An Introduction to Macroeconomic Objectives
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Macroeconomic Objectives are goals set by the government aimed at improving the overall economic performance of a country as well as the quality of life of its citizens
Diagram: The Macroeconomic Objectives

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The government aims to achieve these objectives through the use of macroeconomic policies
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It can be difficult to achieve some outcomes simultaneously
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E.g. High economic growth and stable price levels can be in conflict with one another
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Economic Growth
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Economic growth is a central macroeconomic aim of most governments
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Many developed nations (UK included) have an annual target rate of 2–3%
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This is considered to be sustainable growth
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Growth at this rate is less likely to cause excessive demand pull inflation
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Politicians often use it as a metric of the effectiveness of their policies and leadership
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Economic growth has positive impacts on confidence, consumption, investment, employment, incomes, living standards and government budgets
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Strong economic growth means higher incomes, lower unemployment rates and better government budgets
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Sustainable economic growth will have less demand-pull inflationary pressures or excessive environmental pressure
Graph: UK Economic Growth Rates up to 2023

Growth trends
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An increase in real GDP is a sign that the economy is expanding and employment is increasing
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A fall in real GDP (-11% in 2020) caused by Covid restrictions is a sign economy is contracting
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In 2021 and 2022, real GDP growth rate shows signs of recovery post-Covid restrictions
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High inflation rates also occurred during this period
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UK Economic Growth Trends 2019–2022
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Year |
GDP Growth (%) |
Economic Trends |
|---|---|---|
|
2019 |
1.6% |
Stable economic growth rate |
|
2020 |
-11% |
Fall in GDP growth rate ((Recession) |
|
2021 |
7.6% |
Rapid economic growth post-covid recovery |
|
2022 |
4.1% |
Continued economic growth, but at a decreasing rate |
Price Stability
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The UK has a target inflation rate of 2% using the Consumer Price Index (CPI)
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A low rate of inflation is desirable, as it is a symptom of economic growth
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The different causes of inflation (cost push or demand pull) require different policy responses from the Government
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Demand-side policies ease demand pull inflation
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Supply-side policies ease cost push inflation
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Graph:UK Inflation Rates up to 2022

Inflation trends for 2015–2023
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In the period following the pandemic, inflation rates have exceeded the target rate of 2%
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The CPI peaked at around 8% in 2023
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This is due to supply chain disruptions causing cost-push inflation
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Increased spending following the pandemic caused demand-pull inflation
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The Bank of England (BoE) uses monetary policy to observe and regulate inflation rate
Minimising Unemployment Levels
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The target unemployment rate for the UK is 4–5%
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This is close to the full employment level of labour (YFE)
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There will always be a level of frictional unemployment
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This makes it impossible to achieve 100% employment
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Within the broader unemployment rate, there is an increased emphasis on the unemployment rate within different sections of the population
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E.g. youth unemployment, ethnic/racial unemployment by group
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In 2021, black unemployment in the UK was 11% and white unemployment was 4.1%
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Low levels of unemployment are a sign of a strongly performing economy and are inversely linked to real GDP growth
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When real GDP increases, unemployment falls
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When real GDP decreases, unemployment rises
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