WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity,...

98
WJEC AS Economics Revision guide Copyright: Tejvan Pettinger, Economicshelp.org 1 st August 2018 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the Copyright owners. This guide may be distributed within an educational establishment, if purchased with corresponding network license.

Transcript of WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity,...

Page 1: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

WJECASEconomicsRevisionguide

Copyright:TejvanPettinger,Economicshelp.org1stAugust2018

Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,distributed,ortransmittedinanyformorbyanymeans,includingphotocopying,recording,orotherelectronicormechanicalmethods,withoutthepriorwrittenpermissionoftheCopyrightowners.

• Thisguidemaybedistributedwithinaneducationalestablishment,ifpurchasedwithcorrespondingnetworklicense.

Page 2: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

2

Table of Contents

Unit1–ASMicroeconomics.......................................................................................4Scarcity,choiceandopportunitycost...............................................................................4Opportunitycost.............................................................................................................................................5

Productionpossibilityfrontiers(PPF)....................................................................6Possibilityfrontierandeconomicgrowth.........................................................................................7Specialisation................................................................................................................................................10

Markets...................................................................................................................................11Demand..........................................................................................................................12

Shiftsinthedemandcurve.....................................................................................................................14Supply.............................................................................................................................15

Shiftsinthesupplycurve........................................................................................................................16Marketequilibrium.............................................................................................................17

Consumersurplus.......................................................................................................21Producersurplus.........................................................................................................................................22

Elasticity........................................................................................................................23Usingknowledgeofelasticity...............................................................................................................25Theimpactofelasticityontax..............................................................................................................27Incomeelasticityofdemand(YED)...................................................................................................29Crosselasticityofdemand.....................................................................................................................30Priceelasticityofsupply.........................................................................................................................30

Tax............................................................................................................................................33Wagedetermination............................................................................................................35Nationalminimumwage....................................................................................................39Flexiblelabourmarkets...........................................................................................................................41ImpactofnetmigrationonUKlabourmarkets..........................................................................43Evaluationofnetmigration...................................................................................................................43

Howresourcesareallocatedinafreemarket.............................................................45MarketFailure..............................................................................................................48

Externalitiesandsocialefficiency......................................................................................................48Negativeexternality...................................................................................................................................49Positiveexternality....................................................................................................................................51Publicgood.....................................................................................................................................................52Informationgaps.........................................................................................................................................53Meritgood.......................................................................................................................................................53Demeritgood.................................................................................................................................................53

Governmentinterventiontocorrectmarketfailure..................................................54Tax......................................................................................................................................................................54Subsidy.............................................................................................................................................................56Maximumprices..........................................................................................................................................58Problemofmaximumprices.................................................................................................................59Minimumprices...........................................................................................................................................60Tradeablepollutionpermits.................................................................................................................60Stateprovisionofpublicservices.......................................................................................................61Advertising/Information......................................................................................................................62Regulation.......................................................................................................................................................62PoliciesofWelshgovernment..............................................................................................................63

Governmentfailure....................................................................................................64

Page 3: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

3

Unit2TheUKEconomy.............................................................................................65Circularflowofincome.......................................................................................................65Injections.........................................................................................................................................................66Withdrawals(W)(leakages).................................................................................................................66Multipliereffect............................................................................................................................................66

Aggregatedemand......................................................................................................67Consumerspending(C)...........................................................................................................................68Investment......................................................................................................................................................68Governmentexpenditure(G)................................................................................................................69Nettrade(X-M)............................................................................................................................................70

Aggregatesupply(AS)................................................................................................70Equilibriumnationalincome................................................................................................................73Governmentmacroeconomicobjectives.......................................................................................75Conflictsbetweenobjectives.................................................................................................................76

Fiscalpolicy...................................................................................................................78TheNationalDebt.......................................................................................................................................80Governmentspending..............................................................................................................................82Taxation...........................................................................................................................................................84

Supplysidepolicies....................................................................................................86Evaluationofsupplysidepolicies......................................................................................................87

MonetaryPolicy...........................................................................................................89UKmonetarypolicy...................................................................................................................................89

Theroleofthecentralbank..............................................................................................90Exchangerates......................................................................................................................92Factorsthatinfluenceexchangerates..............................................................................................93Appreciationintheexchangerate.....................................................................................................93Evaluationofanappreciation...............................................................................................................94

Trade.......................................................................................................................................96Benefitsoffreetrade.................................................................................................................................97Argumentsforrestrictingtrade..........................................................................................................98

Page 4: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

4

Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics

Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost

• Scarcity.Theseareresourcesthatarelimited.Withscarceresources,weneedtomakechoicesabouthowtouseanddistributethem.

• Non-renewableresources.Thesearenaturalresourcesthatarefiniteandscarce.Onceused,theycannotbereplaced.Forexample,coal,oil,preciousmetals,andgasareallfinite.

• Renewableresources.Resourcesthatcanbereplenished.Examplesincludewind,wood,fish,solarenergy,andwater.

• Semi-renewableresources.Therearesomeresourcesthat,intheory,arerenewable,butiftheyareover-consumedtheycanbecomeextinctandthusnolongeravailable.Forexample,farmlandshouldberenewable,butifweover-farmanduseextensivequantitiesofchemicals,itcouldcausesoilerosion.

• Economicgood.Agoodwhichhasabenefit(utility)tosociety,andalsoagoodthathassomedegreeofscarcity.

• Freegood.Agoodwhichhasbenefittosociety,butisavailableinanunlimitedquantity.Thereisnoopportunitycostinconsumingit.

Scarcity and choice • Becauseofscarcityandunlimitedwants,weneedtomakechoices.• Forexample,asasociety,ifwecontinuetoover-fish,itmeansfuture

generationsmaynotbeabletotakeanyfishfromtheseaatall.• Asanindividual,weneedtodecidehowtouseourlimitedincometo

purchasegoodsandservices.• Governmentsalsohavescarceresources(limitedtaxincome).Theyneed

tomakedecisionsabouthowtousetaxrevenue.IncreasinggovernmentspendingontheNHSmeanslesspotentialforspendingelsewhere.

The fundamental economic problem • Thefundamentaleconomicproblemistheissueofscarcityandhowbest

toproduceanddistributethesescarceresources.Becauseofscarcityandlimitedresources,economicsisconcernedwith:

• Whattoproduce?• Howtoproduce?• Forwhomtoproduce?

Page 5: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

5

Opportunitycost• Opportunitycostisthenextbestalternativeforegone.

Examplesofopportunitycost

• Ifthegovernmentspendstaxincomeondefencespending,thenthismoneycannotbespentonhealthcare.

• Ifthegovernmentcutstax,theopportunitycostisthattheyhavelesstospend(orusetoreducebudgetdeficit).

• Ifwespendourtimesurfingtheinternet,wecannotspendthistimestudyingeconomics.

• Iffirmsspendalltheirmoneyonadvertisingtheirnewproduct,theycannotusethatmoneytoinvestindevelopingnewproducts.

Importanceofopportunitycost

• Opportunitycostmeanswehavetomakedecisionsaboutthebestuseoftime,moneyandresources.Sometimestherearetwooptionsthataregood,butweneedtochoosetherelativelybestoption.

Choicebetweenstudyandleisure.Supposewehave12hourstospare.Wecanusethese12hoursforstudyorwecanusethe12hoursforleisure.

IfwemovefromAtoB,wecanspendanextratwohoursonleisure.Theopportunitycostisthatwelose2hoursofstudy.

Page 6: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

6

Production possibility frontiers (PPF) APPFshowsthemaximumoutputthataneconomycanproduceiftheeconomyismaximisingtheuseofitsresourcesandoperatingefficiently.

Thisisasimplisticproductionpossibilityfrontierthatshowsachoicebetweengoodsandservices.

• Ifweproducemoreconsumergoods,itleadstofewerresourcesavailableforproducingservices.

• Wecoulduseallournaturalresourcesandhavemanyconsumergoods,orwecouldhaveonlyfewgoodsandconcentrateonproducingservices.

Opportunitycostandproductionpossibilityfrontier

• AtpointA,wehave22goods/21services• AtpointB,wehave18goods/27services.• IfwemovefrompointAtoB,wegainanextra6unitsofservices.• However,theopportunitycostisthatwehavetoforego4unitsofgoods.

PointsonPPFCurve

• AorB=Productivelyefficient.• C=impossible

(withouteconomicgrowth)• D=inefficient,belowpotential

Page 7: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

7

Possibilityfrontierandeconomicgrowth

• Shortruneconomicgrowth.MovingfrompointAtoB.Thisinvolves

makingbetteruseofexistingproductivecapacity.• Longruneconomicgrowth.ThisrequiresashiftinthePPFcurvetothe

right.ThisenablespointCtobeattained.

Causes of long run economic growth AshiftinPPFtotherightcanbecausedby:

• Discoveringmorerawmaterials(e.g.discoveringoilfields)• Increaseinthesizeofworkforce(e.g.immigration)• Increaseincapitalstock(e.g.investmentinnewmachines,factories)• Increaseinlabourproductivity(e.g.duetobettereducatedworkersor

workersbecomingmoremotivated)• Improvementsintechnologywhichincreaseslabourproductivity

Negative economic growth ItisalsopossibleforthePPFcurvetoshiftinwards.Thiscouldoccurdueto:

• Decliningpopulation• Firmsclosingdownandstoppingproduction

Page 8: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

8

Choice between consumer and capital goods

• Consumergoods.Goodsthatwecanuseandenjoy.Thethingswebuyin

shopslikefood,clothes,etc.• Capitalgoods.Thesearegoodsthatareusedintheproductiveprocess–for

example,amachine.Capitalgoodsinvolveinvestmentinincreasingproductivecapacity.

• IfwemovefromBtoA,thereisamovementalongthePPFcurveenabling

morecapitalgoodstobeproduced(anextra8).Theopportunitycostisthattherearelessconsumergoods(17less).

• Increasingcapitalgoodsleadstolowerlivingstandardsintheshortterm,butinthelongtermwemaybeabletoproducemorebecauseoftheinvestmentinmachinesandfactories,whichenableshigheroutput.

Short term growth or long-term investment

• Devotingahigherproportionofresourcestocurrentconsumptionhasanopportunitycostoflessinvestmentandlessgrowthinthelongrun.

• Devotingahigherproportionofresourcestocapitalinvestmenthasanopportunitycostoflessconsumptionintheshortrun.

• ThereisastronglinkbetweenaPPFandthelongrunaggregatesupplycurve(LRAS).LRASisamajordeterminantofeconomicgrowth(see:unit2macro-economics).

Page 9: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

9

RotationinPPFCurve

• InthisPPFcurve,weseeashifttotherightofthePPFcurveonthex-axis.• Inthiscase,weseeanimprovementintechnologyrelatingtocapital

goods,butnotconsumergoods.Therefore,wecanproducemorecapitalgoodsrelativetoconsumergoods.

• Iftheeconomyisbecomingmoreskewedtowardscapitalgoods.Itmayenablehighergrowthinthelong-termbecauseofincreasedinvestment.

Diminishing returns vs constant returns

• ThePPFontheleftisconcavetotheorigin.Thisisbecauseofimperfect

substitution,anddiminishingreturnstoincreasinggoods/services.• IfwemovefromAtoB,wegain6services,andtheopportunitycostis

only1good.• But,ifwemovefromCtoD,wegainonly1serviceandlose3goods.

Therefore,theopportunitycostofproducingmoreservicesisincreasing.• APPFcurvecanbestraight(diagramright)ifthereareconstantreturns.

Page 10: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

10

Specialisation

• Specialisationoccurswhenacountryorfirmconcentratesonproducingaparticulargoodorservice.

• Countrieswillspecialiseinproducinggoodswheretheyhaveacomparativeadvantage.Forexample,Japanspecialisesinproducinghigh-techelectronicgoods.Cubaspecialisesinproducingsugar.

Division of labour

• Divisionoflabouroccurswhenworkersconcentrateondifferenttaskswithinafirm.

• Ratherthantrytomasterallaspectsofproduction,someworkerswillspecialiseataparticularjob.

• Forexample,inacar-buildingfirm,somewillworkondesign,someontesting,andsomeworkerswilljustdounskilledjobssuchaspaintingthecar.

Productivity of labour • Thisisdefinedastheoutputperworker,perperiodoftime.• Forexample,oneworker,maypick100strawberriesperhour.• Specialisationmayenableanincreaseinoverallproductivitybecause

specialisedworkerscanbecomemoreefficient.

Advantages of specialisation in the production of goods • Thedivisionoflabourgivesworkerstimetogainskillsforoneparticular

job.Overall,theyneedlesstimetobetrained.• Withspecialisationandthedivisionoflabour,firmscanbemoreefficient

whenproducingonalargescale;itenableseconomiesofscale,andloweraveragecosts.

• Withoutspecialisationandthedivisionoflabour,onepersonmaybeunabletoproduceacaronhisown.Butthedivisionoflabourmakesabigproductiontaskmanageablebyspreadingtheworkout.

Problems of specialisation • Thedivisionoflabourcanmakejobshighlyspecialisedandrepetitive,

leadingtoboredomandpossiblediseconomiesofscale.• Onanassemblyline,ifonepersonisabsent,thewholeproductionline

mayslowdownifotherpeoplecan’tcovertheirjob.Therefore,thereneedstobesomeflexibility.

Page 11: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

11

Advantages of specialisation in trade • Worldtradeishighlyspecialised,withthegrowthinworldtradeenabling

higherlivingstandards,agreaterchoiceofgoods,andmorecompetition.• Specialisationmeanscountriesdon’thavetoproduceeverygoodthey

need,whichwouldbeimpracticalforsmallcountries.• Countriescanmakeuseoftheirbestresources(e.g.lowlabourcostsin

IndiaandChinaoradvancedtechnologyinGermany).• Itenablescountriestoimportgoodsthattheyotherwisewouldn’tbeable

toproduce(e.g.youcan’tgrowbananasinUK;Africancountriesdon’tcurrentlyhaveaviablecarindustry).

Problems of specialisation in trade • Concentratingonproducingasmallnumberofgoodscanmakean

economyvulnerable.Forexample,ifsugarpricesfall,countriesthatrelyonsugarexportswillseeafallinincome.

• Itmayhamperdevelopmentifcountriessticktoproducingprimaryproducts,whichhavealow-incomeelasticityofdemand.

Markets • Aproductmarketreferstohowagoodisboughtandsold.Forexample,

farmers(producers)sellpotatoesatthemarketandconsumersbuythem.• Themarketwilldeterminethepriceandquantitysold.

Rationality • Ineconomicsweassumefirmsandconsumersarerational.Thismeans

thattheytrytomaximisetheireconomicwelfareandmakedecisionstoenablethis.

Utility • Thisishowmuchbenefitpeoplegetfromconsumingacertaingood.• Ifwegethighutilityfromeatingatarestaurant,wewillbewillingtopay

alargeamountofmoney.• Weassumeconsumerswishtomaximisetheirutility.Forexample,they

willspendmoneyongoodsonlyiftheybelievetheutilitygainedisgreaterorequaltothecost.

Profit • Thisistheamountofmoneyafirmgainsaftersubtractingcostsfromits

totalrevenue(profit=totalrevenue–totalcosts).• Weoftenassumefirmswishtomaximiseprofit(eitherintheshortrunor

longrun).Thismightinvolvecuttingcostsorsellingprofitablegoods.

Page 12: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

12

Demand • Theindividualdemandcurveillustratesthepricepeoplearewillingto

payforaparticularquantityofagood.• Themarketdemandcurveillustratesthepriceconsumersinthewhole

economyarewillingtopay.

Movementalongthedemandcurve

Achangeinpricecausesamovementalongthedemandcurve.

• Ahigherpricereducesdemand.• Alowerpriceincreasesdemand.

• Forexample,ifthereisanincreaseinpricefrom9to12,thentherewillbeafallindemandfrom30to22.

• Asthepricefalls,peopleareusuallywillingtobuymoreofthegood.Ifthepriceishigher,thisdiscouragespeoplefrombuyingthegood.

Page 13: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

13

Demand and diminishing marginal utility Marginalutilityisthesatisfactionthatyougainfromthelastunitofconsumption.

