Showing posts with label Regulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Regulation. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

The Credit Crunch

For those of you who are unsure what the 'credit crunch' is, and how it started, watch this simplified, but concise video that explains it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGxmgwUWNr0&feature=related

To summarise, occurring in 2008, the credit crunch was the result of over lending to people who are high risk and thus the inability of debtors to pay back their loans. In a simplified version, banks make money through a process called credit creation, lending more than is initially deposited. They know that people will deposit money back into the bank that they borrowed from and so can afford to lend more than they have (given a low liquidity ratio: the proportion of their assets - savers' money - that they keep).

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Code for Fiscal Stability (1998)


·     Based on the 5 principles of tax
o      Equitable
o      Economical
o      Efficient
o      Convenient
o      Flexible

Includes:

·     The Golden Rule
o      The government should only borrow to fund new social capital (capital spending, i.e. schools, roads…etc) and not current spending (e.g. welfare benefits)

·     The Sustainable Investment Rule
o      Public sector net debt should not rise above 40% of national income at the end of each financial year of the economic cycle

·     If the government stuck to the two rules, the public sector budget should, in theory, balance out over the course of one economic cycle because the government is not increasing current spending. A deficit is run on capital spending instead, thus balancing it out.

·     Aims
o      To limit how much the government borrows and for what purpose
o      Allow automatic stabilisers (see here) to smooth over the economy
o      Support the role of the monetary policy
o      Avoid an unsustainable increase in public sector debt
o      Ensure that tax revenues that are collected finance public spending as far as possible

·     Australia and New Zealand had a similar code

·     The government complied with the rules from the full economic cycle between 1997-1998 to 2006-2007, just before the recessions/economic crisis.

·     In November 2008, it was written in the pre-budget report that the code had been suspended to allow for the government to act appropriately in response to the global recession.

·     It was replaced by a less restrictive ‘temporary operating rule’ where the target was to manage public finances over the medium term. 

Please note, the Fiscal Policy Framework and the Code for Fiscal Stability should be used in the exam for demonstrating your understanding of past and previous fiscal policy used by governments. As it is no longer in use, be careful when mentioning in the exam.

Thursday, 18 August 2011

Word of the Day

Deregulation

The removal of regulations that restricted competition and freedom of market activity. In the last 30 years, the UK government has deregulated the following markets: airlines, radio stations, bus companies, televisions and telecommunications. The coalition government recently introduced 11 enterprise zones in the UK whereby these regions would be subjected to fewer planning regulations (as well as tax breaks), thus are an example of deregulation policies in the current government. For more on the enterprise zones, click here.