Skip to main content

Home/ Economics A Level/ Group items tagged monetary

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Duncan Innes

America's economy: Not by monetary policy alone | The Economist - 0 views

  •  
    How to boost the US economy
Duncan Innes

BBC News - India raises interest rates rise to stem inflation - 0 views

  •  
    Is india's economy stagflating?
Duncan Innes

Why some economists fear Osborne's upper cuts will leave Britain out for the count | Bu... - 0 views

  • It is this gloomy backdrop which exercises the minds of the third and final group of experts, the bears. For them, the risk is both of a double-dip recession and a long, painful work out from the excesses of the past. Looking at the four main components of demand they would say that consumption is going to be weak so investment will disappoint. Government spending is going to be slashed, leaving a massive burden on exports at a time of slower growth and currency wars. The bears are currently the smallest group. Their numbers are likely to be swelled as winter progresses.
Duncan Innes

US Federal Reserve launches new round of quantitative easing | Business | The Guardian - 0 views

  •  
    America's central bank announced that it would pump an additional $600bn (£372bn) into the ailing US economy over the next eight months in an attempt to accelerate growth and cut unemployment
Duncan Innes

History suggests 2011 will be a year of living frugally | Business | The Guardian - 0 views

  • In the first half of 2010, the story was that the big emerging economies – India, China and Brazil – were acting as the locomotive for global growth. But during the second half of 2010, there were signs of the United States and Germany joining the party
  •  
    The Economy unlike Spurs dislikes years ending in 1. Insightful analysis on threats and opportunities in the economy or 2011.
Duncan Innes

BBC News - China's economy grew 10.3% in 2010 - 0 views

  •  
    Article and radio clip warning of the dangers of inflation in the Chinese economy.
josh mower

BBC News - Could Greece be Europe's Lehman Brothers? - 0 views

  • Could Greece be Europe's Lehman Brothers?
  • Three years ago today, US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson made a momentous decision - to let the investment bank Lehman Brothers fail. The US government had helped to rescue a string of financial institutions, but markets kept pushing more to the wall. Mr Paulson was running out of time and options. There was no political support in Washington to keep throwing money at the problem. Wall Street would just have to learn to bear the consequences of its own folly. Today, many say that it was the wrong decision. The resulting financial meltdown (the stock market plummeted 43%) forced the authorities to do exactly what they had been trying to avoid - commit trillions of dollars to rescue the financial system.
  • Now fast-forward to the present. The "troika" of lenders to Greece - the European Union, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and European Central Bank (ECB) - may soon face a similar moment of reckoning.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • The government in Athens has consistently failed to cut its overspending as much as promised, and keeps coming back for more money. The Greeks complain that spending cuts demanded by the troika are killing their economy, which in turn pushes their tax revenues down, stoking the need to borrow yet more.
  • Would they really pull the plug on Greece to make an example of it? Or, with daily protests on the streets of Athens, could Greece itself walk away from the table? And if so, would it trigger another global meltdown?
  • Certainly it would be irrational for Greece to stop playing ball. Cut off from the troika's bailouts, the country cannot borrow. But even if it stopped paying its debts, Greece would still face enormous pain. Last year the government borrowed the equivalent of 10.5% of annual economic output, just to fund general government spending.
  • That overspend would have to stop immediately - far worse austerity than the troika demands. The Greek banks would also collapse, bereft of outside support. Having crossed the Rubicon of unilateral default, many economists believe the Greeks would leave the euro altogether. One reason is the need to devalue its currency to restore competitiveness. "Greece needs to move its exchange rate by at least 30% to have any chance of getting jobs back," says Mr Booth. Another is that the Greek central bank could then fund the government's continued borrowing with freshly-printed drachmas. But inflation would soar, and imports especially would become very expensive
  • That threatened a chain reaction of bankruptcies, which in turn caused a collapse of confidence throughout the financial system.
  •  
    If Greece defaults would it lead to another recession?
Duncan Innes

Scotland's De-Globalised Economy - 0 views

  •  
    Should Scotland keep the pound "You Tube" 
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page