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Saturday 30 September 2017

Monetary Policy - The difficulties facing the MPC

The two articles below from the BBC business section came out on the same day. This highlights the issue of monetary policy, inflation, BREXIT, employment, growth...the lot!

Article one

Article two



Questions for discussion:

What are the short term implications of a rise in interest rates?
What might the long term issues be?
Do you think Mark Carney is right to suggest rates will rise?


Monday 25 September 2017

Competition, oligopoly, kinked demand curve and supermarkets

Click here to access an article which looks at how Aldi reporting record sales but recording lower profits. A classic example of the kinked demand curve in action!

Questions for discussion:

Why are Aldi sacrificing profits for more sales?
What does this suggest about the elasticity of demand for supermarket shopping?

Saturday 23 September 2017

Market Failure - Junk Food and Obesity

A classic case study of the issues of increasing consumption of junk food. Not only is this a health issue, but also an economic one as well. How would you solve the problem?

Labour Markets - Do some of the newly employed have zero productivity?

Whether due to limited ability or a lack of incentive, the output of some workers taken on in the jobs boom is close to zero. And this drags the average down.

The UK jobs market is booming, as the latest ONS figures show. Unemployment is at its lowest for over 40 years. A record 32.1 million people are in employment, a rise of over 3 million since the financial crisis. Apart from in a few scattered pockets, Britain is at full employment.

Usually in such circumstances, wages would start to outpace inflation. Labour shortages would lead employers to start bidding for workers, who would themselves feel more confident about demanding pay increases.

Perhaps this is starting to happen, with the TUC voting for a campaign to raise public sector wages by 5 per cent. But a combination of immigration and a concerted government campaign to get people off benefits means that the supply of labour has risen sharply. This holds down the price of labour, the wage, in the bottom half of the labour market. Instead, full employment manifests itself in different ways.

A few anecdotes might illustrate the key points:

I recently bought a new phone, which has proved to have an intermittent fault. The Richmond branch of EE advertises both on the internet and on its doors that it opens at 9.30am. I turned up at 9.40 to find the place in darkness. I went to another EE branch, where a listless young woman informed me that she could not replace it. I asked what she could do. She replied that she could take it in for repair, but that this “would take three weeks”. I left, and she slumped back to her stupor.

Later that day, I went to see someone at a leading London university. The department receptionist asked if I had the extension number. When I said I was rather hoping he might have it, he responded that he probably did, but that it would be “hard to find”. We looked at each other in silence. Then a light bulb came on in his mind. He winked at me, and pronounced “I’ll take you up there”.

These experiences are not confined to the dynamic capital city. A few weeks ago, I visited the maths department at Durham and left my glasses behind. They offered to post them guaranteed next day delivery. I tracked the parcel on the Royal Mail website. 39 hours later, it had arrived at the Newcastle sorting centre, all of 15 miles away.

These examples of appalling service arise for two reasons. First, the very high demand for labour means that some people now in jobs are scarcely able to perform work at all. Second, many low paid workers realise they can easily get another job, so why bother making an effort in your current one? 

Here is part of the answer to the so-called productivity puzzle. During the recovery from a recession, productivity, output per worker, usually rises quickly. But it has been flat.

Perhaps we need to find some of these guys to help with productivity? Click here for video

Monday 18 September 2017

Labour Markets - An introduction

Labour Markets are a big part of A2 Economics. The following presentation covers all aspects of the syllabus.