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What are supply-side policies (SSPs)?
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What are supply-side policies (SSPs)?
Government policies aimed at increasing the productive capacity of the economy β they shift LRAS to the right, raising potential output and enabling non-inflationary growth in the long run. There are two broad approaches: market-based and interventionist.
Shift LRAS right β more potential output.
What are the strengths of market-based SSPs?
Can improve efficiency and lower costs through competition. Reduce government burden and fiscal pressure. Encourage entrepreneurship and innovation. May increase foreign direct investment (FDI) through a business-friendly environment.
Efficiency, competition, entrepreneurship, FDI.
What is deregulation?
Removing or reducing government rules and regulations on businesses β this lowers costs, reduces barriers to entry, and encourages competition and innovation. Firms can operate more freely, potentially increasing efficiency and output.
Fewer rules β lower costs β more competition.
What is privatisation?
Transferring ownership of state-owned enterprises to the private sector. The profit motive is expected to drive efficiency. Examples: British Telecom and British Airways were privatised in the 1980s under Thatcher.
State β private ownership for efficiency.
What is the difference between market-based and interventionist SSPs?
Market-based SSPs reduce government intervention and let market forces drive efficiency (e.g., deregulation, privatisation, tax cuts). Interventionist SSPs involve the government actively investing to boost productivity (e.g., education, infrastructure, R&D). Both shift LRAS right β the difference is how.
Markets do it vs government does it.
What are the weaknesses of market-based SSPs?
Increased inequality (tax cuts benefit the rich; weaker unions reduce worker bargaining power). Market failures persist (deregulation β environmental damage). Privatisation concerns (natural monopolies exploit consumers). No guarantee of investment (low taxes don't force firms to invest). Long time lags.
Inequality, market failures, monopoly abuse, no guarantees, slow.
Which school of economic thought is associated with each type of SSP?
Market-based SSPs are associated with neoclassical / new-classical economics (trust markets, limit government). Interventionist SSPs are associated with Keynesian thinking (government has a role in correcting market failures and investing in public goods).
Market-based = neoclassical. Interventionist = Keynesian.
What is trade liberalisation?
Reducing tariffs, quotas, and other trade barriers β exposing domestic firms to international competition. This encourages efficiency, specialisation according to comparative advantage, and access to cheaper inputs.
Lower trade barriers β more competition β efficiency.
Why might privatisation of natural monopolies be harmful?
Natural monopolies (water, rail, electricity) have very high fixed costs and are most efficient with one provider. If privatised without strong regulation, the monopoly firm can exploit consumers with high prices and poor service, since there is no competition to discipline it.
One provider β no competition β consumer exploitation.
How do SSPs differ from demand-side policies (monetary and fiscal)?
SSPs shift LRAS right β they increase potential output and enable non-inflationary growth. Demand-side policies (monetary/fiscal) shift AD β they affect actual output in the short run but may cause inflation if the economy is near capacity. SSPs address the supply-side root cause.
SSPs = LRAS right. Demand-side = AD shift.
Why don't tax cuts guarantee increased investment?
Firms invest when they expect profitable returns from higher demand. If consumer confidence and demand are weak, lower taxes simply increase profits without leading to new investment β the money goes to shareholders as dividends or share buybacks instead.
Without demand, firms save the tax savings rather than investing.
How do tax reform and labour-market reform work as market-based SSPs?
Tax reform: lower corporate/income taxes incentivise work, entrepreneurship, and investment. Labour-market reform: reducing union power, lowering minimum wages, making hiring/firing easier β increases flexibility and reduces structural unemployment.
Lower taxes β incentives. Flexible labour β less structural unemployment.
Give a real-world example of market-based SSPs.
In the 1980s, the UK (Thatcher) and US (Reagan) pursued aggressive market-based SSPs: privatising telecoms and airlines, deregulating finance, cutting top tax rates, and weakening union power. Output increased but inequality also widened significantly.
Thatcher/Reagan: privatisation, deregulation, tax cuts.
Do most economies use market-based or interventionist SSPs?
Most economies use a mix of both β the debate is about the balance. The optimal approach depends on context: a heavily regulated economy may benefit from deregulation, while a developing country with poor infrastructure may benefit more from government investment.
Most use a mix β the debate is about balance.
How can deregulation lead to negative externalities?
Reducing environmental, health, or safety regulations to lower business costs may lead to pollution, unsafe products, or financial instability. The 2008 financial crisis is partly attributed to deregulation of the banking sector, which allowed excessive risk-taking.
Less regulation β pollution, unsafe practices, financial risk.
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How does infrastructure investment increase productive capacity?
