what is the exchange rate
the price of one currency expressed in terms of another. The exchange rates change due to fluctuations in demand for a currency, economic growth and interest rates.
£1.00 = $1.20 -> £1.00 = $1.10
If the pound increases in value against other currencies it is said to STRENGTHEN.
The pound can buy more euros, or fewer pounds are needed to buy one euro.
£1.00 = A$2.05 -> £1.00 = A$1.46
If the pound decreases in value against other currencies it is said to
WEAKEN.
The pound buys fewer Australian dollars, or more pounds are needed to buy one Australian dollar.
Businesses will try to avoid uncertainty when exchange rates are
volatile - may set an agreed rate for future transactions
A business may choose to target a specific
international market (or economy) when the exchange rate is favourable.
importers
may switch international suppliers when the
exchange rate is less favourable
stockpile raw material and products when
currency is strong.
exporters
lower prices to limit the impact of a strong currency
increase promotion in foreign markets when currency is weak.
what is inflation
Inflation is the general rise in prices over time. A low rate of inflation can be managed by businesses but a high rate of inflation will increase costs and reduce demand.
what is deflation
Deflation is a fall in prices as measured by CPI. Deflation is relatively rare in the UK. Short-term falls can boost sales for businesses. Prolonged deflation can have severe consequences for businesses as consumers postpone purchases whilst waiting for prices to fall further.
what happens when there is high inflation
what happens where there is low inflation
what happens when there is deflation
A government will use fiscal and monetary policy to influence
economic activity in order to maintain growth and limit negative factors such as high levels of inflation, unemployment and the negative externalities of growth.
what is the monetary policy
This is the policy to adjust the amount of money
in circulation and therefore influence spending and economic activity. The main form of monetary
policy is interest rates - the cost of borrowing money and the reward for saving.
monetary policy generally includes
impact of interest rate (high %)
impact of interest rate (low%)
what is fiscal policy
involves government spending and taxation as a means of controlling economic activity.
The difference between government income (mainly taxes) and expenditure in a fiscal year is known as
the budget balance.
expansionary fiscal
Reduces direct and indirect tax to increase disposable income. Increases borrowing (PSNCR).
Increases spending in areas such as health and education. Spending stimulates demand for businesses and creates jobs. Budget deficit may rise.
contractionary fiscal
Reduces spending in areas such as health and education. Pressure on inflation slows. Budget deficit may fall or reach a surplus.
Increases direct and indirect taxes to slow down growth and reduce the budget deficit.
taxation
income tax, national insurance payments, VAT, corporation tax, customs and excise duties
government expenditure
A range of measures intended to improve the
Protectionism
efficiency and effectiveness of free markets.
Policies include: