This topic covers the primary macroeconomic objectives that governments aim to achieve to ensure economic stability and growth. These objectives typically
Topic Synopsis
This topic covers the primary macroeconomic objectives that governments aim to achieve to ensure economic stability and growth. These objectives typically include low and stable inflation, low unemployment, economic growth, and a favourable balance of payments.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Inflation: A sustained rise in the general price level, measured by CPI. The government target is 2% ±1%. High inflation reduces purchasing power and can harm international competitiveness.
- Unemployment: People who are willing and able to work but cannot find a job. Measured by the claimant count (those claiming benefits) or Labour Force Survey (ILO definition). Types include cyclical, structural, frictional, and seasonal.
- Economic growth: An increase in the economy's output of goods and services, measured by real GDP. Sustainable growth is around 2-3% per year. Growth improves living standards but can cause environmental damage.
- Balance of payments: A record of all transactions between the UK and the rest of the world. The current account includes trade in goods and services. A deficit means imports exceed exports, which can be a sign of uncompetitiveness.