• Thefirstchocolatebarofthedayislikelytogivethehighestutility.Thesecondchocolatebarusuallygiveslessutilitythanthefirst.

• Ifyouhavealreadyeatenthreechocolatebars,youareunlikelytoenjoyafourth.Therefore,theutilityfromthefourthchocolatebarismuchlessthanthefirst.

• Asyouconsumemoregoods,theutilityoftheextragoodsusuallydeclines.Thisiswhythedemandcurveisdownwardsloping.Youwouldn’twanttopayasmuchforthefourthchocolatebarasthefirst.

• Thisiswhyanindividual’sdemandcurveisdownwardsloping.Theyarewillingtopaylowerpricesforahigherquantity.

Toencouragehigherdemand,lowerpricesareneeded.

Income and substitution effect • Ifthepriceofagoodchanges,therearetwofactorswhichaffectdemand.

1.Incomeeffect

• Thislooksattheeffectofapriceincreaseondisposableincome.Ifthepriceofagoodincreases,thenconsumerswillhaverelativelylowerdisposableincome.Forexample,ifthepriceofpetrolrises,consumersmaynotbeabletoaffordtodriveasmuch,leadingtolowerdemand.

2.Substitutioneffect

• Thislooksattheeffectofapriceincreasecomparedtoalternatives.• Ifthepriceofpetrolrises,thenitisrelativelycheapertogobybus.

Page 14: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

14

ShiftsinthedemandcurveThisoccurswhen,evenatthesameprice,consumersarewillingtobuyahigherquantityofgoods–forexample,demandshiftsfromDtoD2

Ashifttotherightinthedemandcurvecanoccurforanumberofreasons:

1. Anincreaseindisposableincome,suchashigherwagesandlowertaxesgivingconsumersmorespendingpower.

2. Anincreaseinthequalityofthegood.Forexample,mobilephonesarenowmoreversatileandpowerful,makingthemmoreattractive.

3. Advertisingcanincreasebrandloyaltytogoodsandincreasedemand.4. Anincreaseinthepriceofsubstitutes.Forexample,ifthepriceofO2

Mobilephonecallsgoesup,thedemandforVodafonemobileswillincrease.

5. Afallinthepriceofcomplements.Forexample,alowerpriceforAppleappswillincreasedemandforAppleiPhones.

Evaluation

• Itdependsonthetypeofgood.Ariseinincomewillnothaveanyeffectondemandforsalt,butitwillhaveabiggereffectondemandforluxurycars.

• Somegoodswillvaryduetoseasonalfactorsliketheweatherandtimeofyear(e.g.scarvesandairconditioners).

Page 15: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

15

Supply Thesupplycurvereferstothequantityofagoodthattheproducerplanstosellinthemarket.

Changeinpriceandmovementalongsupplycurve

• Ifpricechanges,thereisamovementalongthesupplycurve.• Forexample,anincreaseinthepricefrom£40to£50causesanincrease

from30to33.

Whysupplycurveslopesupwards

• Aspriceincreases,firmshaveanincentivetosupplymorebecauseatahigherprice,theygetextrarevenue(income)fromsellingthegoods.

• Also,asoutputrises,firmsusuallyhavehighermarginalcostsintheshortrun;itismorecostlytoincreaseoutput.Therefore,firmsrequirehigherpricestoencouragemoresupply.

• Firmsreacttomarketpricesincompetitivemarkets.Ifafarmertriedtosellhisproduceabovethemarketprice,hewouldn’tbeabletosell.Wesayfirmsarepricetakers.

Page 16: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

16

Shiftsinthesupplycurve

Anincreaseinsupplyoccurswhenmoreissuppliedateachprice,e.g.ashiftinsupplyfromStoS2.Thiscouldoccurforthefollowingreasons:

• Adecreaseincostsofproduction.Thismeansthatbusinesscansupplymoreateachprice.Lowercostscouldbeduetolowerwagesorlowerrawmaterialcosts.

• Anincreaseinthenumberofproducerswillcauseanincreaseinsupply.• Expansioninthecapacityofexistingfirms,e.g.investmenttoextendthe

sizeofafactory.• Anincreaseinthesupplyofacomplementarygood,e.g.beefandleather.• Favourableclimaticconditions,whichareveryimportantforagricultural

products,e.g.goodweatherwillgiveagoodharvest.• Improvementsintechnology,e.g.computersandtheinternetenables

moretobeproducedforalowercost.• Lowertaxesonthegood,e.g.lowerpetroltax.• Governmentsubsidiesonthegood(governmentpayingpartofthecost).

Jointsupply

• Jointsupplyoccurswhentwogoodsaresuppliedtogetherfromthesamesource.

Page 17: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

17

Market equilibrium Thepricemechanismreferstohowsupplyanddemandinteracttosetthemarketpriceandtheamountofgoodssold.

Marketequilibriumoccurswhensupply=demandandthereisnotendencyforthepricetochange.

Excess demand

Ifthepriceisbelowequilibrium(p2),demandisgreaterthansupply(Q2–Q1)–causingashortage.

Page 18: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

18

• Therefore,withconsumerswantingtobuymorefirmswillputuppricesandsupplymore.

• Aspricerises,therewillbemovementalongthedemandcurveandlesswillbedemanded.

• Priceswillriseuntilsupplyequalsdemand.

Excess supply

• Ifthepriceisaboveequilibrium(p2),supplyisgreaterthandemand(Q2-Q1)–causingasurplus.

• Toselltheunsoldgoods,firmsreducethepriceandreducesupply(movementalongsupplycurve).Thelowerpricealsoencouragesmoredemand.

• ThepricefallstoP1wheresupplyequalsdemand.

Impact of increase in demand • Ifconsumerssawanincreaseinincome,wewouldseeanincreasein

demandforgoodslikeTV’s;thedemandcurvewouldshifttotheright.• Initiallytherewouldbeashortage,butthehigherdemandwouldcause

thepricetoriseandsupplierstosupplymore.

Page 19: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

19

Theincreaseindemandcausesanincreaseinprice(P1toP2)andanincreaseinquantity(Q1toQ2).

Inthelong-term,thehigherpricesmayencouragemorefirmstoenterthemarketandthesupplycurvewillshifttotheright.

Fall in supply Iftheavailabilityofoildecreased,wewouldseeafallinsupply.

Thefallinthesupplyofoilcausesthepricetoriseandasmallfallindemand.Sincedemandforoilisinelastic,weseearelativelybiggerincreaseintheprice.

Page 20: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

20

Impactoffallinsupplyinlongterm

• Ifthepriceofoilincreased,itmaystarttomakeitprofitabletoproduceoilfromnewplaces,suchasAlaskaandAntarctic.Previouslyitwastoocostlytoproduceoilfromhere,butthehigherpricemaymakeitworthwhile.

• Ifthepriceofoilrises,inthelong-termpeoplemayrespondtohigherpricesbyswitchingtootherformsoftransportwhichdon’tusepetrol.

Factors that could explain a fall in the price of a good • Thepriceofagood,suchascoffee,wouldfalliftherewasafallindemand

and/oranincreaseinsupply.

FallinthepricefromP1toP2

Thedemandforcoffeecouldfallforvariousreasonssuchas:• Lowerincomesmeanthatconsumerscannotaffordtobuyasmuch.• Coffeebecomeslessfashionable.

Afallinnumberofcoffeeshops.• Healthconcernsaboutcaffeine.

Thesupplyofcoffeecouldincreaseforvariousreasonssuchas:

• Anincreaseinthenumberofsuppliersorcountriesproducingcoffee.• Lowercostsofproduction,e.g.lowerwageratesincoffee-producing

countries.• Governmentsubsidies,e.g.LatinAmericancountriesmaywishto

subsidiesthecoffeefarmers.• Higherlabourproductivityinproducingcoffee,whichwilldecreasethe

costsofproduction.

Page 21: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

21

Consumer surplus • Consumersurplusisthedifferencebetweenthepricethatconsumerspay

andthepricethattheywouldbewillingtopay.• Forexample,ifabookcosts£10,butthedemandcurveshowsthatthey

wouldhavepaid£16,theconsumersurplusis£6.

• Consumersurplustendstobehigherwhenmarketsarecompetitiveandpricesarelow.

• Consumerandproducersurpluswillbemaximisedinafreemarketwherepriceisdeterminedbysupplyanddemand.

• Amonopolythatcansethigherpriceswillbeabletoreduceconsumersurplus.

• Forexample,peaktrainfaresareanattempttochargehigherpricestothosecommuterswillingtopaythehigherprice–andcaptureconsumersurplus.

Page 22: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

22

Producersurplus• Producersurplusisthedifferencebetweenthepricesuppliersreceive

andthepricethattheywouldhavebeenwillingtosupplythegoodat.• Ifthemarketpriceis£10,andtheirsupplycurveshowsthattheywould

havesupplieditat£8,theyhaveaproducersurplusof£2.

Producersurplusafterfallinsupply

• Inthiscase,supplyshiftsfromS1toS2,themarketpricerisesfrom£25to£30.Quantityfallsfrom100to80.

• Inthiscase,weseeadeclineinconsumersurplus.Producersurplusalsofalls.

Calculating consumer surplus Wecancalculatearightangledtriangle,usingformula-1/2xheightxbase

• Price=£30,quantityequals80.• Themaximumconsumersurplus=£50-£30=£20• Tofindtheareaofconsumersurplus=(£20×80)/2=£800

Calculating producer surplus • Themaximumproducersurplusis£30-£15=£15• Theareaofproducersurplus=(£15×80)/2=£600

Page 23: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

23

Elasticity Thepriceelasticityofdemandmeasurestheresponsivenessofdemandtoachangeinprice.

Priceelasticdemand

• Demandispriceelasticifachangeinpricecausesabiggerpercentagechangeindemand.

Exampleofelasticdemand

• IfthepriceofTescobreadincreases5%anddemandfalls15%,thePEDis(-15/5)=-3.0.Thisispriceelastic.

Characteristics of elastic demand • Luxurygoodsaresensitivetopricebecausetheyrepresentabig

percentageofdisposableincome,suchassportscarsandforeignholidays.• Competitivemarkets.Goodsthathavemanysubstitutesandavery

competitivemarketwillbeelastic-forexample,ifthepriceofTescobreadincreased,consumerscouldswitchtoseveralothervarieties.

• Frequentlybought.Withgoodsthatareboughtfrequently,wearemorelikelytocompareprices,andswitchifnecessary.

Page 24: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

24

Inelastic demand • Demandispriceisinelasticifachangeinpriceleadstoasmaller

percentagechangeinQ.D.• PEDwillbelessthan-1(e.g.-0.5)

Exampleofinelasticdemand• Ifthepriceoftobaccoincreases10%anddemandfalls2%,thePED=-0.2

Characteristicsofinelasticgoods

• Fewsubstitutes.e.g.petrolandcigaretteshavefewclosealternatives.• Necessities,e.g.ifyouhavetodrivetowork,youneedtobuypetrol.• Addictive.Ifyouareaddictedyouwillpayhigherpricee.g.cigarettes,

coffee.• Smallpercentageofincome–meansyoudon’tworryifpricerises.• Intheshortterm,demandisusuallymoreinelasticbecauseittakestime

forconsumerstofindandswitchtoalternatives.

Evaluation

1. Demandforagoodlikecoffeeislikelytobeinelastic,astherearefewsubstitutestocoffee.Butdemandforindividualbrandsofcoffeeislikelytobemoreelastic,astherearesubstitutestoStarbuckscoffee(e.g.Costa).

2. Elasticitymaychangeovertime.Intheshortterm,demandforpetrolisinelastic,butovertime,peoplemaybemorewillingtoswitchtoalternatives,suchascyclingtowork,sothatdemandforpetrolbecomesmoreelasticwithtime.

Page 25: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

25

Usingknowledgeofelasticity

1.Revenueandelasticity

Ifdemandisinelasticthenincreasingthepricecanleadtoanincreaseinrevenue.

Inthisexample,thepriceofoilrisesfrom$110abarrelto$190,andthequantityfallsfrom9millionto8million.

• Revenuewas$110×9=$990million• Revenueisnow$190×8=$1,520million• Anincreaseinrevenueof$530million

ThisiswhyOPECtriestoincreasethepriceofoil,becausehigheroilpricesaremoreprofitable.

WhatisthePEDofoilinthisexample?

• %changeinQ.D1/9=-0.11(-11.1%)• %changeinprice80/110=0.727(72.7%)

Therefore,PEDofoil=-11.1/72.7=-0.15(inelastic)

Page 26: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

26

Ifdemandwaspriceelastic

• Pricerisesfrom£110to£130–(20/110)=18%• Quantityfallsfrom9to4(5/9)=55.5%• Revenuewas110×9=£990• Revenuehasnowfallento4×£130=£520• Afallof£470

PEDofthisexample-55/18=-3.05(elasticdemand)

2.Advertisingandelasticity

• Firmshaveanadvantageifdemandfortheirgoodispriceinelastic.Ifdemandisinelastictheycanincreasepriceandmakemoreprofit.

• Thisiswhymanyfirmsspendmoneyonadvertisingtocreatebrandloyalty.

• Becauseofstrongbrandloyalty,CocaColacanchargeahigherpricethanotherbrandslikeSainsburyCola.

• Firmscanmakedemandmoreinelasticbyofferingmoreadd-onfeaturesandbetterqualityproductsthatstandoutfromthecompetition.

Page 27: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

27

Theimpactofelasticityontax

• Inthisexample,thetaxis£70perunit.• Aftertaxisplacedonthegood,supplyshiftstoS2.• Demandfallsfrom80to72.Thepricerisesfrom£80to£140.• Thetotaltaxrevenueequals72×£70=£5,040

Consumerburdenoftax

• Thetaxis£70,andconsumersenduppayinganextra£60.• Inthiscase,consumersfacemostofthetaxburden.• Consumerburden=(60×72)=£4,320

Producerburden

• Producersget£10lessafterthetax.• Therefore,producerburdenis(10×72)=£720.

Page 28: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

28

Elasticity of a demand curve Withastraightlinedemandcurvetheelasticityofdemandvaries.

BetweenpointAandB,demandiselastic.(-3.5)

• Thisisbecausethe%changeinquantity(4to6)is2/4=50%• The%changeinprice(14to12)=-2/14=-14%

BetweenpointsCandD,demandbecomesinelastic.(-0.375)

• The%changeinquantity13to15isjust2/13)=15%• The%changeinpriceisgreater2/5=40%

Withastraightlinedemandcurve,theelasticityisalwayschanging.

• DemandismoreelasticwhenQisclosetozero.• Aspricefallscloserto0,demandbecomesmoreinelastic.• PED=1whenthe%changeindemandisthesameas%changeinprice

(somewhereinmiddleofdemandcurve)

Page 29: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

29

Incomeelasticityofdemand(YED)Incomeelasticitymeasurestheresponsivenessofdemandtoachangeinincome.

Forexample,ifaverageincomeincreasesby5%andthedemandformobilephonesincreasesby20%,anddemandforTescovaluericefalls2%.

• ThentheYEDformobilephones=20/5=4.0(luxurygood)• TheYEDforTescovaluerice-2/5=-0.4(inferiorgood)

Types of good • Inferiorgood.Thisoccurswhenanincreaseinincomeleadstoafallin

demand.InferiorgoodswillhaveanegativeYED.ExamplesincludeclothesfromcharityshopsandTescovaluerice.Asyourincomeincreases,youbuybetterqualitygoodsinstead.

• Normalgood.Thisoccurswhenanincreaseinincomeleadstoanincreaseindemandforthegood,thereforeYED>0.Mostgoodsarenormalgoods.

• Luxurygood.Thisoccurswhenanincreaseinincomecausesabiggerpercentageincreaseindemand,thereforeYED>1.Itmeansdemandisincomeelastic.Examplesincludejewelleryandsportscars.

• Incomeinelastic.Thismeansanincreaseinincomeleadstoasmallerpercentageincreaseindemand.Therefore0>YED<1.

Importance of income elasticity of demand • Inarecession,withfallingincomes,demandforluxurygoodswillfall

significantly.Demandforinferiorgoodswillincrease.• Budgetpoundshopsmaydowellwithfallingincomes,butluxurycar

saleswillnot.• Supermarketsmayrespondtoarecession(fallingincome)bysupplying

more‘inferior’goodsandcuttingbackonluxurygoods.• Ifincomesarerising,firmsmayseektomaketheirgoodmoreofaluxury

good,e.g.carmanufacturersmayaddmoreluxuryitemstocars,suchasairconditioningtotakeadvantageoftherisingincomes.

Page 30: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

30

CrosselasticityofdemandCrosselasticityofdemandmeasureshowthedemandforonegoodisaffectedbythepriceofanother.

• Forexample,ifthepriceofmilkfallsby10%,demandforteamayincrease1%.ThereforeXED=(1/-10)=-0.1

Substitutegoods.Thesearetwogoodsthatcouldbeusedasalternatives.Withtwosubstitutegoods,XEDwillbepositive.

• WeaksubstitutesliketeaandcoffeewillhavealowXED.• TescobreadandSainsburysbreadareclosesubstitutessoXEDishigher.

Complementsgoods.Thesearegoodsthatareusedtogether.ThereforeXEDisnegative.

• Forexample,ifthepriceofDVDplayersfall,thentherewillbeanincreaseindemandforDVDdiscs.

Unrelatedgoods.Ifthepriceoflambincreases,wewouldexpectittohavenoeffectonthedemandforbeerorcomputers.Ifthepriceoflambincreasesanddemandchangesforcomputers,itisjustaco-incidenceandnotrelated.

PriceelasticityofsupplyThismeasuresthe%changeinquantitysuppliedafterachangeinprice.

• Ifthepriceofcarsincrease10%,andsupplyincreases5%,o ThePES=5/10=0.5

• Ifthepriceoftomatoesincrease10%andsupplyincreasesonly1%intheshortterm,

o ThePES=1/10=0.1

Page 31: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

31

Inelastic supply

• Inelasticsupplymeansachangeinpricecausesasmallerpercentagechangeinsupply(PES<1).

• Perfectlyinelasticmeansachangeinpricehasnoeffectonsupply.• Intheexampleontheleft:%changeinQ=3/50=6%• %changeinprice=6/60=10%• Therefore,PES=6/10=0.6(inelasticsupply)

Supplycouldbeinelasticforthefollowingreasons:

1. Operatingclosetofullcapacity.Iffirmsareoperatingclosetofullcapacity,itisdifficulttoincreasesupply.

2. Lowlevelsofstocks;therefore,therearenosurplusgoodstosell.3. Intheshortterm,capitalisfixed,thereforefirmsdonothavetimeto

buildabiggerfactoryandincreasesupply.4. Difficulttoemployfactorsofproduction,e.g.itmaybedifficulttofind

relevantskilledlabourtoincreaseoutput.5. Withagriculturalproducts,supplyisinelasticintheshortrunbecause

ittakesatleast6monthstogrowcrops.

Page 32: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

32

Elastic supply Thisoccurswhenanincreaseinpriceleadstoabigger%increaseinsupply,thereforePES>1.

• Perfectlyelasticsupplymeansthatatagivenprice,supplyisunlimited.

• Ontheleft:Priceincreasefrom60to63andQincreasesfrom50to60.• %changeinQ=10/50=20%• %changeinprice=3/60=5%• ThereforePES=20/5=4.0(elasticsupply)

Supplycouldbeelasticforthefollowingreasons:

• Ifthereissparecapacityinthefactory.• Iftherearestocksavailable.• Ifitiseasytoemploymorefactorsofproduction.

Difference between long run and short run

• Intheshortrun,supplyismorelikelytobeinelasticbecausethefirmdoesnothavetheabilitytoincreasethesizeofthefactory.

• But,inthelongrun,supplycanbemoreelasticasthefirmisabletoinvestinmorecapacityandthereforeincreasesupply.

Page 33: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

33

Elasticity calculation SupposePESforcomputersis2.0.Whenthepricewas£30,thefirmsupplied4,000.Ifthepriceincreasedfrom£30to£36,whatwillbethenewQ?

• Priceincreasesby£6.Thereforeasa%,(6/30=0.2)=20%

(PES)2.0=%changeinQS20(%changeinP)

• Therefore40=%changeinQS• ThereforenewQ=4000*140/100=5,600

Tax Taxincreasesthecostofthegoodandshiftsthesupplycurvetotheleft.

• Inthisexample,thespecifictaxis£35perunit(80-45).• Thetaxincreasesthepricefrom£50to£80.Quantityfallsfrom90to82.• Thetotaltaxrevenueforthegovernmentwillbe:82×£35=£2,870

Page 34: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

34

The burden of tax Theburdenofthetaxissharedbetweenconsumersandproducers.

• Theconsumerburdenshowstheextraamountthattheypay(howmuchtaxraisesprice).

• Producersalsoloseoutfromtaxbecausetheygetalowerpriceafterpayingtaxtothegovernment.

Consumer and producer burden of specific tax

• Ifdemandisinelastic,thenmostofthetaxwillleadtohigherpricesandconsumerburdenofthetaxwillbegreaterthantheproducerburden.

• Inthediagramontheright,demandispriceelasticandthereisaproportionallysmallereffectonpriceandconsumers.Producershaveagreaterburdenfromthetax.Consumerburdenisrelativelyless.

• Governmentsoftenincreasetaxongoodswithinelasticdemandbecausethisleadstothebiggestincreaseintaxrevenue.

• Oftentobaccomanufacturerswillbeabletopass100%ofthetaxincreaseontoconsumersbecausedemandissoinelastic.

Page 35: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

35

Wage determination

• Incompetitivelabourmarkets,theequilibriumwagerateintheindustryisdeterminedbythemeetingpointofthelaboursupplyanddemandcurves(W1).

Inthisexample,theincreaseindemandforlabour,leadstohigherwages(W1toW2),

andahigherquantityoflabour(Q1toQ2).

Factors affecting demand for labour • Wages.Higherwagescauseamovementalongthedemandcurve.• Productivityofworkers.Ifworkersaremoreproductiveandproduce

more,firmsshouldbewillingtopayhigherwages.• Demandforthegood.Labourisaderiveddemand.Ifthereismore

demandforeconomicstuition,therewillbemoredemandforeconomicstutorsandthiswillpushupthewage.

• Substitutestolabour.Insomeproductionprocesses,firmscouldsubstituteworkersformachines(e.g.assemblylines).

• Non-wagecosts.Thisincludespayingnationalinsurance,healthinsurance,andpotentialredundancypay.

Page 36: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

36

Elasticity of demand for labour Theelasticityofdemandforlabourmeasureshowresponsivedemandforlabourisafterachangeinwages.Elasticityofdemandforlabourdependson:

• Howessentialistheworker?Canlabourbesubstitutedforcapital?Forexample,withautomatedcheckouts,workerscanbesubstitutedformachinesandlabourdemandwillbemoreelastic.

• Numberofpeoplewithqualificationsandskills.Ifonlyasmallnumberofworkershavequalifications,demandwillbemoreinelastic.

• Timeperiod.Intheshortterm,demandforlabourwillbeinelastic.However,overtime,itbecomeseasiertosubstitutelabourforcapital,sodemandbecomesmoreelastic.

• Proportionofwagecosts.Iflabourisahigh%oftotalwagecosts,thefirmwillbemoresensitivetoariseinwages.

Workerswithinelasticdemandarehardtoreplace.Therefore,theytendtohavegreaterbargainingstrengthandcandemandhigherwages.

ThedemandcurveD2ismoreinelasticthanD1.Thedemandcurve(D2)leadstoahigherwage(W2).Workerswithaninelasticdemandcurvearenoteasilyreplaceableandsogethigherwages.

Page 37: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

37

Factors that determine supply of labour • Wagerate.Higherwagescauseamovementalongthesupplycurve.• Thenumberofqualifiedpeopleandthedifficultyofgetting

qualifications.Forprofessions,suchaslawyersanddoctors,therearealimitednumberofpeoplewithsufficientqualifications.Thislimitssupplyandpushesupwages.

• Thenon-wagebenefits(non-pecuniary)benefitsofajob.Thisincludesstatus,jobsecurity,dangerofjob,howenjoyablethejobis,thelengthofholidaysandotherfringebenefits.E.g.iftubedrivershavetostartworkingnights,itmayreducesupplyofworkersbecauseitbecomesalessattractivejob.

• Population/demographics.NetimmigrationintotheUKhasincreasedthesupplyofnurses,cleaners,andotherservicesectorworkers.

Elasticity of supply of labour Theelasticityofsupplymeasureshowwageratesaffecttheresponsivenessofthesupplyoflabour.Supplywillbeinelasticif:

• Onlyasmallnumberofworkershavenecessaryqualifications(e.g.doctors).

• Thejobisunpopular/dangerous,makingsupplylower.• Iftakesalongtimetogainqualifications.

• S1ismoreinelastic(e.g.lawyers).ThisleadstoahigherwageofW2.• S2ismoreelastic(e.g.cleaners).ThisleadstolowerwagesofW1.

Page 38: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

38

Wage inequality between regions • Weoftenseewagedifferentialsbetweendifferentregions.Forexample,

differencesbetweenwagesinWalesandtherestoftheUK.• Alsotherecanbewagedifferentialswithinaregion,e.g.wageshigherin

Cardiff,thanruralpartsofnorthWales.

ExplainingwagedifferentialsbetweenWalesandLondon

• InWalessupplyanddemandarerelativelymoreelastic.• InLondon,supplyismoreinelasticanddemandhigher.

ExplainingrelativelylowerwagesinWalesthanS.E.England

• InLondon,firmsaremoreprofitableandabletopayhigherwages.Forexample,inLondon,manyfinancialfirmsareabletopaylargebonusesduetoprofits.

• HigherunemploymentinWales.Duetotheprocessofde-industrialisationWaleshasexperiencedperiodsofhigherunemployment.Unemploymenttendstopushdownwagesbecausetherearemorepeoplewillingtofillvacancies.

• ShortageofhousinginLondon,limitssupplyofworkers,pushingupwages.

• GreaterconcentrationofworkerswithhighlevelsofskillsandqualificationsinLondoncomparedtoWelshregions.

Page 39: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

39

National minimum wage Thenationalminimumwageisagovernmentlegislationwhichpreventsfirmsfrompayinglessthanthestatutoryminimum.

• FromOctober2015,thenationalminimumwagewillbe£6.70anhourforworkersagedover21.Therearelowerratesforyoungworkers.

• Thegovernmenthasindicateditwillsignificantlyincreasetheminimumwageforadultworkersto£9anhourby2020.

• Thisisanattempttomatchthelivingwage–aleveldeemednecessarytodealwithcurrentlivingcosts.

Impact of a national minimum wage

1. Potentialunemployment

• AminimumwageabovetheequilibriumcouldcauseunemploymentofQ3-Q1.ThisisbecausetheminimumwageofW2reducesdemandforworkerstoQ1.

• Thisisparticularlyaconcernforsomeindustrieswherewagesareahighpercentageofcosts,e.g.hairdressersorservicesectorworkers,suchascleaners.

• Asubstantialriseintheminimumwagewillbemorelikelytocauseunemploymentinlowwageregions,suchasthenorth.ItwillhavelessimpactinLondonandthesouth.

Page 40: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

40

2.Minimumwageandmonopsony

• Aminimumwagecouldcounter-acttheeffectofamonopsonyemployer.Amonopsonyisanemployerwhohasmarketpower.Thismarketpowerenableshimtopaylowerwagesandemploysfewerworkers.

• Somejobs,likefiremen,onlyhaveagovernmentemployer,sothatisaclassicexampleofamonopsony.

• Inpractise,manyworkershavelittlebargainingpowerbecauseitisdifficulttomovejobs.

3.Nationalminimumwageandelasticityofdemandandsupply

• Ifdemandforlabourisinelastic,anationalminimumwagewouldcauselittle,ifany,fallindemandforlabour.

• Forexample,ifwagesincreaseforthewholeservicesectorindustry,theycanpassthewagecostsontoconsumers.

• Inthiscase,aNMWonlycausesaverysmallfallindemandforlabour,fromQ1toQ2.

Page 41: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

41

4.Caseforregionalminimumwages

• AminimumwagemaybeinsufficienttoprovidealivingwageinLondonbecauseofhigherlivingcosts.

• But,inWales,aUKnationalminimumwagemaypotentiallybesignificantlyhigherthancurrentwagelevels.

• Thiswillsignificantlyincreasethewagesofthelow-paid,butalsocouldcauseunemploymentbecauseemployersmaybeunabletoaffordthehigherwages.

5.Doesaminimumwagereducepoverty?

• Aminimumwageincreasestheincomeoflowpaidworkers.• However,theimpactonrelativepovertyisnotclearcut.Thepoorest

sectionsofsocietytendtobeoutofworkandreceivinggovernmentbenefits.Theyarenotaffectedbyanationalminimumwage.

• Also,manywhogetthenationalminimumwagemaybesecondincomeearnersinafamilysotheimpactonreducingpovertyislimited.

FlexiblelabourmarketsFlexiblelabourmarketsarecharacterisedby:

• Wagessetbymarketforces–supplyanddemand• Lowlevelsofregulation• Mobilityofworkers• Easyforfirmstoemployworkers,andeasyforworkerstoswitchjobs

FactorsthathaveincreasedlabourmarketflexibilityintheUK

• Growthinpart-time/temporarycontracts.Thismeansfirmscanemployworkersforthetimeperiodneeded.

• Growthinzerohourcontracts.Thismeanspeopleareemployed,butthefirmisundernoguaranteetoofferafixednumberofhours.Thismeansweeklywagescanfluctuatesignificantly.

• Declineintradeunionsandcollectivebargaining.Thisgivesfirmsmorepowerindeterminingwages.

• Increaseinself-employment.Self-employmentmeansworkersneedtocontinuallygainbusinessinordertogainincome.Thismakesself-employedworkersmoresensitivetochangesinthemarket.

• MigrationofworkersfromEurope.WiththeexpansionoftheEuropeanUnion,manyEasternEuropeanworkershavecometotheUKtofilljobvacancies,oftenjobswhicharenoteasytofill.

• Changesinwelfarebenefits.Thegovernmenthasmadeitharderforworkerstogetbenefits,suchasunemploymentbenefitanddisabilitybenefits.Thishashadanimpactonincreasingthesupplyoflabour.

Page 42: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

42

Impact of flexible labour markets • Unemploymentfellquicklyafterthe2008recession.Firmsweremore

willingtotakeonnewworkers.Thissuggestsflexiblelabourmarketsmayenablealowerrateofunemployment

• Therehasbeenadegreeofunder-employment,withpeopleworkingfewerhoursthantheywouldlikeinpart-timework.Thismeanslowerincomeformanypart-timeworkers.

• Greaterjobinsecurity.Peoplehavework,buttherearefewerguaranteesthejobwilllast.Thisgreaterjobinsecuritycouldhavenegativeeffects,suchaspeoplebecomingde-motivatedbecausetheyhavelittleattachmenttothefirm.Butitcouldalsoencourageworkerstotryhardertoretaintheirjob.

• Aflexiblelabourmarketcouldbenefitworkerswhoneedtojugglelookingafterchildrenandworkingfromhome.

• Aflexiblelabourmarketcanbenefitthosewhohavetheskillstogainanincomefromnewtechnology,suchastheinternet.However,aflexiblelabourmarketcouldbedamagingtounskilledworkers,whofindithardtogetlong-termjobsecurity.

Government policies to increase labour market flexibility

• Reduceminimumwages.Firmscanpaylowerwages,butitwouldincreaseinequalityandrelativepoverty.

• Makeiteasiertohireandfireworkers.Ifitischeapertohireandfireworkers,firmsmaybemorewillingtoemploypeopleinthefirstplace,butitcanleadtogreaterjobinsecurity.

• Bettereducationandtraining.Trainingschemeswouldgiveworkersmoreskillstobeabletoacceptnewjob.Awelltrainedworkforcewouldreduceoccupationalimmobility.Educationandtrainingisagoodpolicyintheory,butcanbehardtoimplementinpractise;itwoulddefinitelytaketimetohaveaneffect.

• Encourageimmigration.Immigrantscouldtakejobswheretherearelabourshortages,butimmigrationcancreatenewproblems,suchashousingshortagesandcongestion.

• Reduceincometaxrates,e.g.increasingincometaxthreshold.Thiswouldencourageworkerstomoveintotheworkforce,andmakingbenefitsrelativelylessattractive.

• Reducepoweroftradeunions.Ifgovernmentsmakeitdifficultforunionstogoonstrike,thereislesspotentialforworkersdisruptingwagesettlements.Itmayalsoleadtofirmsgainingmonopsonypowerandsettinglowwages.

Page 43: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

43

ImpactofnetmigrationonUKlabourmarketsInrecentyears,therehasbeenanetinflowofworkersintotheUK.Theeffectofthisnetmigrationincludes:

• Increaseinsupplyoflabour.Theincreasedsupplyoflabourhasoftenfilledgapsinjobswhichfirmshavefounddifficulttofill,e.g.cleaningandfruitpicking.

• Increaseindemandforlabour.Migrantsincreasethepopulationandthereforeincreaseoveralldemandintheeconomy.

• Firstly,migrationcausesanincreaseinlaboursupply.• But,alsointhelong-term,ahigherpopulationshouldincreasedemandfor

labour.• Inthisdiagram,wageswillstayatQ1andquantityoflabourincreasesfromQ1

toQ3.

Evaluationofnetmigration• Skilledlabour.Thegovernmenthassetcriteria,makingiteasierfor

skilledlabourtomigrate.Thishasmeantmigrationhasplayedanimportantroleinfillingvacanciessuchasnursesanddoctors.

• Offsettheimpactofanageingpopulation.TheUKhasanageingpopulation,whichplacesgreaterstrainongovernmentfinances(oldpay,lesstaxandneedmorepensionsandhealthcarespending).Netmigration

Page 44: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

44

ofyoungworkershelpsthegovernment’sbudgetsituation,becausetheyaremorelikelytopayincometaxanddon’treceivepensions.

• Migrantscanreturntocountryoforigin.Inaperiodofrisingunemployment,migrantsoftenreturnhome.Thus,migrationcanbeacounter-cyclicalfactorinmakingUKlabourmarketsmoreflexible.

• Inrecentyears,manyforeignworkershavebeenattractedintotheUK.

Immigrationaccountedfor46%ofnetpopulationgrowthin2008.

Problems of net migration • Overcrowding.TheUKexperiencesovercrowding,especiallyinpartslike

thesouth-east.Migrationandariseinthepopulationplacesgreaterstrainonalreadylimitedhousingstockandpublicamenities.

• Undergroundeconomy.Migrantsaremorelikelytoworkintheblackmarket,avoidingregulationslikeminimumwages.

o However,thereisabigdifferencebetweenillegalimmigrationandlegalmigration.

• Unemployment.Somepeoplefeelmigrantstakeexistingjobsfromnativeworkersbecausetheyarewillingtoacceptlowerwages.

o However,itshouldberememberedmigrationalsocreatesjobs,throughtheadditionaldemandintheeconomy.

Page 45: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

45

How resources are allocated in a free market Inafreemarket,pricesandprofitactassignalstoagents.Thisinfluencestheallocationofresources.

Rationing effect • Ifthereisashortageofthegood,thepricewilltendtoincrease.• Thehigherpricecausesmovementalongthedemandcurve.Lessis

demandedatthehigherprice.Thishelpstorationthescarcedemand.

Higherpriceactsasadisincentivetobuy,rationingdemand.

Incentive effect • Iftherewasincreaseddemandforanewgood(likephoneapps),this

wouldpushuptheprice.• Thishigherpricemakesthegoodmoreprofitable.Therefore,inthelong

run,itactsasanincentiveforproducerstoincreaseproduction.

Page 46: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

46

• Inthelongterm,firmsrespondtohigherprices(andmoreprofit)by

increasingsupply.• Thisisanexampleofhowmarketscanrespondtochangingconditions.• Forexample,therisingdemandformobilephoneshasledtosignificant

increaseinsupply.

Signalling Thepricemechanismcanprovideasignaltofirmsandconsumers.

• Ifweseehigherdemand,priceswillriseandthiscreatesasignaltoproducersthatthereishighdemand.

• Ahighwageforcertaintypesofworkcansignaltoworkersthatfirmsneedtofillthesejobs.

Inter-related markets Deriveddemand.Thisoccurswhenthedemandforagooddependsondemandforanotherproduct/service.

• Forexample,thedemandfortrainsdependsonthedemandforgettingtowork.Iftherewasariseinunemploymentandlesspeopleworking,demandfortravelwouldfall.

Compositedemand.Thisoccurswhenagoodhasmultipledifferentuses.Risingdemandforoneuserationstheavailabilityforuseofanyotherpurpose.

• Forexample,demandforwheatcouldbeduetotheuseofwheatineitherbreadorasabiofuel.

Page 47: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

47

• Ifthereishigherdemandtousewheatasabiofuel,thiswillaffectthepriceofbread.Withmoredemandforbiofuels,thepriceofwheatwillrisecausingthepriceofwheatforbreadtoalsoincrease.

• Otherexamplesofcompositedemandinclude:• Land-usedforeitherofficesorforbuildinghouses.• Steel-couldbeusedforbuildinggunsoritcouldbeusedforbuilding

bicycles.

Jointdemand.Thisoccurswhentwogoodsarecomplementaryandneededtogether.

• Forexample,ifyoubuyaprinter,youneedtobuyprintinginktoo.• Therefore,higherdemandforhomeprinterswillleadtohigherdemand

forinkcartridges.Otherexamplesofjointdemandinclude:o iPhoneandiPhoneAppso Cameraandmemorystick

Rational behaviour Ineconomics,weusuallyassumefirmsandconsumersarerational.

Thismeansthattheytrytomaximisetheireconomicwelfareandmakedecisionstoenablethis.

• Consumerstrytoplaceavalueonagooddependingonhowmuchtheyenjoythegood/service.Theymaygivethisutilityamonetaryvaluelike£10.

• Weassumeconsumerswishtomaximisetheirutility.Forexample,theywillspendmoneyongoodsonlyiftheybelievetheutilitygainedisgreaterorequaltothecost.

• Thefirstchocolatebarmaygivehighutility,andconsumersarewillingtopay50p.However,thesecondchocolatebarhasalowermarginalutility–youmightfeelsickifyoueattoomany.

Are consumers rational? • Itcanbedifficultforconsumerstoevaluatetheactualutilitytheygetfrom

agood.• Consumersmaynothavethetimetoworkoutthemarginalutility.• Insteadtheymayuse‘rulesofthumb’orbuyaccordingtoprevious

spendingpatterns.• Consumersarenotalwaysrational,butcanbeinfluencedbyfactors,such

asadvertisingandimpulsebuying.• Consumersmayhavepoorinformationorlackthetimetoworkoutthe

bestprice/utility.Inthiscaseconsumersmaymakeuseofhabitbuyingorrulesofthumbtogetthebestestimation.

• Consumerscanbepronetoirrationalexuberance.Forexample,inaperiodofrisinghouseprices,peoplemaythinkthisisagoodonewaybet,sotheybuyhouseshopingpriceswillkeeprising.

Page 48: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

48

Market Failure Marketfailureoccurswhenthereisaninefficientallocationofresourcesinafreemarket.Marketfailureimpliesthereisadeclineinproducers/consumersurplusandanetwelfareloss.

Marketfailurecanoccurforvariousreasons.

• Externalities–acostorbenefitimposedonathirdparty,leadingtounder-orover-consumption.

• Informationasymmetries–lackofcompleteknowledgebyoneparty.E.g.peoplemayunder-estimatethebenefitsofeducation(meritgood)orunderestimatethecostsofsmoking(demeritgood).

• Monopoly–Whenafirmhasmarketpowerandcansethigherprices.Monopoliesmayalsobemoreinefficientbecausetheyfacelesscompetitivepressures.

• Immobilities–Geographicalimmobilitiesoccurwhenitisdifficultforpeopleorfirmstomovetoanotherarea.E.g.unemployedcoalminersinYorkshirefinditdifficulttomovetoLondonbecauseofhousingcosts.Occupationalimmobilitiesoccurwhenitisdifficultforpeopletoretrainandgetskillsinnewhigh-techindustries.

• Publicgoods–Goodsthatarenon-rivalandnon-excludable.Theytendtobeunder-providedornotprovidedinafree-market.Examplesincludelawandorder,nationaldefenceandstreetlighting.

• Meritanddemeritgoods–Goodswherewemakedecisionsbasedonpoorinformation.

• Volatileprices–Inagriculturalmarkets,pricescanbevolatilecausingproblemsforconsumersandfarmers.

• Incomeinequality–inafreemarket,therecouldbewidespreadinequalitywithsomeunabletoaffordimportantservices.

ExternalitiesandsocialefficiencySocialbenefit

• Socialbenefitisthetotalbenefittosociety.• Socialbenefit=privatebenefit+externalbenefits.• Socialmarginalbenefit(SMB)=theadditionalbenefittosocietyof

producinganextraunit.• SMB=PMB(privatemarginalbenefit)+XMB(externalmarginalbenefit)

Socialcost

• Socialcostisthetotalcosttosociety.• SocialCost=privatecost+externalcosts.• Socialmarginalcost(SMC)=privatemarginalcost(PMC)+external

marginalcost(XMC)

Page 49: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

49

NegativeexternalityAnegativeexternalityoccurswhenthereisacostimposedonathirdparty.

• Forexample,ifafirmproduceschemicals,theexternalcostisthepollutionthatcausesdamagetotheriverandthelostearningsforfishermen.

• Ifyoudriveintoatowncentre,thenegativeexternalityisthecongestionandpollutionthataffectsotherpeopleinthetown.

• Withanegativeexternality,thesocialmarginalcostisgreaterthantheprivatemarginalcost.

Inafreemarket,theequilibriumwillbeatQ1,P1,wheresupply(S)=demand(D).

• However,atQ1,theSMCisgreaterthanthePMC.• Q1issociallyinefficientbecausetheSMCisgreaterthantheSMB–this

illustratesanareaofdeadweightwelfareloss.• Inthisexample,thereisoverconsumptionofthegoodwithnegative

externalities.• ThesociallyefficientlevelofoutputwouldbeatQ2,whereSMC=SMB.

Diagram:negativeexternalityofproduction

Page 50: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

50

Negative consumption externality Negativeexternalitiescanalsooccurinconsumption.

• Forexample,ifwedriveinefficientpetrolcars,theconsumptionofpetrolcausesexcessCO2emissionsandpollution.Thisisacosttotherestofsociety.Otherpeoplewillexperiencepollutionandperhapsillhealthbecauseofourdecisiontodrive.

• Ifwedrinkalcoholtoexcess,wemayturnuplatetoworkonMondaymorning,leadingtolowerproductivityandlowereconomicgrowth.

• Withanegativeconsumptionexternality,thesocialmarginalbenefitislessthanyourprivatemarginalbenefit.

• Inafreemarket,theequilibriumwillbeatQ1(D=S).• But,thesociallyefficientlevelisatQ2(whereSMB=SMC).• Therefore,inafreemarket,thereisoverconsumptionofthisgoodwitha

negativeexternality.

Page 51: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

51

PositiveexternalityApositiveexternalityinconsumptionoccurswhenthereisabenefittoathirdpartyfromyourconsumption.

• Forexample,ifyoucycletowork(ratherthandrive),otherpeoplebenefitfromreducedcongestionandpollution.

Diagramofpositiveexternalityinconsumption

Inafreemarket,theequilibriumwillbeatQ1,P1,whereSupply(S)=Demand(D).

• However,thisissociallyinefficient.• AtQ1,theSMBisgreaterthantheSMC,leadingtoanareaofdeadweight

welfareloss.• Withapositiveexternality,thereisunder-consumption.• SocialefficiencyoccursatQ2,whereSMB=SMC.

Positiveexternalityinproduction

• Whenproducingagoodcausesabenefittoathirdparty.• Forexample,ifyoukeepbees,thenanearbyapplefarmerbenefits

becauseyourbeeshelptopollinatehisappletrees.

Page 52: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

52

Private good Aprivategoodisagoodwherethebenefitsaccruetotheindividualandothersarepreventedfromconsumingit.

• Theprivategoodisrivalrousandexcludable.Ifyoueatanapple,nooneelsecaneatit.

PublicgoodApublicgood,bycontrast,hastwocharacteristics:

• Non-rivalry.Whenagoodisconsumed,itdoesn’treducetheamountavailableforothers,e.g.streetlighting.

• Non-excludability.Thisoccurswhenitisnotpossibletoprovideagoodwithoutitbeingpossibleforotherstoenjoy,e.g.nationaldefence.

Publicgoodssufferfromthefree-riderproblem.

• Thefreeriderproblemmeansthatpeoplecanenjoythegoodswithoutpayingforit.Therefore,thereisnoincentiveforfirmstoprovidegoodsbecauseitisdifficulttochargeconsumersforusingit.

• Theconsumercanenjoyitforfree.• Publicgoodsusuallyrequirethegovernmenttoprovidethegooddirectly

andpayforitoutofgeneraltaxation.

Quasi—publicgoods.

Somegoodshavepartofthecharacteristicsofpublicgoods,e.groadsaretoanextentnon-rivalrousandnon-excludable,butnotcompletely,e.g.iftoomanypeopleuseroads,itcausescongestion.Somepeoplearenotqualifiedtodrive.

• Somepublicgoodscanbeprovidedbythefreemarket.Forexample,someonemayprovideabeautifulgardenandnotmindifpeopleenjoyitforfree.

Examtip:Becareful-notallgoodsprovidedbythepublicsector(government)arepublicgoods.

• Forexample,theNHSisprovidedbythepublicsector(government).But,itisnotapublicgood,becauseresourcesarelimited(waitinglists)–sothereisrivalryandexcludability.Ifyouseeadoctor,nooneelsecanhaveanappointmentatthatsametime.

• TheNHSwouldbeconsideredameritgood–peoplemayunderestimatethebenefitsofgettingvaccinationsandahealthyworkforcehaspositiveexternalities.

Page 53: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

53

Informationgaps• Symmetricinformationmeansbothpartiessharethesameknowledge.

Forexample,ifyougotoamarket,youcanseethepriceofapplesandalsolookattheirquality.

• Asymmetricinformationoccurswhenonepartyhasmoreinformationthanotherparties.Forexample,ifsellingacar,acardealermayknowitisafaultyenginethatwon’tlast.But,asaconsumer,youmaynotknowthis.

Problem of asymmetric information • Peoplemaybereluctanttobuysecondhandcarsiftheydon’ttrustwhat

theyarebuying.Thisleadstolowerpricesforallsecondhandcars.• Peoplemakethe‘wrong’decisionsandreducetheireconomicwelfare.

MeritgoodAmeritgoodoccurswherepeoplemayunderestimateorbeunawareofthebenefitsofconsumingagood.

• Forexample,studentsmayunderestimatethebenefitsofstudyingandthereforeleaveschoolearly.Orpeoplemaybereluctanttogetavaccinationfromdiseases.

• Meritgoodsoftenhaveapositiveexternalityaswell.• Meritgoodsareunder-consumedinafreemarket.

DemeritgoodAdemeritgoodoccurswherepeopleunder-estimateorignorethecostsofconsumingagood.

• Forexample,peoplemaynotbeawareofthedangersofsmoking–ortheymaybeaware,butchoosetoignorethem.

• Demeritgoodsoftenhavenegativeexternalitiesaswell(e.g.passivesmokingeffecttoothers).

• Demeritgoodsareover-consumedinafreemarket.

Page 54: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

54

Government intervention to correct market failure

Tax• Taxshiftsthesupplycurvetotheleftandmakesthegoodmoreexpensive.

Thiswillreducedemand.• Thegovernmentcanusetaxfordemeritgoodsandgoodswithnegative

externalities.

Specific tax

Aspecifictaxplacesacertainperunittaxonthegood.Itisthesamewhatevertheprice,forexample,tobaccodutyoralcoholexciseduty.

Inthiscasethespecifictaxis£15,anditreducesthequantityfromQ1toQ2.Thepricerisesfrom£52to£60.

Page 55: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

55

Ad valorem tax

Anadvaloremtaxplacesacertainpercentageonthegood.Forexample,VATintheUKis20%.Thehigherthepriceofthegood,themoretaxispaid.

