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A Level Economics
Theme 2: The UK Economy - performance and policies
(2.4) National Income
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Lenard Anonuevo
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Cards (53)
Circular flow of income
1. Households own wealth and resources, provide
firms
with
land
, labour and capital in return for rent, wages, interest and profits
2. Households use this money to buy
goods
and services produced by the
firms
3. Money flows in one
direction
,
goods
/services and factors of production flow in another
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National output
Value of the flow of
goods
and services from firms to
households
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National expenditure
Value of
spending
by
households
on goods and services
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National income
Income paid by firms to
households
in return for
land
, labour, capital and enterprise
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In the simple two-sector model, national
output
=
national expenditure
=national income
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Two-sector
model
Too
simplified
to represent the actual
economy
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Expanded
circular flow
model
1.
Government
takes
money
through taxation and adds money through spending
2. Financial services inject
money
through investment and take
money away
through savings
3. Foreign markets add
money
through exports but take
money away
through imports
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Wealth
Stock of assets
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Income
Flow
of
money
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Countries with high levels of
wealth
tend to have high levels of income and vice versa but there is not a perfect correlation between
wealth
and income
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Injections
Government spending
(
G
)
Investment
(
I
)
Exports
(
X
)
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Withdrawals
/
Leakages
Taxes
(
T
)
Savings
(
S
)
Imports
(
M
)
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If sum of
injections
is greater than sum of
withdrawals
Economy
will be
growing
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If injections are
smaller
than
withdrawals
Economy will be
shrinking
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In
equilibrium
,
injections
must be equal to withdrawals and so the national income remains the same
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Equilibrium position of national output
Where the
AD
and
AS
curves intersect
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If
AS
or
AD
are shifted
Equilibrium position
will
change
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In the short run,
AD
is
downward sloping
and AS is upward sloping
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Short-run equilibrium changes
1. Increase in SRAS shifts equilibrium to
lower
prices and
higher
real GDP
2. Increase in AD shifts equilibrium to
higher
prices and
higher
real GDP
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Classical LRAS
Perfectly inelastic, so
shift
in
AD only
affects prices not output
Economy
will always return to
full employment level
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Classical
long-run
adjustment
1. Increase in
AD
leads to
positive output gap
2.
Firms
bid up
wages
and other factor prices
3. SRAS shifts to
higher prices
,
output
returns to original level
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Classicists
conclude that changes in AD without a change in LRAS are only
inflationary
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Rise
in
LRAS
Leads to
lower prices
and
higher output
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Classical
economists favour
supply-side policies
over demand management
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Keynesian LRAS
Can have
equilibrium
at less than
full employment
Believe
wages
don't rapidly fall with
unemployment
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Keynesian
long-run
adjustment
1. Increase in
AD
from
deep recession
only increases output, not prices
2. Increase in
AD
from near full employment increases
prices
, not output
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Keynesians
argue government needs to
increase AD
during recessions, not use supply-side policies
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In
macroeconomics
, a factor affecting
AD
can also affect AS
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If the economy is producing at or near
full employment
, for example at AD1
A rise in LRAS will
increase output
and
decrease
the price level
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If the economy is in a
deep recession
, for example producing at
AD2
An increase in
LRAS
will have
no effect
on prices or output
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Keynesians
argue that during recessions the government needs to work to
increase AD
rather than using supply side policies
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In
microeconomics
, any factor which affected demand would not affect
supply
and vice versa
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With
macroeconomics
, a factor which affects
AD
can easily affect AS
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An
increase
in
investment
Increases AD
but it could also
increase LRAS
as firms are able to produce more
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Not all
investment
results in increased production and so the
LRAS
will not increase
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The extent to which
investment
increases output and
lessens inflation
depends on its rate of return
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Multiplier
process
An increase in
AD
because of an increased injection (exports,
government spending
or investment) can lead to a further increase in national income
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Multiplier ratio
The
ratio
of the final change in income to the initial change in
injection
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Multiplier process
1. Initial
injection
increases
spending
and income for someone else
2.
This leads to further
consumption spending
3.
This creates more
jobs
and increases output
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Marginal propensity to consume
(
MPC
)
The
increase
in consumption following an
increase
in income
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