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Macro Economics




                    Notes              goods  and services  and the  level of  prices. The aggregate supply curve specifies  the
                                       relationship between the amount of output firms produce and the price level. Shifts in
                                       either aggregate supply or aggregate demand will cause the level of output to change –
                                       thus affecting growth – and will also change the price level - thus affecting inflation.




                                      Task  Find out the current inflation rates in India, China, USA, Brazil, Zimbabwe and
                                     Japan. Also find out the highest ever inflation rates recorded in these countries.

                                   1.3.1  Objectives

                                   Objectives refer to the aims or goals of government policy whereas instruments are the means
                                   by which these aims might be achieved and targets are often thought to be intermediate aims -
                                   linked closely in a theoretical way to the final policy objective.

                                   If the government might want to achieve low inflation, the main instrument  to achieve this
                                   might be the use of interest rates and a target might be the growth of consumer credit or perhaps
                                   the exchange rate.
                                   Broadly, the objective of Macro Economic policies is to maximise the level of national income,
                                   providing economic growth to put on a pedestal the utility and standard of living of participants
                                   in the  economy.  There  are also  a  few  secondary  objectives  which are  held  to  lead  to  the
                                   maximisation of income over the long run. While there are variation between the objectives of
                                   different national and international entities, most follow the ones detailed below:
                                       Sustainability: A rate of growth which allows an increase in living standards without
                                       undue structural and environmental difficulties.
                                       Full Employment: Where those who are competent and willing to have a job can get hold
                                       of one, given that there will be a certain amount of frictional and structural unemployment.

                                       Price Stability:  When prices remain  largely stable,  and near  is not  rapid inflation  or
                                       deflation. Price stability is not necessarily the same as zero inflation, but instead steady
                                       level of low-moderate inflation is often regarded as ideal. It is worth note that prices of
                                       some goods and services often fall as a result of productivity improvements during period
                                       of inflation, as inflation is only a measure of general price level.
                                       External Balance: Equilibrium in the balance of payments,  lacking the  use of artificial
                                       constraints. That is, exports roughly equal to imports over the long run.

                                       Equitable distribution of Income and Wealth:  A fair share  of the national 'cake', more
                                       equitable than would be within the case of an entirely free market.
                                       Increased Productivity: more output per unit of work per hour.

                                   Only a limited number of policies can be used to achieve the government's objectives. There is
                                   a huge amount of research conducted in trying to determine the effectiveness of different policies
                                   in meeting key objectives. Indeed the debates about which policies are most suitable lie at the
                                   heart of differences between economic schools of thought.
                                   The main instruments available to meet the objectives are:

                                       Monetary Policy: changes to interest rates, the supply of money and credit and changes to
                                       the exchange rate.
                                       Fiscal Policy: changes to government taxation, government spending and borrowing.





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