Tax to overcome market failure • Theidealtaxwouldbeequaltotheexternalmarginalcost.• Thismakesconsumerspaythefullsocialmarginalcost.

TaxshiftsthesupplycurvetoS2andreducesdemandtoQ2,whichisthesociallyefficientlevel(SMC=SMB).

Page 56: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

56

Advantages of taxes • Raisesrevenueforthegovernmenttospendonalternatives.• Internalisestheexternality(taxmakespeoplepaythefullsocialcost).• Createsincentivesinthelong-termtoencouragefirmstoreducepollution

orprovidealternatives.• Taxcanalsoalterconsumerbehaviourinthelong-term.Forexample,

higherpetroltaxmayencourageconsumerstobuyabicycletoavoidfuelduties.

Evaluation of taxes • Ifdemandisveryinelastic,taxwillonlyhaveaminimaleffectinreducing

demand.Thismayoccuriftherearenoalternativestothegood,e.g.petrol,tobacco.

• Hightaxesmayencouragetaxevasion,e.g.cigarettetaxencouragescigarettestobesmuggledontheblackmarket.Ataxonrubbishmayencouragefly-tipping.

• Highspecifictaxeswillberegressive.Theytakeahigherpercentageofincomefromthepoorthanhigh-incomeearners.

• Theremaybeadministrationcostsinimplementingnewtaxes,e.g.itwouldbedifficulttoimplementacongestionchargefordrivingintosmallcities,likeOxfordorCambridge.

• Itcanbedifficulttomeasuretheexternalcostandhowmuchtaxshouldbeincreased.

• Electronicroadpricingisawaytotryandplaceataxequaltotheexternalcostofdriving,e.g.ifyoudriveincitycentresandpeaktimes,thecostsofcongestionarefargreaterthandrivinginoff-peaktimes.

Subsidy• Asubsidymeansthegovernmentpaysapartofthecostofagood.For

everygoodsold,thegovernmentwillgivefirmsaproportionofthecost.• Theaimofsubsidiesistoencourageconsumptionofgoodswhichare

underprovided/under-consumedinafreemarket.• Asubsidyshiftssupplytotherightandreducestheprice.

Page 57: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

57

Inthiscase,thesubsidyis£10perunit.ThesubsidyincreasesQfrom90to98.

• Thetotalcosttothegovernmentis98×10=£980.

Whysubsidisegoods?

1. Goodsthathavepositiveexternalities(benefitstootherpeople)aresubsidisedtocreatemoresocialefficiency.

a. Forexample,takingthetraintoworkhelpsreducecongestion.Thegovernmentmaywishtomaketrainscheaper,andthereforereducetrafficcongestion.

2. Tomakeimportantpublicservicesavailabletothoseonlowincome,e.g.peoplemaynotbeabletoafforddentaltreatmentwithoutsubsidiesfromthegovernment.

Page 58: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

58

Subsidy to overcome market failure

• Inthisexample,thefreemarketequilibriumisatQ1,P1(S=D).• AsubsidyofP0-P2shiftsthesupplycurvetoS2andreducespricetoP2.

Atthisprice,thequantitydemandedisQ2.• ThisisasociallyefficientlevelbecauseatQ2,SMB=SMC.

Evaluation of subsidies • Costtothegovernment.Subsidieswillbeexpensiveandwillrequire

highertaxesonothergoods.• Elasticity.Ifdemandisinelastic,asubsidywillbeineffectivein

increasingdemand.Forexample,asubsidyontraintravelmaybeineffectiveifitisapoorsubstitutetodrivingacar.

• Effectofsubsidyonfirm.Afirmthatreceivesasubsidyismorelikelytobeinefficient,astheybecomereliantonthegovernmentsubsidy.Subsidiesmaykeepinefficientfirmsinbusiness.

• Theremaybegovernmentfailure,e.g.thegovernmenthaspoorinformationaboutwhotosubsidise.

• Combinationofpolicies.Subsidiesmaybemosteffectiveifcombinedwithotherpolicies,e.g.taxondrivingandusingmoneytoprovidealternativestodrivingintotown,e.g.cheaperbuses.

Page 59: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

59

MaximumpricesAmaximumpriceoccurswhenthegovernmentsetsapricelimitandpreventspricesfromrisingabovethatlevel.

Forexample,ifrentingahouseinLondonis£120aweek,thegovernmentmaydecidetohaveamaximumpriceofrentingof£100aweektomakehousingmoreaffordable.

ProblemofmaximumpricesTheproblemofamaximumpriceisthatifthepriceissetbelowtheequilibrium,wegetashortage.AtMaxPrice,demandisgreaterthansupply(Q3-Q1).Thisleadstowaitinglistsandencouragesablackmarket.

• Theextentoftheshortagedependsontheelasticityofdemandandsupply.Ifsupplyisinelastic,therewillbelittlereductioninavailability.

• Note:Ifthemaximumpricewasplacedabovetheequilibrium,itwouldhavenoeffect.

Page 60: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

60

Minimumprices• Aminimumpriceoccurswhenthegovernmentsetsapricefloor,and

doesn’tallowpricestogobelowthatlevel.• Withminimumprices,thegovernmentmaybecommittedtobuyingthe

surplus.

Theproblemofaminimumpriceisthatwegetasurplus.AtMinprice,supplyisgreaterthandemand(Q3-Q1).TomaintaintheMinprice,thegovernmenthastobuythesurplus.

• Note:Aminimumpricebelowtheequilibriumwouldhavenoeffect.

TradeablepollutionpermitsTheseinvolvegivingfirmsalegalrighttopolluteacertainamount,e.g.100unitsofcarbondioxideperyear.

• Ifthefirmproduceslesspollution,itcansellitspermitstootherfirms.• However,ifitproducesmorepollution,ithastobuypermitsfromother

firms.• Therewillbeamarketforpollutionpermits.Iffirmspollutealot,there

willbelowsupplyandhighdemand;thereforethepricewillbehighforpermits.

• Therefore,thereisafinancialincentiveforfirmstocutpollution.

Page 61: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

61

Problems of Tradeable Permits • Difficulttoknowhowmanypermitstogiveinthefirstinstance.• Itmaybedifficulttoaccuratelymeasurepollutionlevels.Thereisan

incentiveforfirmstohidepollution.• Inmostmarkets,itrequiresglobalco-operationtomakeiteffective,

otherwisetheindustrywillmovetocountrieswithlowerenvironmentallegislation.Also,pollutionisverymuchaglobalproblemrequiringglobalsolutions.

• Highadministrationcostsofmeasuringpollutionandenforcingpermits.

StateprovisionofpublicservicesForsomemeritgoodsandpublicgoods,themostefficientsolutionformarketfailureisforthegovernmenttoprovideservicesdirectly.

Forexample,thegovernmentcouldsubsidiseprivatedoctorstotreatpeople,butthereareadvantagestothegovernmentpayingforanationalhealthservicedirectly:

• Itensureseveryonehasaccesstothisimportantmeritgoodandprovidesgreaterequalityinsociety.

• Anationalhealthservicemaybeabletobenefitfromeconomiesofscale,leadingtoloweraveragecoststhansmallindependenthospitals.

• Forserviceslikehealthandeducation,workersdonotneedthesameprofitmotiveofaprivatemanufacturingfirm.Therefore,thereislesslikelytobegovernmentfailureduetoalackofincentives.

• Publicgoodslikelawandordermaynotbeprovidedatallinafreemarket.

Advantages of the private sector providing public services 1. Increaseddemandsarebeingplacedonthepublicsectordueto

demographicchanges.Ifmorepeoplewentprivate,thiswouldenabletheNationalHealthServicestohaveshorterwaitinglists.

2. Providesconsumerswithmorechoice.3. IflesspeopleusetheNHS,itwouldenablethegovernmenttolowertaxes

andreduceborrowing.4. Theprivatesectorhasaprofitincentivetocutcostsandprovideamore

efficientservice,e.g.publicbodiesmayhaveover-staffingbecauseofpoliticalfearsaboutjobcuts.

5. PossiblediseconomiesofscaleintheNationalHealthService.

Disadvantages of the private sector 1. Itisdifficulttointroduceaprofitmotiveintopublicservicessuchas

healthcare;forexample,itisnotpracticaltogiveperformancerelatedpaytonurses/doctors.Also,theprivatesectormaycutcostsbyreducingthequalityofservice,e.g.cuttingbackoncleaning.

Page 62: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

62

2. Mayincreaseinequality.Peopleonlowincomescannotaffordprivatehealth.

3. Healthisameritgoodandwillbeunderprovidedinafreemarket.Thereforethereisajustificationforgovernmentsubsidy.

Advertising/InformationThegovernmentmayseektoovercomemarketfailurethroughprovidinginformationaboutcertaingoods.

• Forexample,thegovernmentmayruncampaignstowarnaboutthehealthdangersoftobaccoandalcohol.Thesearedemeritgoods,wherepeoplemaynotknowthecostsofconsumption.

• Providinginformationcanhelpovercomeinformationasymmetries.

Evaluation

• Governmentadvertisingcampaignswillcostmoneyandrequirehighertaxes.

• Thereisnoguaranteepeoplewilllistenortakenoteofgovernmentcampaigns.Youngpeoplemaychoosetoignorecampaignsaboutthedangersofalcoholbecausetheyenjoyasenseofrebelliousness.

• However,overtime,peoplehavebecomeawareofthedangersoftobaccoandlong-termsmokingrateshavebeenfalling.

RegulationToovercomemarketfailure,thegovernmentmayuselawsandregulationstoprohibitcertainbehaviour.

• Forexample,ratherthantryandtaxcocainetomakepeoplepaythefullsocialcost,theymayjustprohibititsproductionandconsumption.

• Alternatively,thegovernmentmaybancertainchemicalsbecausetheyaretoodangerous.

Evaluation

• Regulationissimpleandcanbeeffectiveinpreventingdamaginggoodsandservicesfrombeingproduced.However,sometimesnopollutionisnotthemostefficientlevelofproductioninsociety.Carscreatenegativeexternalities,butitisnotdesirabletobancarscompletely.

• Itdependsontheenforceability.Forexample,whentheUSprohibitedalcohol,itwasveryhardtoenforce.Peoplekeptdrinkingbutorganisedcrimebecamemorepowerfulandmoresuccessfulbecauseillegalalcoholwasinhighdemand.

Page 63: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

63

PoliciesofWelshgovernment

Free NHS prescriptions • NHSprescriptionscouldbeconsideredtobeameritgood.Peoplemay

underestimatethebenefitsoftakingaprescriptiondrug.• Iftheyhavetopay,theymaybeunableorunwillingtotake.Free

prescriptions,whichhavebeenintroducedinWaleshelpsovercomethismarketfailure.

• Freeprescriptionsalsomakessureeverybodycanaffordtogetnecessaryhealthcare,andcanhelpreduceinequality.

• However,demandforprescriptionsislikelytobeveryinelasticbecausemostpeoplewouldpaytogetbetterhealth.

• Thereisanopportunitycostofofferingfreeprescriptions.Itwillrequirehighertaxesorlowergovernmentspendinginotherareas.

• Freeprescriptionswillgotoeveryone,includingthequitewealthy,whocouldeasilyafforditanyway.

Charging for plastic bags • Since2011,thereisacompulsorychargeof5pperplasticbag/paperbag.• Whenplasticbagsarefree,consumersuselargequantities,wasting

resources.Chargingforplasticbagsencouragespeopletoreusetheirbagsandcutdownonwastedresources.

• Aplasticbagalsohasnegativeexternalities.Theycauselitter,useupvaluableresourcesandcantakealongtimetodegrade.Bycharging5p,consumersaremadetopaythefullsocialcostoftheplasticbag.

• Thedownsideistheadministrationcostsinchargingforbags.But,makingituniversalmeansshopperscometoexpectthecost.

Policies to reduce inequality • WithinWalesthereissignificantincomeinequalitybetweendifferent

regions.SomeareaslikeCardiffaremoreprosperousthanvalleyregionsinthesouthandareasinthenorthofWales.

• ThereisahighlevelofunemploymentinthesouthWalesformerminingcommunities,whichhavestruggledtoadapttochangeineconomicactivity.

• Inruralareasinthenorth,lowpaidworkismoreofaproblem,withmanyreceivingin-workbenefits.

• Policiestoovercomepovertyincludetaxandbenefitsystem(setforwholeUK,notdevolvedtoWelshgovernment).

• Policiestoattractnewinvestmentandrealignmentoftheeconomy.Forexamplegrantstodepressedareastohelppromoteeconomicdevelopmentanddiversificationintonewindustriesandeconomicsectors,suchastourismandtheservicesector.

• But,onlysomuchthegovernmentcandotoreducepoverty,e.g.privatesectordeterminingwagesandde-industrialisationishardtoreverse.

Page 64: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

64

Government failure Governmentfailureoccurswhengovernmentinterventionintheeconomycausesanetwelfareloss.Peoplealsorefertogovernmentfailurewheneffortstoovercomemarketfailuredonotsucceed.

Causes of government failure 1.Lackofincentivesworkingforthegovernment.Governmentbodiesdonothavethesameprofitmotivesofprivatecompanies.Thereforemanagersandworkersmayfeelnoincentivetoworkhardorcutcosts.Theresultcanbegovernmentagenciesthatareinefficient,withhighercostsandnotproducingwhatpeopleneed.

• Tosomeextent,thiscanbeovercomebyrewardinggovernmentworkerswithperformancetargets.

• Incentivesmaybelessimportantinserviceslikehealthcare,wheredoctorsvaluepatienthealth.

2.Unintendedconsequences.Oftengovernmentinterventiontriestosolveoneproblem,butanotherproblemiscreated.Forexample:

• Minimumpricesinagriculturewereanattempttostabilisefarmers’incomes.However,theunintendedconsequenceofguaranteedminimumpriceswasthatitencouragedover-production.Farmersusedchemicalstomaximiseyields–knowingthegovernmentwouldbuyanysurplus.Thisprovedexpensiveandinefficient.

• Byincreasingtaxesontobacco,thegovernmentmadeitmoreprofitableforpeopletosmugglecigarettesfromEurope.

• Amaximumpriceonrentingpropertycouldleadtoadeclineinavailablehousingforrenting–worseningthehousingcrisisratherthanhelping.

• Higherincometaxmaydiscouragepeoplefromworking.

3.Lackofinformation.Governmentbodiescansufferfromalackofknowledgeabouthowtointervene,justaswecangetalackofinformationinafreemarket.

• Forexample,itcanbedifficultforagovernmentbodytocalculatethenetexternalcostsofanewairportornuclearpower.

• Governmentsmayfailtopredictfuturetrends,e.g.theimpactofminimumpricesonincentivesinthelong-term.

4.Administrationcosts.Anygovernmentinterventionislikelytohavesomeadministrationcostsandbureaucracy.

• Forexample,settingupacongestionchargeforsmallcitiescouldbedifficultbecausethecostsofadministeringtheschemewillberelativelyhigh.Withsomenewtaxes,thecostofbureaucracymaybeclosetotherevenuegained.

Page 65: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

65

Unit 2 The UK Economy

Circular flow of income Thecircularflowofincomeisabasicmodeloftheeconomy.Inthecircularflowofincome:

• Moneyflowsfromhouseholdstofirms(tobuygoods).• Thenfirmspayhouseholdswagestoproducegoods.

Moneycanflowoutofthecircularflowofincometoabroadortogovernment.

ThecircularflowofincomeshowsthreewaystocalculateGDP(GrossDomesticProduct).

Three methods of calculating GDP 1. Totalnationalincome(wages,dividends,profit)2. Totalnationalexpenditure(consumptionandinvestment)3. Totalnationaloutput(valueofgoodsandservicesproduced)

Page 66: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

66

InjectionsThisisanincreaseofexpenditureintothecircularflowofincome,leadingtoanincreaseinaggregatedemand(AD).Injectionscaninclude:

1. Exports(X)–spendingfromabroadondomesticgoods.2. Governmentspending(G).3. Investment(I)–spendingoncapitalgoodsbyfirms.

Withdrawals(W)(leakages)Withdrawalsareareductionofmoneyinthecircularflow.Withdrawalscaninclude:

• Saving(S)–depositingmoneyinbanks.• Imports(M)–spendingonforeigngoods.• Taxation(T)–theGovernmentraisingmoneyfromconsumersandfirms.

