in groups of 3 - 4 discuss and answer the questions below. what is aggregate supply? what does...
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IN GROUPS OF 3 - 4 DISCUSS AND ANSWER THE QUESTIONS BELOW . WHAT IS AGGREGATE SUPPLY?
WHAT DOES SUPPLY SIDE REFER TOO?
WHAT WOULD SUPPLY SIDE POLICIES BE?
HOW COULD THESE POLICIES INFLUENCE SUPPLY?
SLO: Describe supply-side policies and apply then to economic models of growth
SUPPLY SIDE MICRO-ECONOMIC POLICY
Supply side policies will be focused on encouraging people to produce (supply) goods and services e.g.
Lowering income tax Lowering capital gains tax rates, reducing regulation ( removing rules that restrict producers)
According to supply-side economics, consumers will then benefit from a greater supply of goods and services at lower prices.
Supply side= Policies that are directed at influencing supply in markets.
NZ SUPPLY-SIDE POLICY HISTORY
Tended to concentrate over the past 20years on state sector reform (Selling of government owned enterprises) and increasing deregulation of industry.
Arguments for supply side policiesThe private sector producers can operate more efficiently than the state sector can.
Private sector producers operate more efficiently with fewer rules and regulations
State resources are more appropriately used to provide public and merit goods (health, education, roads, and welfare) than private goods (banking and communication)
EXAMPLE. PRIVATISATION OF TELEPHONE SERVICES
Privatisation =Transferring ownership from the government to private firms.
Quantity
Price $
D
S
Qe
SePrivatisation often
lead to reduced costs for producers
S1
Q1
S1
Market for Goods
HOW DOES PRIVATISATION LEAD TO DECREASED COSTS FOR PRODUCERS?There is a difference in incentives between public and private
sectors. A tax-funded government business has a monopoly (the only
producer in the market) and thus has guaranteed revenues, regardless of performance. And its workers are protected both by unionization and by a civil service system which virtually guarantees continued employment and pay increases, regardless of performance.
A private firm in a competitive market must win over its customers by offering them a superior combination of performance and price. If it fails to deliver adequately, its customers can go elsewhere.
Private firms producing public services – even firms which competitively win exclusive contracts for a number of years – therefore operate far more efficiently than government monopolies.
MICRO ECONOMIC REFORMS IN 1980S-1990S
The Financial Sector Removed interest rate controls NZ dollar floated
Government departments co-oporatised then privatised Post office split to – NZ Post, Post bank and telecom Railways were corporatised then sold
Labour Market freed up Employment contracts act 1991
Trade protection policies removed Removal Tarriffs and Quotas
Welfare benefits reduced
Health Sector Reformed Try to make it operate more efficiently using business type model
EXERCISE BOOKS PAGE 154-155 Read page 153-154