British Economy L2: UK Business Cycle and Demand for Labour

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  • Created by: issyh
  • Created on: 29-12-20 14:30
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  • UK Business Cycle and Demand for Labour
    • business cycle
      • describes the variation of economic activity around the path of trend growth
    • recession
      • a period of negative economic growth for two consecutive quarters of more
    • amplitude
      • the % change in real GDP from peak to trough (recession) or trough to peak (expansion)
    • impulse - propagation mechanism
      • may be used to explain what causes actual output to deviate from the trend output
        • impulses = the source of shocks hitting the economy
        • propagation mechanisms = the channels through which the shocks affect economic outcomes
      • Slutsky and Frisch suggested that economies are constantly subject to random shocks / impulses which constantly buffet the economy
        • 1) shocks change the D/S conditions in the economy
        • 2) once disturbed, the economy begins a deterministic adjustment until next shock occurs
        • 3) I-P M transforms these random impulses into irregular cyclical oscillations
        • 4) response to individual shocks are reduced, old oscillations are constantly being supplemented by new ones corresponding to more recent shocks
        • 5) economy is regularly buffeted by endless series of shocks, and never really settles down to stationary state
    • British Economy is difficult
      • data measurement issues: GDP is measured with an error
      • key policy variables and shocks are unobserved: observe GDP but with a lag
      • economy is highly complicated environment - implying the transmission of the shock isn't fully understood
      • UK is small open economy and variables such as exchange rate and world demand- beyond influence of domestic authorities
    • demand for labour
      • labour: derived demand - stemming from the demand for the products that the labour produces
      • exogenous shock: falling D for product - fall D for labour (fired or reduced hours)
    • 'productivity puzzle'
      • employment exceeded the pre-recession peak well before GDP did so, but this implies a fall in labour productivity since labour employed were not producing as much output as before
        • perhaps due to falling real wages allowing businesses to hold onto (unproductive?) labour
    • reasons for poor UK productivity pose recession
      • ONS reasoning
        • low levels of business investment
        • higher number of people working beyond normal retirement age
        • impact of financial crisis on banks willing to lend
        • fall in productive potential in North Sea oil/gas
      • BoE reasoning
        • firms unwilling or unable to layoff workers - 'hoarding labour'
        • business cycle 2016 - in expansion phase but productivity was an inssue and wage growth was modest
    • predicting and forecasting
      • composite leading indicator (CLI's) - a set of component series selected from a wide range of key short-term economic indicators
      • turning point occurs in a series when the deviation from trend series reached a local max/min
        • growth cycle peaks (end of expansion) occur when activity is furthest above trend level
        • growth cycle troughs (end of recession) occur when activity is furthest below trend level

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