Roads, railways, ports, airports, and broadband networks reduce transport and communication costs β firms become more productive and competitive. Renewable energy infrastructure reduces long-run energy costs. The private sector under-provides infrastructure (public/merit good), so government intervention is needed.
Better transport/communication β lower costs β more productive firms.
What are the strengths of interventionist SSPs?
Addresses market failures (private sector under-invests in education, infrastructure, R&D). Reduces inequality (education and healthcare benefit lower-income groups most). Can be targeted to lagging regions or strategic sectors. Builds long-run capacity β human and physical capital.
Fixes market failures, reduces inequality, targeted, long-run capacity.
How does government investment in education shift LRAS?
Better-educated workers are more productive β output per worker rises β LRAS shifts right. Education also reduces structural unemployment by equipping workers with skills that match industry demand, and improves labour mobility so workers can adapt to changing sectors.
More skilled workers β higher productivity β LRAS right.
Why is investment in healthcare an interventionist SSP?
Healthier workers have fewer sick days, higher productivity, and longer working lives. Government investment in public health, hospitals, and preventive care increases the effective labour force and its quality. This is especially important in developing countries where disease reduces the workforce.
Healthy workers = productive workers = more output.
What are the weaknesses of interventionist SSPs?
Expensive β requires significant government spending, which may increase national debt. Very long time lags β education investments take a generation. Government failure β bureaucrats may misallocate resources or pick wrong industries. Crowding out private investment. Hard to measure returns.
Costly, slow, government failure, crowding out, hard to measure.
What is industrial policy?
A government strategy to support specific industries or sectors considered strategically important β through subsidies, tax breaks, R&D funding, or protection from foreign competition. It aims to develop competitive industries that drive long-run growth.
Government supports strategic industries with subsidies/R&D/protection.
What is government failure in the context of interventionist SSPs?
When government intervention produces a worse outcome than the market would have β bureaucrats may misallocate resources, pick the wrong industries to support ("picking winners"), or be influenced by lobbying and corruption. The result is wasted public funds and no improvement in LRAS.
Government makes worse choices than the market would.
How do education and training reduce structural unemployment?
Structural unemployment occurs when workers' skills don't match employer needs. Government-funded vocational training, apprenticeships, and retraining programmes equip workers with in-demand skills, closing the skills gap and enabling them to fill available jobs.
Training matches skills to jobs β reduces mismatch.
How do R&D subsidies contribute to long-run growth?
R&D subsidies encourage innovation β new technologies β higher productivity β LRAS shifts right. Without subsidies, the private sector under-invests in R&D because the benefits (positive externalities) spill over to other firms, making it a market failure that justifies intervention.
Subsidies β innovation β productivity β LRAS right.
Give real-world examples of successful interventionist SSPs.
South Korea: government supported semiconductor and electronics industries (Samsung, LG) with subsidies and trade protection. Singapore: invested heavily in education and infrastructure. Both became high-income economies within a few decades through strategic government intervention.
South Korea (tech), Singapore (education/infrastructure).
What is human capital?
The skills, knowledge, experience, and health of the workforce that make it productive. Investing in human capital (through education, training, healthcare) increases worker productivity and shifts LRAS right. It is considered the most important factor in long-run growth.
Skills + knowledge + health of workers.
Why do interventionist SSPs have very long time lags?
Building infrastructure takes years of planning and construction. Education investments take a generation β children starting school today won't enter the workforce for 15β20 years. R&D may not yield commercial innovations for decades. These policies cannot fix short-run problems.
Infrastructure = years. Education = a generation. R&D = decades.
Why does the private sector tend to under-provide infrastructure?
Infrastructure has public good and merit good characteristics β it is difficult to exclude users and benefits society broadly. The private return is lower than the social return (positive externalities), so firms under-invest. Government provision or funding fills this gap.
Public/merit good β private under-invests β government steps in.
What forms of education investment can a government make?
Funding schools and universities, vocational training and apprenticeships, adult retraining programmes for workers displaced by technology, research scholarships, and improving access to education in disadvantaged communities. All raise human capital and long-run productivity.
Schools, universities, vocational training, retraining, scholarships.
How can interventionist SSPs reduce inequality?
Education and healthcare investment benefit lower-income groups the most β they equalise opportunity. Better schools in disadvantaged areas, free healthcare, and targeted training programmes help the poor develop skills and earn higher incomes, breaking the intergenerational poverty cycle.
Invest in people β equalise opportunity β reduce inequality.
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How are SSPs shown on an AD/AS diagram?
SSPs shift LRAS to the right (from LRASβ to LRASβ) β potential output increases. In the new classical model, the vertical LRAS shifts right β more output at a lower price level. In the Keynesian model, the horizontal/upward-sloping section of AS extends further right.