MultipliereffectThemultipliereffectoccurswhenachangeininjectionscausesabiggerfinalchangeinrealGDP.

Forexample,ifthegovernmentincreasedG(governmentspending)by£10billion,andthisledtoanincreaseinrealGDPof£16bn,wesaythemultipliereffectis16/10=1.6.

Whydowegetamultipliereffect?

• Supposewehaveadepressedeconomywithsparecapacityandunemployedworkers.Ifthegovernmentspends£10billiononbuildingroads,theywillemployworkers.Incomeandspendingwillriseby£10bn.

• But,theunemployedwillnowhaveextramoneytospend.Theywillbuyproductsfromshops,andshopkeeperswillnowseeimprovedincomesandalsospendmore.

• Inotherwords,theinitialspendingdoesn’tjuststaywithoneperson.Thereareknockoneffects.Higherspendingleadstomoreincomeforothers,andthereforefurtherroundsofspending.

Page 67: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

67

Aggregate demand Aggregatedemand(AD)isthetotaldemandforgoodsandservicesintheeconomy.AD=C+I+G+(X-M)

• C=Consumerexpenditureongoodsandservices(60%)• I=Grosscapitalinvestment(spendingoncapitalgoods,e.g.machines)• G=Governmentspending• X=Exports • M=Imports

ShiftinADandmovementalongtheADcurve

Anincreaseinthepricelevel(P1toP2)causesmovementalongtheADcurve.

• Atahigherpricelevel,ceterisparibus,consumershavelessdisposableincome(moneytospend).

• Atahigherpricelevel,UKexportswillberelativelylesscompetitive,leadingtolowerexportdemand.

• AshiftintheADcurvewouldoccuriftherewasachangeinfactorslikerealincome;higherincomewouldshiftADtotheright.Consumerswouldbuymoreatthesamepricelevel.

Page 68: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

68

Shift in AD • Iftherewasanincreaseinincome,theADcurvewouldshifttotheright

(AD1toAD2).• ADcouldshifttotherightiftherewasariseininvestment,exportsor

governmentspending.

Consumerspending(C)ConsumerspendingisthebiggestcomponentofAD(approx.60-65%ofAD).Consumerspendingisdeterminedby:

• Disposableincome.Thisisincomeaftertaxesandbenefits.RisingrealwageswouldincreasedisposableincomeandshiftADtotheright.

• Saving.Thealternativetospendingdisposableincomeistosave.Ifincomestaysconstant,butconsumerswanttoincreasetheirsavings,thenconsumptionwillfall.

• Consumerconfidence.Ifconsumersarepessimisticaboutthefuture,theywillprefertosave,payoffdebtandreducetheircurrentspending.LowconfidencewillshiftADtotheleft.Highconfidencewillencouragespending.

• Houseprices/wealth.Risinghousepricestendtoincreaseconsumerspendingthroughapositivewealtheffect.IntheUK,manypeopleowntheirhouses.Ifhousepricesrise,theycouldgainequitywithdrawal–re-mortgagingthehouseandtakingmoneytospend.Theywillalsofeelmoreconfidentiftheirhouseisworthmore.

• Incometax/VAT.Acuttoincometaxwillincreaseconsumers’disposableincome,encouragingspending.

• Interestrates.Lowerinterestratesreducethecostofborrowingencouragingspending.Lowerratesalsomakeconsumptionmoreattractivethansavinginabank.

• Costofliving.Ifwagesstaythesame,butthecostoflivinggoesdown(e.g.afallinpetrolprices),peoplewillhavemoredisposableincomeandspendmore.(ThisfactorcausesmovementalongtheADcurve.)

InvestmentInvestmentmeansexpenditureoncapitalgoods–factorsthatincreasetheproductivecapacityoftheeconomy,e.g.machinesandfactories.

• Investmentaccountsforabout15%ofAD.• InvestmentaffectsbothADandAS.• Investmentisrelativelymorevolatileandisstronglyinfluencedby

confidenceandchangesintherateofeconomicgrowth.

Page 69: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

69

Factors that affect investment • Confidence.Ifbusinessesareoptimisticaboutfuturedemand,theywill

needtoincreaseproductivecapacityandstarttoinvestnow.Ifbusinessesfaceuncertainty,theywillcutbackonriskyinvestment.

• Animalspirits.Keynessaidinvestmentwasheavilyinfluencedbythe‘animalspirits’ofbusinessmen–didpeopleexpecttheirbusinesstogrow?Thisconfidencecanquicklychangedependingonthestateoftheeconomy.

• Interestrates.Investmentisoftenfinancedbyborrowingorusingsavings.Lowerinterestratesmakeitcheapertofinanceinvestmentandmakemoreprojectsworthwhile.

• Availabilityoffinance.Businessesmaywishtoborrowandinvest,butaccesstocreditisabigissue.Banksmaybereluctanttogiveasmallbusinessaloanbecauseitisariskyinvestment.Inthiscaseitmaydependonbusinessesfindingothersourcesofcredit,suchasthestockmarketorprivateinvestors.

• Governmentregulation.Somebusinessesmayputoffinvestmentbecauseoftheheavycostofregulation,e.g.theneedtomeetenvironmentalstandardsandlabourregulation.Ontheotherhand,governmentscouldencourageinvestmentthroughofferingregionalsubsidies.

• Economicgrowth.Akeyfactorindetermininginvestmentistherateofeconomicgrowth.ImprovementsintherateofgrowthandADwilltendtoincreaseinvestment.Alsoimportantisthedemandfromoverseasandthedemandforexports.

Governmentexpenditure(G)Governmentspendingincludestransferpayments(e.g.benefits)anddirectspending,suchascapitalinvestmentonpublicroads.

In2013/14,theUKgovernmentspentatotalof£722.9billion(44%ofGDP).Governmentspendingisinfluencedby:

• Fiscalpolicy.ThegovernmentmaychoosetousefiscalpolicytotryandinfluenceAD,e.g.inarecession,thegovernmentcouldborrowmoreandspendoncapitalinvestment,suchasbuildingnewroadsandrailways.

• Economiccycle.Inaperiodofhigheconomicgrowth,taxrevenuestendtorise;thisgivesthegovernmentmoremoneytospendonservicesliketheNHS.

• Politicalcycle.Governmentmaycutspendingafteranelectiontotryandreducebudgetdeficit,butthenincreasespendingshortlybeforeanelection.

Page 70: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

70

Nettrade(X-M)TheUK’smaintradingpartneristheEU(60%oftrade).Thoughtheproportionoftradewithdevelopingeconomies,likeChinaandIndia,isrising.

Factors that affect (X-M) • Exchangerates.Ifthereisadepreciationoftheexchangerate,exports

willbecheaperandimportsmoreexpensive.Thiswilltendtoincrease(X-M)andincreaseAD.

• Economicgrowth.IfUKgrowthisrelativelyhigherthanothercountries,wewillseeariseinimportspendingandthiswillreducenet(X-M).But,ifthereisstronggrowthinEurope,thiswillleadtohigher(X-M)andhigherAD.

• Competitiveness.IftheUKhasalowerinflationratethanourcompetitors,thenUKexportswillbecomerelativelycheaper.Improvedcompetitivenesscouldbeduetolowerwagesorhigherproductivity.

• Non-pricefactors.Inadditiontoprice,thequalityanddesirabilityofUKgoodsandserviceswillbeimportant.IfUKfirmscanproducebetterqualitygoodsandserviceswithuniquesellingpoints,demandforUKexportswillriseanddemandwillbemoreinelastic.

• Tariffsandprotectionistmeasures.Ifacountryfacedhightariffsonexports,thiswouldreducedemand.Forexample,iftheUKlefttheEU,itmayfindthattherearehighercosts/tariffsonexportstoEurope.

Aggregate supply (AS) Aggregatesupply(AS)isthetotalproductivecapacityoftheeconomy.Itisthesumofalltheindividualsupplycurvesforparticulargoods.

TheAScurveshowsmaximumpotentialoutput;thereisastrongcorrelationwithaProductionPossibilityFrontier(PPF),whichalsoshowsthemaximumpotentialofaneconomy.

Page 71: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

71

Long run aggregate supply (LRAS)

• InthediagramthereisashiftinAD.Thiscausesahigherpricelevel(P1toP2)andamovementalongtheAScurve.

• IntheshortruntherecanbesparecapacityandLRASiselastic.• But,LRASalsobecomesinelasticatY2.Thismeansthatfirmscannot

increasecapacitybeyondthispointof‘fullemployment’withoutincreasedinvestment.

FactorsaffectingLRAS

Inthelongrun,ASisdeterminedbythequantityoffactorsofproductionandtheproductivityoflabour/capital.(Labourproductivitymeansoutputperworker.)

• Population.Ariseinthenumberofworkingagepeoplewillincreasethelabourforceandincreaseproductivecapacity.Theworkingagepopulationcanbeaffectedbybirthratesandnetmigration.TheUKlabourforcehasincreasedduetonetmigrationinthepastdecade.

• Technology.Technologicalimprovementsareoneofthebiggestfactorsaffectinglabourproductivity,e.g.theInternetmakesiteasierforfirmstocheckcostsandprices.

• Investment.Iffirmsorthegovernmentinvestinincreasingthecapitalstock,wewillseehigherASinthelongrun.

• Educationandskills.Improvededucationandvocationalskillsenablesworkerstobemoreproductiveandofferhigheraddedvalue,increasingproductivecapacity.

• Infrastructure.Improvedtransportlinksreducethecostoftransportandencouragetrade;thisisimportantforboostingproductivecapacity.

Page 72: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

72

• Governmentpolicies.ThegovernmentcanaffectLRASbyitssupplysidepoliciesoneducation,competitivenessandregulation.Forexample,privatisationandderegulationmayincreaseefficiencyandcompetitivepressureinindustrieslikegasandelectricity.

o Note:Thereisalimittohowmuchthegovernmentcaninfluenceproductivecapacity.Mosttechnologicalimprovementscomefromtheprivatesector.

• Attitudestoenterprise.Astableeconomicandpoliticalclimatemayencourageentrepreneurstoinvestanddevelopbusiness.

Shift in LRAS

Ifthereisanincreaseinproductivityoranincreaseinfactorsofproduction,theLRASwillshifttotheright.ThiscancausehigherrealGDP.

Governmentsupplysidepolicies,suchasprivatisationandderegulation,couldleadtoanimprovementinproductivecapacityandshiftLRAStotheright.

SupplysidepolicieswillalsoshiftthePPFcurvetotheright.

Page 73: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

73

EquilibriumnationalincomeEquilibriumnationalincomeoccurswhereAD=AS.

• Inthisexample,thereisafallinAD,leadingtoachangeinequilibriumnationalincome.RealGDPfallsfromY1toY2,andthereisafallinthepricelevel.

Rise in AD Ifthereissparecapacityintheeconomy,thenariseinADwillleadtohigherrealGDP.

Page 74: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

74

Demandsidefactorsthatcanincreaseeconomicgrowthcouldinclude:

• Lowerinterestrates–reducingthecostofborrowingandleadingtohigherinvestmentandhigherconsumption.

• Risinghouseprice–leadingtoapositivewealtheffect,encouragingconsumerspending.

• Lowertaxes–increasingdisposableincome.• Higherconfidenceintheeconomy–encouragingspendingand

investment.

Multiplier effect on AD and GDP

• Inthiscase,wegetariseininjections(e.g.risinginvestmentlevels).• InitiallythiscausesADtoincreasetoAD2.• But,becauseofthemultipliereffectandfurtherroundsinspending,we

getanotherincreaseinADtoAD3causingabiggerfinalincreaseinrealGDP.

• Inthisexample,initially,therewasalotofsparecapacityatY1.AtY3,theeconomyisclosetofullcapacity.

Page 75: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

75

GovernmentmacroeconomicobjectivesTheprimaryeconomicobjectivesofagovernmentarelikelytobe:

1. Economicgrowth.Mostgovernmentswouldtrytomaximisesustainableeconomicgrowthtoincreaselivingstandardsandhelpcreateemployment.

2. Lowinflation.Thegovernment’sinflationtargetiscurrentlyCPI2%(+/-1).Thegovernmentwishestoavoidbothhighinflationandalsoavoidthethreatofdeflation.Problemsofinflationinclude:

o Createsinstabilityreducinginvestmento HighUKinflationreducesUKcompetitivenesso Canreducetherealvalueofsavings.o Lowinflationisconsideredbestenvironmentforencouraging

investmentandsustainableeconomicgrowth.3. Lowunemployment.Mostgovernmentswillaimforfullemployment.

Unemploymentcreateshighpersonal,socialandeconomiccosts,suchasstressandrelativepovertyfortheunemployed.Governmentsalsolosetaxrevenuefromtheunemployed.

4. Satisfactorycurrentaccount/balanceofpayments.Alargecurrentaccountdeficitcouldbeaneconomicconcern(e.g.weakexportgrowth,relianceoncapitalflows,financedeficit).Therefore,governmentsmaywishtohaveareasonablelowdeficit/surplus,

5. Lowgovernmentborrowing.Governmentsoftencommittofiscaltargetsforbothannualborrowing,andtotaldebt(publicsectornetdebt).

6. Stableexchangerate.Arapiddepreciationintheexchangeratecouldcauseinflationarypressuresandinstability.Therefore,governmentsmaypreferastableexchangerate(e.g.,afixedexchangeratesystem).

Otherminorobjectives

• Issuesofequality.Higheconomicgrowthmaybeattheexpenseofincomeinequality.Makingsuregrowthisfairlydistributedmaybeanobjectiveofsomegovernments.

• Environment.Higheconomicgrowthcouldcauseenvironmentalproblemsandissuesforlong-termsustainability.Lookingafterenvironmentmayrequiresomesacrificeintermsofeconomicgrowth.

Page 76: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

76

ConflictsbetweenobjectivesAgovernmentwillstruggletomeetallthemacro-economicobjectivesatonce.

Unemploymentvs.inflation

• Ifthegovernmentpursueddemandsidepoliciestoreduceunemployment,wecouldseeafallinunemployment,highereconomicgrowth,butalsoariseininflation.

Diagram:expansionaryfiscalpolicy

• Ifthegovernmentincreasedspending(G),wewouldseeanincreaseinAD.ThisleadstoariseinrealGDP(Y1toY2).

• Asoutputincreases,firmswillhiremoreworkers.• RealGDPrisesfromAtoB,andwegethigherinflation(P1toP2).

Theremaybeothertrade-offsaswell:

• HigherADcouldcauseabiggercurrentaccountdeficitbecauseofhigherimportspending,andhigherinflationreducingthecompetitivenessofexports.

• Expansionaryfiscalpolicy(higherG/lowertax)willleadtoabiggerbudgetdeficit.

Thetrade-offcanworkinreverse.IfwereduceAD(e.g.,higherinterestrates),wecangetlowerinflation,butwemaycauseunemployment.

Page 77: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

77

Deflationaryfiscalpolicy

FallinADleadstolowerinflation,butalsocauseslowerrealGDPandrisingunemployment.

Evaluation

• Inthelongrun,itmaybepossibletoachievehighergrowthandlowerunemployment,withoutcausinginflation.Forexample,ifADincreasesatthesamerateasLRAS,wecangeteconomicgrowthwithoutinflation.

• Ifwealsousesupplysidepolicies,wecanreducestructuralunemployment,withoutcausinganyinflation.

Other potential policy conflicts • Highereconomicgrowthmaycauseenvironmentalproblems.For

example,theoveruseofscarcelimitedresourcesactsasaconstraintonfuturelivingstandards.

• Lowerincometaxandcorporationtaxmayprovideaboosttogrowth,butmayalsoincreaseinequalitybecausehighearnersbenefitmostfromthesetaxcuts.

• Cuttingdownbenefitsmayprovideanincentivefortheunemployedtogetajob,butitmaycauseincreasedinequality.

• Policiestoreduceacurrentaccountdeficit(deflationaryfiscalpolicy)maycauselowereconomicgrowthandhigherunemployment.

Page 78: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

78

Fiscal policy Fiscalpolicyreferstochangesintaxationandgovernmentspendingandthefiscalpositionofthegovernment.

Demandsidefiscalpolicyattemptstoinfluenceaggregatedemand(AD).Theaimcouldbeto:

1. Stimulateeconomicgrowthinaperiodofarecession2. Maintainlowinflation

Supplysidefiscalpolicyattemptstoinfluenceproductivityandthesupplysideoftheeconomy,e.g.spendingoneducationtoimprovelabourproductivity.

Expansionary fiscal policy (loose fiscal policy) Thisinvolveslowertaxratesand/orhighergovernmentspending,withtheaimtoincreaseAD.

Effectofexpansionaryfiscalpolicy

• ExpansionaryfiscalpolicywillincreaseADandincreasethesizeofthebudgetdeficit.Itmayalsocauseinflation.

Page 79: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

79

Deflationary fiscal policy (tight fiscal policy) • Thisinvolveshighertaxratesand/orlowergovernmentspending.• TheaimofdeflationaryfiscalpolicyistodecreaseADandinflation.• Deflationaryfiscalpolicywillalsoimprovethebudgetdeficit.

Evaluation of fiscal policy 1. Poorinformationmayreducetheaccuracyofforecastingfuture

economicgrowthandinflation.Therefore,thegovernmentmaybeunsurewhethertheyneedtoboostADorreduceAD.Inpractise,governmentsfinditdifficultto‘finetune’theeconomywithfiscalpolicy.

2. ItdependsonothercomponentsofAD.Forexample,ifthegovernmentcutincometaxtoincreaseAD,itmaybeineffectiveifconsumerconfidenceislowandpeoplejustsavetheextraincome.

3. Disincentivestowork.Higherincometaxtoreduceinflationcancreatedisincentivestowork,reducingproductivityandAS.

4. TimelaginvolvedininfluencingAD.IfthegovernmentwantedtoincreaseAD,theycouldcommittomoregovernmentspending.But,therewillbedelaysinactuallyimplementinghigherspending,andthendelaysinthisspendingaffectingthewidereconomy.

5. Budgetdeficits.Expansionaryfiscalpolicy(higherspending,lowertax)willincreasegovernmentborrowing.Thiscouldleadtohigherinterestratesinthelongtermorevencausemarketstoloseconfidenceindebtlevels.

6. Crowdingout.Ifthegovernmentspendmorebyborrowingfromprivatesector,itmayreducetheamountofmoneytheprivatesectorhastospend.

Page 80: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

80

ThenationaldebtNationaldebt(publicsectornetdebt)isthetotal(cumulative)amountofdebtthatthegovernmentowestheprivatesector.

• InJanuary2015,thenetdebtwas£1,483.3 billion, equating to 80%ofGDP.• UKnationaldebtasa%ofGDPpeakedaftertheFirstandSecondWorld

Wars.ItfellduringthepostwarperiodaseconomicgrowthledtohigherGDP,makingdebtasmallerpercentage.

• Netdebtasincreasedsincethefinancialcrisisof2007

Government borrowing • Thebudgetdeficitistheannualamountthegovernmentneedstoborrow

fromtheprivatesector.

Page 81: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

81

Thepreviousdiagramshowspublicsectornetborrowing(budgetdeficit)intheUK.

• In1999-00and2000-01,theUKranabudgetsurplus.Governmentspendingwaslessthantaxrevenues.

• Borrowingpeakedin2009-10becauseofthefinancialcrisisandrecession.Intherecession,taxreceiptsfellandspendingonunemploymentbenefitsrose.

• In2009/10,thegovernmentalsopursuedexpansionaryfiscalpolicy(cuttingVATratestoboostAD).

Budgetdeficit

• Thebudgetdeficitwillbethedifferencebetweengovernmentspending(G)andtaxrevenue.

• Thebudgetdeficitismeasuredthroughstats,suchasPublicSectorNetCashRequirement(PSNCR)andnetborrowing.

• Thebudgetdeficitisalsoreferredtoasnetborrowing.

Public expenditure Governmentspendingincludesallformsofspendingbycentralandlocalgovernment.Themaintypesofgovernmentspendingare:

• Capitalexpenditure.Thisisgovernmentspendingoncapitalprojectsandcreatingnewassets.Itisinvestmentthatincreasesthecapitalstockoftheeconomy.

o Thistypicallyinvolvesbuildingnewroads,railways,hospitals,andimprovingcommunication.Thiscapitalspendingcanincreasetheproductivecapacityoftheeconomyinthefuture,becauseithelpsshiftlong-runaggregatesupplytotheright.

• Currentexpenditure.Thisisgovernmentspendingonitemsthatarerecurringandonlylastsalimitedtime,e.g.spendingonpublicsectorwagesandconsumableproducts.

o Forexample,buildingaschoolwhichlasts50yearsiscapitalexpenditure.Payingteachers’wagesandpayingelectricbillsiscurrentspending.Botharenecessary.

• Transferpayments.Thesearesimplepaymentsfromthegovernmenttoindividuals.Itrepresentsaredistributionofincomeinsociety.Examplesoftransferpaymentsinclude:• Pensions• Welfarepayments,suchasunemploymentbenefitandhousingbenefit• Transferpaymentscanredistributeincome,butalsowelfarebenefits

riskcreatingdisincentivestowork.

Page 82: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

82

GovernmentspendingRealgovernmentspending—Spendinglevelsadjustedforinflation.

In2011/12,therewasasmallfallinrealgovernmentspendingduetothepolicyofausterity(cuttinggovernmentspending)

Governmentspendingasa%ofGDProsefrom2000to2009

Page 83: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

83

Impact of higher government spending Anincreaseinrealgovernmentspendingcouldimply:

• Moreinvestmentineducationandinfrastructure.Thegovernmentcanusetaxrevenuestoovercomemarketfailureinareassuchastransport,education,andhealth.Providinggoodswithpositiveexternalitiescanleadtogreatersocialefficiency.Itcanalsohelpimproveindicesofeconomicdevelopment,suchasliteracyrates.

• Redistribution.Thegovernmentcanspendmoneytoredistributeincomeamongstpeopleonlowincomes.Thiscanhelppromoteamoreequalsocietyandimproveeconomicwelfare.Countrieswiththehighestlevelsofgovernmentspending(Norway,France,UK)havethemostdevelopedwelfarestates,whichprovideasafetynetandhealthcareforthepoorermembersofsociety.

• Fiscalpolicy.Inarecession,governmentspendingmaybeeffectiveinstimulatingtheeconomy,e.g.governmentborrowingcanoffsetariseinprivatesectorsaving,andincreaseAD.

• Automaticstabilisers.Between2007and2010,theincreaseingovernmentspendingasa%ofGDPisaconsequenceoftherecession,causingafallinGDP,buthighergovernmentspendingonunemploymentandhousingbenefits.

Evaluation of higher government spending • Highertaxesmayberequiredtofundhigherspending.Higherincome

taxratescouldcreatedisincentivestowork.Highercorporationtaxcoulddiscouragefirmsfromsettingupinthatcountry,leadingtolowergrowth.

• Potentialinefficiencyofgovernmentspending.Often,governmentbodieslackaprofitincentivetobeefficient.Therefore,governmentspendingcouldbewasteful,misused,andinefficient.Ontheotherhand,itcouldovercomemarketfailure,e.g.lackofeducation.

• Efficiency.Governmentspendingcouldbecomemoreefficientthroughcompetitivetenderingandpublic-privatepartnerships,whichinvolvebothpublicandprivatesectors.Thereisnoreasongovernmentspendinghastobeinefficient.

• Crowdingout.Anincreaseinthegovernmentsectorhasanopportunitycost.Moregovernmentspendingmeansadeclineinthesizeoftheprivatesectorandareductioninprivatesectorenterprise.

• Dependsonthekindofspending.Itdependsonwhatthegovernmentisspendingthemoney:

o Spendingonwelfarebenefits(transferpayments)mayincreaseequality,butbedetrimentaltoefficiencyandproductivity.

o Spendingontransportlinks(capitalspending)canhelptheeconomybecomemoreefficientandcompetitiveinthelongterm.

Page 84: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

84

TaxationThegovernmentcollectstaxrevenuesfromavarietyofsources.Themaintypesoftaxationare:

• Directtaxation–incometax,NIcontribution.Thesetaxesaretakendirectlyfromaperson’swages.Incometaxisprogressivebecauseittakesabigger%oftaxfrompeoplewithhighincomes.

• Indirecttaxation–VAT,exciseduty.Consumerspaythesetaxesindirectly;whenagoodisbought,thefirmhastopaytheVATratetothegovernment(20%).Indirecttaxesalsoincludeexciseduty(e.g.alcohol,tobacco)andpetroltaxes.

• Progressivetaxoccurswhenthoseonhigherincomelevelspayahigher%oftheirincomeintax,e.g.theUKhasatoprateof45%onmarginalincomeover£150,000;thisisaprogressivetax.

• Regressivetaxoccurswhenanincreaseinincomeleadstoasmaller%oftheirincomegoingonthetax,e.g.excisedutiesandVATtakeabigger%oflowincomeearners.

• Indirecttaxationispaidbyfirmssellinggoods,e.g.VATisincludedinthefinalpriceconsumerspay.

Impact of increasing the rate of income tax • Higherrevenues.Higherincometaxshouldincreasetaxrevenues.

Thegovernmentcanspendmoreonpublicservicesandbenefitstoreduceinequalityandfundcapitalinvestment.

• Taxevasion.Higherincometaxmayencouragetaxevasion,e.g.higherratesofincometaxcouldencouragepeopletoworkinanother

Page 85: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

85

country.Therefore,anincreaseintaxrevenuesmaybelessthanexpected.

• Incentivestowork.Highermarginaltaxratesmayreduceincentivestoworkanddoovertime.Thesubstitutioneffectstateshigherincometaxwillmakeworkrelativelylessattractive.

• Redistribution.Higherratesofincometaxcanhelpredistributeincomefromhighearnerstolowearnersandcreatemoreequality.

• Aggregatedemand.Highertaxrateswillreducedisposableincomeandleadtolowerconsumerspending.Ceterisparibus,thiscouldleadtolowereconomicgrowthandlowerinflation.

Evaluation of higher income taxes • Disincentives?Somefearhigherincometaxratescouldcreate

disincentivestowork.Butothereconomistssuggestevidenceismixed.Thesubstitutioneffectofataxrisemaymakepeopleworkless,buttheincomeeffectencouragesthemtoworkmore(toachievetargetincome).

• Itdependshowtaxrevenueisused.Ifincometaxrevenueisinvestedinimprovedinfrastructure,itcanthebenefitlong-runproductivecapacity.Ifincometaxrevenueisneededforwelfarepayments,therewillbenoincreaseinproductivecapacity.

• Doesrevenueincrease?TheLaffercurvesuggeststherecomesapointwherehigherincometaxratesleadstoadeclineintaxrevenue,becausepeoplestopworkingiftaxistoohigh.

Page 86: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

86

Supply side policies Supplysidepoliciesaregovernmentattemptstoincreaseproductivity,maketheeconomymoreefficientandshiftaggregatesupplytotheright.Supplysidepoliciescanbeeither:

1. Interventionist-involvinggovernmentspendingtoovercomemarketfailure,e.g.buildingnewroadstoreducecongestion.

2. Marketoriented-policiestoreduceregulationandallowfreemarketstofunctionmoreefficiently,e.g.reduceminimumwages.

Supplysidepoliciescanhelptheeconomyinvariousways:

1. Lowerinflation.ShiftingAStotherightwillcausealowerpricelevel.2. Lowerunemployment.Supplysidepoliciescanhelpreducestructural,

frictionalandrealwageunemployment.3. Improvedeconomicgrowth.Supplysidepolicieswillincreaseeconomic

growthbyincreasingAS4. Improvedtradeandbalanceofpayments.Bymakingfirmsmore

competitive,theywillbeabletoexportmore.

Page 87: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

87

Examples of market oriented supply side policies 1. Privatisation.Thisinvolvessellingstateownedassetstotheprivate

sector.Itisarguedthattheprivatesectorismoreefficientinrunningbusinessesbecausetheyhaveaprofitmotivetoreducecostsanddevelopbetterservices.

2. Deregulation.Thisinvolvesreducingbarrierstoentryinordertomakethemarketmorecompetitive.Greatercompetitioncreatesincentivestoreducepricesandcosts.Forexample,UKtelecomsmarketsarenowmorecompetitiveandthishashelpedreducepricesandincreaseefficiency.

3. Reducingtaxes.Itisarguedthatlowertaxes(incomeandcorporation)increaseincentivesforpeopletoworkharder,leadingtohigheroutput.

4. Reducingstatewelfarebenefits.Lowerunemploymentbenefitsmaycreateabiggerincentiveforpeopletolookforworkandstayoffbenefits

5. Reducedbureaucracyforfirms.Ifrulesandregulationsareremovedthenfirmswillhavelowercostsandbemoreproductive.

6. Labourmarketreforms.SomeeconomistsarguethatmanyEuropeanlabourmarketsaretooheavilyregulated.Forexample,removinglawsabouthiringandfiringworkersandfixedhourcontractswouldincreaselabourmarketflexibilityandencouragefirmstohireworkers.Onthedownside,greaterlabourmarketflexibilitymayleadtogreaterjobinsecurityforworkers.

Examples of interventionist supply side policies • Increasededucationandtraining.Bettereducationcanimprovelabour

productivityandincreaseAS.Oftenthereisanunderprovisionofeducationinafreemarket,leadingtomarketfailure.Therefore,thegovernmentmayneedtosubsidisesuitabletrainingschemes.

• Providingbetterinformationaboutavailablejobs.• Improvingtransportandinfrastructure.Inafreemarket,thereis

likelytobeanunderprovisionofpublictransport.Iftransportnetworkswereimproved,firmswouldbenefitfromlowercosts.

Evaluationofsupplysidepolicies• Theywilltaketimetohaveeffect,e.g.itwilltakeseveralyearstocreatea

moreeducatedworkforce.• Itwillcostmoneytoimproveinformationandeducation,andtherefore

taxeswillneedtorise.• Deregulation,suchaslowerbenefitsandreducedminimumwages,may

causesideeffects,suchasincreasedpoverty.• Governmentfailuremayoccur.Forexample,thegovernmentmayhave

poorinformationaboutwhattospendmoneyon.Forexample,the

Page 88: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

88

governmentmayfinancethewrongkindofscheme,suchasanewtrainlinethatisnotusedverymuch.

• Inarecession,increasingASmaybeinsufficient.Inarecessionthemostimportantthingisnotsupplysidepoliciesbutpoliciestoincreaseaggregatedemand.

Inthisexample,wesuccessfullyincreaseLRAS,buttheeconomyisstuckinarecession,sotheoutputisrelativelysmall.Inthissituation,theeconomyneedsanincreaseinAD(demandsidepolicies).

• Thereisonlysomuchthegovernmentcando.Itisimportanttobearinmindthattechnologicalimprovementsandproductivitygainscomelargelyfromtheprivatesector.

• Itisdifficultforthegovernmenttotransformproductivityandcreatenewtechnology.Atbest,thegovernmentcancreateaclimateforprivatesectorinnovationtooccur.

• TheUK’slastperiodofdemandpullinflationwasthelate1980s.• Inthisperiod,growthwasveryhighat4-5%ayear.Itwasfuelledby

incometaxcuts,risinghousepricesandrelativelylowinterestrates.• Inflationwasclosetothegovernment’stargetof2%between1992and

2008.Thisperiodwasknownasthe‘greatmoderation’becauseeconomicgrowthwassustainableanddidnotcauseinflation.

• Inflationdidnotincreaseuntil2008,whenitreachedover5%.Thiswasduetorisingoilprices.

Page 89: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

89

Monetary Policy Monetarypolicyinvolveschangingtheinterestrateormanipulationofthemoneysupplybythemonetaryauthorities.

Inflationcomparedtothegovernmentstargetof2%

Aimsofmonetarypolicy

1. Controltherateofinflation.InflationtargetforMPCisCPI-2.0%+/-12. Maintainsustainableeconomicgrowth3. Influencetheexchangerate(notsoimportant)

UKmonetarypolicy• Everymonth,theMPCmeettodecidefutureinterestrates.Iftheyfeelthe

inflationrateislikelytogoabovethetarget(e.g.duetoahigherrateofeconomicgrowth)thentheywillincreaseinterestratestomoderatedemandandkeepinflationlow.

• IftheMPCfeelthatinflationislikelytofallbelowthetargetandthereissloweconomicgrowth,theyarelikelytodecreaseinterestratestoboosteconomicgrowthandpreventunemployment.

Todeterminefutureinflation,theMPCwilllookatvariousstatisticssuchas:

• Therateofeconomicgrowthcomparedtothelongruntrendrate.Ifgrowthisfasterthanthetrendrate,inflationislikelytooccur.

• Wagegrowth.Higherwagegrowthcancausebothcost-pushanddemand-pullinflation.

Page 90: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

90

• Temporaryfactorsliketaxrisesandcommoditypriceriseswillbegivenlessimportancebecausetheydonotindicateunderlyinginflation.

• Unemployment.HighunemploymentwilltendtoreducewageinflationandsotheMPCismorelikelytocutinterestratestoboostAD.

The role of the central bank CentralBanksplayanimportantroleinamoderneconomy.Theirfunctionsinclude:

1. Monetarypolicy.CentralBanksareusuallyresponsibleformonetarypolicy.Thisinvolveschanginginterestratestomeetthegovernment’stargetforinflation(andothermacro-objectives).

2. Bankertothegovernment.CentralBanksmanagethegovernment’sfinancialaccount.

3. Lenderoflastresort.Animportantroleisactingasthelenderoflastresort,forboththegovernmentandprivatebanks.Ifthegovernmentrunsoutofmoney,theCentralBankscanstepintobuygovernmentdebt,preventingpanicaboutthegovernment’sliquidity.Theycanalsolendmoneytocommercialbanksiftheyaretemporarilyshortofliquidity(money).

Effect of higher interest rates (Tight monetary policy) Ifinflationisforecasttoriseabovetheinflationtarget,theMPCarelikelytoincreaseinterestrates.ThiswillhelpreduceADandinflationbecausehigherinterestrates:

• Makesborrowingmoreexpensive,thereforepeoplespendlessoncreditreducingconsumerspending.Firmswillalsobelesswillingtoinvestbyborrowingmoney.

• Thecostofmortgagesincreases,thereforepeoplehavelessdisposableincomecausingafallinconsumption.ThereforeADdecreases.

• Savingmoneyinabankismoreattractivethereforethereislessspendingandrelativelymoresaving.

• Exchangerateincreases.Withhigherinterestrates,itismoreattractivetosaveinUKbanks.ThisincreasesthedemandfortheBritishPoundandincreasestheexchangerate.Ahigherexchangeratewillreducethedemandfor(X-M)becauseexportsaremoreexpensive,andimportscheaper.

Evaluation of monetary policy 1.Othercomponentsintheeconomy.Theeffectivenessofmonetarypolicydependsuponothervariablesintheeconomy,forexample:

• Ifconfidenceislow,areductionininterestratesmaynotincreasedemand.

• Iftaxesarerising,thismaycounterafallininterestrates.

Page 91: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

91

• Iftheworldeconomyisslowing,thiswillreduceexportsandAD;thiswouldkeepspendinglow-eveniftherewasareductionininterestrates.

2.Theeffectofinterestratesdependsonthesituationoftheeconomy.Iftheeconomyisclosetofullemployment,acutininterestratesislikelytojustcauseinflationsignificantlywithonlyasmallincreaseinrealGDP.(AD3toAD4)

• Howeveriftheeconomyhassparecapacity,(e.g.atY1toY2)higherADwillincreaseGDP,withonlyasmallamountofinflation.

3.Timelags.Theremaybetimelagsforlowerinterestratestohaveaneffect.Forexample,higherinterestratesmaynotreduceinvestmentintheshorttermbecausefirmswillcontinuewithexistinginvestmentprojects.

4.Conflictsofobjectives.Monetarypolicymayconflictwithothermacroeconomicobjectives.IftheMPCreducesinflation,thismayleadtolowergrowthorhigherunemployment.

5.InterestratesforwholeUK.TheMPCsetinterestratesforthewholeoftheUK,butifregionsaregrowingatdifferentrates,itmaynotbesuitable.Forexample,ifWaleswasdepressed,butrestofUKgrowingstrongly.HighratesmaybedamagingforWelsheconomy.

Page 92: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

92

Exchange rates • Theexchangeratemeasuresthevalueofacurrencyagainstother

currencies.• Bilateralexchangeratemeasurestheexchangeratefortwocountries,

e.g.thevalueofthePoundSterlingagainsttheDollar.• Nominalexchangeratemeasurestheactualmonetaryvalue,andthe

amountofcurrencyyoucangete.g.£1=$1.5.• Realexchangeratetakesintoaccountinflationandmeasuresthe

amountofgoodsyoucanexchange.Therealexchangerate=nominalexchangerateX(domesticprice/foreignprice).

• Effectiveexchangerate.Theweightedaverageofacurrencyadjustedforinflation,likerealexchangerate.

• Appreciationistheincreaseinvalueofexchangerate.• Depreciation/devaluationisthedecreaseinvalueofexchangerate.• Floatingexchangerateisthevalueofexchangeratedeterminedby

marketforces.• Fixedexchangerateisthegovernmentcommittedtokeepingexchange

rateatsetvalue.• Hybridorsemi-fixedexchangerateisthegovernmentcommittedto

keepingexchangeratewithinacertainband/peg,e.g.£1=€1.1to€1.2.Itisamixtureoffloatingexchangeratesandfixedexchangerates.Itissometimesknownasa‘dirtyfloat’.

ExchangerateindexforthePoundSterling

Page 93: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

93

• Atrade-weightedindexmeansthatwemeasurethevalueoftheBritishPoundagainstabasketofcurrencies.

• Wegiveaweightingtothemostimportantcurrencies(e.g.theEuroandtheUSDollarwillhavethebiggestweightingbecausemosttradeiswiththeEurozoneandthentheUS).

• Thisexchangerateindexshowsa20%fallinthevalueofthePoundSterlingbetween2007and2009.

Factorsthatinfluenceexchangerates• Inflation.IfinflationintheUKisrelativelylowerthanelsewhere,UK

exportswillbecomemorecompetitive,andtherewillbeanincreaseindemandforPoundSterlingtobuyUKgoods.Countrieswithlowerinflationratestendtoseeanappreciationinthevalueoftheircurrency.Ifacountryengagedinquantitativeeasing(QE)thiscouldcreateinflationandthereforereducethevalueoftheexchangerate.

• InterestRates.IfUKinterestratesriserelativetoelsewhere,itwillbecomemoreattractivetodepositmoneyintheUK.Therefore,thedemandforSterlingwillrise,causing“hotmoneyflows”.Higherinterestratescauseanappreciation.

• Speculation.IfforeigncurrencydealersbecomepessimisticaboutthestateoftheUKeconomy,theymaysellSterling.Theycouldbecomepessimisticaboutprospectsforgrowth,highgovernmentdebt,andfutureinflation.SimilarlyifacountrylikeSwitzerlandwasseenasarelative‘safehaven’forsaving,itcouldleadtoariseindemandforSwissFrancsandcauseanappreciationintheSwissFranc.

• Balanceofpayments.Ifacountryhasalargecurrentaccountdeficit,itmaycausedepreciationbecausethereisanetoutflowofcurrency.

AppreciationintheexchangerateAnappreciationmeansthevalueofacurrencyincreases.Theeffectofthisis:

• Exportsmoreexpensive.Therefore,quantityofexportsfalls.• Importscheaper.Therefore,quantityofimportsrises.• LowerAD.Assumingdemandiselastic,anappreciationwillcauselower

aggregatedemandandlowereconomicgrowth.• Lowerinflation.Thisisdueto3reasons:

o Lowerimportpricese.g.fallingoilpricesfromtheappreciation.o LowerexportsandlowerAD,reducingdemandpullinflation.o Toremaincompetitive,firmshaveabiggerincentivetocutcosts.

• Worseningofcurrentaccount,e.g.biggerdeficit,becauseofdeclineinexportsandriseinquantityofimports.

• Foreigndirectinvestmentmayfall.Ariseintheexchangeratemaydiscourageforeigndirectinvestment(FDI),becauseitisnowmoreexpensiveforforeignfirmstoinvest.

Page 94: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

94

Evaluationofanappreciation• Dependsontheelasticityofdemandforimportsandexports.If

demandisinelastic,anappreciationwillhavelessimpactonreducingdemand.

• ItdependsonothercomponentsofAD.Anappreciationwon’tcauseafallinAD,ifconsumerspendingisgrowingstrongly.ConsumerspendingisabiggercomponentofADthannetexports.

• Timelags.Often,demandisinelasticintheshorttermandbecomesmoreelasticovertime.Therefore,anappreciationcouldhaveabiggerimpactovertime.

• Itdependsonproductivitygrowth.Iftheexchangerateappreciatesbecausefirmsarebecomingmoreproductive,thentheywillremaincompetitive.Iftheexchangerateappreciatesduetospeculation,firmsaremorelikelytobecomeuncompetitive.

o Forexample,countrieslikeGermanyandJapanhaveprospered,eveninperiodsofanappreciatingcurrency.

• Itdependsonthestateoftheeconomy.Iftheeconomyisgrowingstronglyandisnearfullcapacity,ariseintheexchangeratecouldhelpreduceinflationarypressureandkeepgrowthsustainable.Ifthereisalreadysparecapacity,thenanappreciationcouldleadtoarecession.

Theeffectsofanappreciationdependonthestateoftheeconomy.AfallinADtoAD2reducesinflation,withlittleeffectonrealGDP.

But,afallinADfromAD3toAD4,leadstoabigfallinrealGDP.

Page 95: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

95

Effects of a depreciation in exchange rate • Exportscheaperandmorecompetitive• Importsmoreexpensive• IncreasedADandhighereconomicgrowth• InflationmayriseduetohigherimportpricesandhigherAD.• Competitivenessimprovesintheshortterm;inthelongtermitmaynot

improveduetohigherinflation.

Government intervention in foreign exchange markets

InthisdiagramagovernmentbuyingPoundSterlinghasincreaseddemand(D1toD2)andincreasedthevalueofthe£.£1nowgivesmoredollars($1.70)

Methodsofgovernmentinterventioninforeignexchangemarkets

1. Buying/sellingcurrency.GovernmentscoulduseforeigncurrencyreservestobuyPoundsandincreasethevalueofthePound.Thoughforeigncurrencyreservesarelimited.

2. Changinginterestrates.ThegovernmentorCentralBankcouldincreaseinterestratestoincreasethevalueofthePound.

3. Improvingcompetitiveness.Thegovernmentcouldusedeflationaryfiscalpolicytoreduceinflationandimprovecompetitiveness.Itcouldalsotrysupply-sidepoliciestoimprovelong-runcompetitiveness.

Page 96: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

96

Advantages of fixed exchange rates • Providegreaterstabilityforfirmsinvolvedintrade,e.g.exportersdon’t

havetofeararapidappreciationwhichwouldreducetheirprofitability.• Canhelpreduceinflationascountrieshaveanaddeddisciplinetokeep

inflationlow,otherwisethecurrencywouldbeweaker.• Mayreducespeculationifmarketsbelievethecountrywillsticktoan

exchangerate.

Disadvantages of fixed exchange rates • Mayleadtotheexchangeratebeingovervalued,thiscanharmexports

andeconomicgrowth.• Maintainingafixedexchangeratemayrequirehighinterestrates(this

mayconflictwithotherobjectives,suchascausinglowergrowthandhigherunemployment).

• UKforcedoutofERMin1992,becausemarketsfelttheyhadjoinedatthewrongrate.GovernmentunabletomaintainvalueofPoundinERM.

Trade • Internationaltradeallowscountriestospecialiseingoodsandservices

whichtheyarerelativelybestatproducing.• Absoluteadvantage.Thisoccurswhenonecountrycanproduceagood

withfewerresourcesthananother.• Comparativeadvantage.Acountryhasacomparativeadvantageifitcan

produceagoodataloweropportunitycost,e.g.ithastoforegolessofothergoodsinordertoproduceit.

• Thelawofcomparativeadvantage.Thisstatesthattradecanbenefitallcountriesiftheyspecialiseinthegoodsinwhichtheyhaveacomparativeadvantage.

Restrictions on free trade Protectionisminvolvespoliciestorestricttrade.Thiscaninvolve:

• Highertariffs(typeoftaxonimports).• Non-tariffbarriers,e.g.theUShavechargesonpackagesundergrounds

of‘aviationsecurity’,andthisincreasesthecostsofimports.Otherrulesandregulationscanmaketrademoredifficult.

• Voluntaryexportrestraintiseffectivelyatypeofquotawherevoluntarylimitsareplacedonimportsofgoods.

• Embargo,e.g.USembargowithCuba.• Governmentsubsidy.Governmentsubsidieseffectivelygivethefirman

unfaircompetitiveadvantage.Thishasoftenoccurredwithnationalairlines.

• Distortedexchangerate.Keepingyourcurrencyartificiallylowmakesexportsrelativelymorecompetitive.

Page 97: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

97

Benefitsoffreetrade• Increasedexports.IfUKfirmshaveacomparativeadvantagethen,with

lowertariffs,theywillbeabletoexportmore,andcreatemorejobs.• Economiesofscale.Ifcountriescanspecialiseincertaingoods,theycan

benefitfromeconomiesofscaleandloweraveragecosts.Thisisespeciallytrueinindustrieswithhighfixedcosts,orthosethatrequirehighlevelsofinvestment.

• Tradeisanengineofgrowth.Worldtradehasincreasedbyanaverageof7%ayearsince1945;itisabigcontributortoglobaleconomicgrowth.

• Reducingtariffbarriersleadstotradecreation.Tradecreationoccurswhenconsumptionswitchesfromhighcostproducerstolowcostproducers,enablinganincreaseineconomicwelfare.

• Theremovaloftariffsleadstolowerpricesforconsumers(P1–P2)andanincreaseinconsumersurplus(1+2+3+4).

• Thegovernmentwilllosetaxrevenueofarea3.• Domesticfirmswillselllessandloseproducersurplusofarea1.• Therewillbeanincreaseinoveralleconomicwelfareof:(2+4).

• Increasedcompetition.Withmoretrade,domesticfirmswillfacemorecompetitionfromabroadand,therefore,therewillbemoreincentivestocutcostsandincreaseefficiency.Itmaypreventdomesticmonopoliesfromchargingtoohighprices.

• Makeuseofsurplusrawmaterials.Countrieswithlargereservesofrawmaterialsneedtradetobenefitfromtheirnaturalwealth.

Page 98: WJEC AS Economics Revision guide - Prestatyn High School...4 Unit 1 – AS Microeconomics Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost • Scarcity. These are resources that are limited.

98

Argumentsforrestrictingtrade• Infantindustryargument.Ifdevelopingcountrieshaveindustries

thatarerelativelynewthen,atthatmoment,theseindustrieswouldstruggleagainstinternationalcompetition.Therefore,theyneedtariffprotectionwhiletheydeveloptheirindustriestobemorecompetitive.

• Thesenileindustryargument.Ifindustriesaredecliningandinefficient,theymayrequirealargeinvestmenttomakethemefficientagain.Protectionfortheseindustriescouldactasanincentiveforfirmstoinvestandreinventthemselves.

• Needtodiversifytheeconomy.Manydevelopingcountriesrelyonproducingprimaryproducts,inwhichtheycurrentlyhaveacomparativeadvantage.However,relyingonagriculturalproductshasseveraldisadvantages:

o Pricescanfluctuateduetoenvironmentalfactors.o Goodshavealowincomeelasticityofdemand.Therefore,even

witheconomicgrowth,demandwillonlyincreasealittle.

• Protectionagainstdumping.TheEUsoldalotofitsfoodsurplusfromtheCAPatverylowpricesontheworldmarket.Thiscausedproblemsforworldfarmersbecausetheysawabigfallintheirmarketprices.Tariffscanprotectagainstdumping.

• Environmental.Itisarguedthatfreetradecanharmtheenvironmentbecausecountrieswithstrictpollutioncontrolsmayfindthatconsumersimportthegoodsfromothercountrieswherelegislationislaxandpollutionisallowed.