The provided document does not contain information regarding topic 2.1.2 - Government policies. It is a technical configuration file for a web monitoring a
Topic Synopsis
The provided document does not contain information regarding topic 2.1.2 - Government policies. It is a technical configuration file for a web monitoring agent and a 404 error page for the Pearson qualifications website.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Fiscal policy: Changes in government spending and taxation to influence aggregate demand. Expansionary (spending ↑, taxes ↓) to boost the economy; contractionary (spending ↓, taxes ↑) to cool it down.
- Monetary policy: Changes in interest rates and the money supply set by the Bank of England. Higher rates reduce borrowing and spending; lower rates encourage them. The Bank also uses quantitative easing to increase money supply.
- Demand-side vs supply-side policies: Demand-side policies (fiscal and monetary) aim to influence aggregate demand; supply-side policies (e.g., training, deregulation) aim to increase productive capacity and shift long-run aggregate supply.
- Policy conflicts: Sometimes objectives clash—e.g., reducing inflation (higher interest rates) may increase unemployment. Students must be able to discuss trade-offs.
- Time lags: Fiscal policy can take months to implement and affect the economy; monetary policy works faster but still has lags. This affects policy effectiveness.