what occurs in a financial market
financial liquid assets are exchanged .g stock or bond market
role of the financial market
to facilitate saving - provide somewhere for consumers + firms to store their funds, savings are rewarded with interest rates
lend to businesses + individuals - allows consumption and investment , sometimes referred to as financial intermediary
facilitate the exchange of goods + services - by creating a payments system : cheques, paper money, credit card services, bank transaction, banks buy + sell foreign currencies
provide forward markets - firms are able to buy and sell into the future at a set price e.g. farmers selling the produce that they are growing in a month time at a guaranteed price
provide a market for equities - involves the trade of shares
impacts of a tax change
incentive to work
tax revenue
income distribution
real output and employment - effects income and therefore AD, higher indirect taxes effects SRAS, higher income taxes + disincentive to work
price level change - due to shifts in LRAS and AD
trade balance - consumers spend less on imports –> in the long run less AD decreases a business need to invest and this could reduce competitive FDI
lower corporation tax encourages firm to more production to your country –> this results in a “ race to the bottom “ = lower revenue for all countries
national debt definition
is the sum of all the government debts built up over many years
fiscal debt definition
is when government spends more than it receives in a given year
structural deficit definition
the fiscal deficit that occurs when the cyclical deficit is zero, it is not related to the state of the economy
cyclical deficit definition
is the deficit that occurs because government spending and tax fluctuate around the trade cycle
factors increasing the size of the fiscal deficit
trade cycle - during a downturn government tax revenue reduces
unforeseen events - natural disaster / recession
interest rates - IR on national debt (£82 billion)
privatisation - one off payment to the government
government aims - does the government care about the debt
factors such as number of dependants
high revenue from oils = budget surplus
factors influencing the size of national debts
if the governments is continuously running a fiscal deficit national debt will increase
ageing population = pension programs + lack of people working therefore a reduction in income tax
significance of high fiscal deficit and national debt
market failure in the financial sector - speculation and market bubbles
market failure in the financial sector - asymmetric information
market failure in the financial sector - negative externalities
market failure in the financial sector - moral hazard
” too big to fail “
bankers make risky decisions knowing if they fail the burdens do not fall on them
market failure in the financial sector - market rigging
macroeconomic polices in a global context : reduce fiscal deficit and national debt
macroeconomic polices in a global context : reducing poverty and inequality
free market forces will make poverty + inequality
–> however most agree that some level of redistribution of income is necessary but the degree to which is continuous as high incomes in society provide an incentive
progressive tax –> depends on how effective government are at redistributing USA vs Finland
inheritance tax which means wealth cannot be passed on
government expenditure: universal benefits , means tested benefits
- government can provide goods and services such as school , education, healthcare meaning people are given a more + start in life
- max wage minimum wage
- equal pay legislation ( men , women , ethnicity )
- trade union friendly legislation
- employers could provide benefits to their workers : sickness pay , medical care, pensions
- price controls however thus may create a black market for the excess supply
- trickle down effect
- redistribution of income increases marginal utility
- improvement in education and training opportunities will prevent children from under privilege backgrounds achieving less than others –> e.g. lower university requirements
macroeconomic polices in a global context : changes in interest rates and the supply of money
macroeconomic polices in a global context : international competitiveness
macroeconomic polices in a global context : transnational companies
macroeconomic polices in a global context : transnational companies
macroeconomic polices in a global context : regulation of transfer pricing
macroeconomic polices in a global context : problems facing policy makers
inaccurate information > trends change , government is always behind with the stats
risks + uncertainty > cannot accurately predict the future
external shocks . government aim to lessen their impacts
Reasons for restriction of free trade
Infant industries - newly established so unable to compete in global markets due to: reputation, costumer base, sunk costs, high AC and lack of economies of scale
Job protection - concern that by allowing imports domestic producers will lose out to international firms = job loss
Protection from potential dumping - excess supply being sold at extremely low prices internationally harming domestic producers > in China tariffs were placed on stainless steel tubes from the EU and Japan
Protection from unfair competition - different health and safety rules allow some firms to have much lower costs. Heavy subsidisation from governments > harms domestic producers
Dangers of over specialisation - no country should be totally reliant on another