LRAS shifts right in both models.
In what economic context are market-based SSPs most appropriate?
Over-regulated economies where bureaucracy and red tape stifle business, economies in fiscal crisis (market-based SSPs are cheaper), and countries where state-owned enterprises are inefficient. The focus is on removing barriers rather than spending money.
Over-regulated, fiscally constrained, inefficient state firms.
What are the common strengths shared by all SSPs?
Increase potential output β non-inflationary growth. Can reduce the natural rate of unemployment (NRU). Improve international competitiveness β help (X β M). Address long-run structural problems, not just short-run demand fluctuations.
More output, lower NRU, better competitiveness, fix structural issues.
Why do SSPs enable non-inflationary growth?
By shifting LRAS right, SSPs increase potential output β the economy can produce more without running into capacity constraints. AD can grow to match the higher capacity without causing demand-pull inflation. This is the key advantage over demand-side policies.
More capacity β AD can grow without causing inflation.
In what economic context are interventionist SSPs most appropriate?
Developing countries where education, healthcare, and infrastructure are lacking. Economies with high inequality where growth benefits are not shared. Countries where the private sector is unable or unwilling to provide essential public goods.
Developing, high inequality, lacking public goods.
What are the common weaknesses shared by all SSPs?
Long time lags (years or decades for full effect). Uncertain outcomes (no guarantee the policy works). Cannot fix short-run demand deficiency β a recession needs demand stimulus, not SSPs. Potential equity trade-offs (especially market-based approaches).
Slow, uncertain, won't fix recessions, possible inequality.
Why can't SSPs solve a recession?
SSPs build long-run productive capacity β they don't boost AD in the short run. A recession is caused by insufficient aggregate demand. To close a deflationary gap, you need fiscal or monetary stimulus to increase spending now. SSPs are a long-run complement, not a short-run fix.
Recessions need demand stimulus; SSPs build future capacity.
What is the key exam strategy when discussing SSPs?
The best answers consider BOTH approaches and explain which is more appropriate for the specific context of the question. Avoid one-sided arguments. Acknowledge trade-offs and link the choice to the country's level of development, existing institutions, and specific problems.
Discuss both, match to context, avoid one-sided arguments.
How does the SSP AD/AS diagram differ from the demand-side policy diagram?
Demand-side policies shift AD (β or β), affecting short-run output and prices. SSPs shift LRAS right, increasing long-run potential output. On the diagram, an LRAS shift shows the economy can sustainably produce more, whereas an AD shift may be temporary and inflationary.
AD shift = short-run demand. LRAS shift = long-run capacity.
What happens to the price level when LRAS shifts right?
In the new classical model (vertical LRAS), a rightward shift leads to a lower equilibrium price level β the economy can produce more, so goods become relatively cheaper. In reality, prices may not fall but inflation stays low even as output grows.
Price level falls (or inflation stays low) as capacity expands.
How do market-based and interventionist SSPs compare on cost and speed?
Market-based: cheaper to implement (removing regulations costs less than building schools) and faster to enact (deregulation is quicker than training a generation). Interventionist: more expensive and much slower, but addresses root causes like market failures and inequality.
Market = cheaper and faster. Interventionist = costlier but deeper.
How do SSPs reduce the natural rate of unemployment (NRU)?
Education and training reduce structural unemployment (skills mismatch). Labour-market reforms reduce frictional unemployment (faster job matching). Both lower the NRU β the unemployment rate at full employment. On a diagram, this shifts the LRAS right as more workers become productive.
Education β less structural. Flexibility β less frictional. Both β lower NRU.
What is the best approach to evaluating SSPs in an IB exam?
Match the SSP type to the specific context: what problem is the country facing? Consider both market-based and interventionist options. Evaluate short-run vs long-run effects, costs vs benefits, and equity implications. Always acknowledge uncertainty and trade-offs. Use real-world examples.
Context-specific, both sides, short vs long run, examples.
How do the two approaches compare on equity?
Market-based SSPs can worsen inequality (tax cuts disproportionately benefit the rich; weaker unions hurt low-wage workers). Interventionist SSPs tend to reduce inequality (education, healthcare, and infrastructure benefit lower-income groups the most).
Market-based may worsen inequality; interventionist reduces it.
What key statement should you include when drawing SSP diagrams in exams?
SSPs are the ONLY way to achieve sustained, non-inflationary long-run growth. They shift LRAS right, increasing potential output and lowering the price level. Demand-side policies alone cannot achieve this β they shift AD but may cause inflation at full capacity.
Only SSPs give sustained non-inflationary growth.
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