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IB ECONOMICS SECTION 2.6 SUPPLY-SIDE POLICIES 23.Explain that supply-side policies aim at positively affecting the production side of an economy by improving the institutional framework and the capacity to produce (that is, by changing the quantity and/or quality of factors of production). Supply-side economic policies are mainly microeconomic policies designed to improve the supply-side potential of an economy, make markets and industries operate more efficiently and thereby contribute to a faster rate of growth of real national output The “supply side” refers to factors affecting the quantity or quality of goods and services produced by an economy such as the level of productivity or investment in research and development. 23.Explain that supply-side policies aim at positively affecting the production side of an economy by improving the institutional framework and the capacity to produce (that is, by changing the quantity and/or quality of factors of production). Supply-side policies in fact aim for the same thing as demand side; increased growth, lower unemployment, price stability and equilibrium in the foreign sector. It is therefore not the aim which differs but the method of achieving these aims. Policies aimed at increasing LRAS aim to: 1. Provide incentives for laborers to work more and unemployed to search for jobs 2. Increase the mobility of labor – both between jobs and between regions 3. Increase labor and capital productivity 4. Increase firms ability and willingness to invest, e.g. increase the physical capital stock 5. Foster innovation both in production and products 6. Increase competition in the economy via privatization and ease of start-ups 7. Increase foreign direct investment (FDI) – both abroad and at home All the above aim to increase growth over the long run without experiencing the tradeoffs common to demand-side policies. 24. State that supply-side policy may be market-based or interventionist and that in either case they aim to shift the LRAS curve to the right, achieving growth in potential output. Supply side policies are government policies which seek to increase the productivity and efficiency of the economy. They can involve interventionist supply side policies (e.g. government spending on education) or market-based supply side policies (e.g. reduce government legislation) The main macro economic objectives of the government include: 1. Higher economic growth 2. Low inflation 3. Low Unemployment 4. Equilibrium on the balance of payments 5. Distribution of income To achieve all objectives simultaneously it is essential to improve the supply side of the economy. If the government can increase productivity and shift AS to the right, it can enable low inflationary growth. 24. State that supply-side policy may be market-based or interventionist and that in either case they aim to shift the LRAS curve to the right, achieving growth in potential output. Market based policies: Supply-side policies are frequently highly market orientated, aiming to ‘liberate’ markets which are hindered from clearing due to various forms of market ‘impurities’ such as labor legislation, strong unions and harmful government tax laws. The US and UK implemented many market based policies in the 1980s. Interventionist policies: There are however various forms of interventionist such as increased government investment in infrastructure and education, government re-skilling and training schemes and regional/sectoral support in depressed areas/sectors. Scandinavian countries have been noticeably active in this area during the 1990s. 24. State that supply-side policy may be market-based or interventionist and that in either case they aim to shift the LRAS curve to the right, achieving growth in potential output. Interventionist supply side policies: States have a key role in investing in public services and building critical infrastructure Tax incentives and welfare reforms can encourage more people into work A commitment to a fair minimum wage / living wage to improve work incentives Active regional policy to boost under-performing areas / areas of high unemployment Some case for selective import controls to allow domestic industries to expand Management of the exchange rate to improve competitiveness of export industries Nationalization of some key industries Stronger regulation of industries including finance and transport 24. State that supply-side policy may be market-based or interventionist and that in either case they aim to shift the LRAS curve to the right, achieving growth in potential output. Market-base supply side policies: Cutting government spending and taxes and policies to cut government borrowing Laws to control trade union powers Reducing red-tape to cut the costs of doing business Measures to improve the flexibility of the labor market / reforming employment laws Policies to boost competition such as deregulation and tough anti-monopoly and anti-cartel laws Privatization of state assets (selling off public sector businesses into the private sector) Opening up an economy to overseas trade and investment Opening up an economy to inward labor migration 24. State that supply-side policy may be market-based or interventionist and that in either case they aim to shift the LRAS curve to the right, achieving growth in potential output. Classical view of LRAS shifting to the right. Keynesian view of LRAS shifting to the right. 25. Explain how investment in education and training will raise the levels of human capital and have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will increase LRAS. Increased Spending on Education and Training: Economists disagree about the scale of the likely economic and social returns to be earned from higher spending on education – but few of them deny that “investment in education” has the potential to raise the skills within the work force and improve the employment prospects of thousands of unemployed workers. The economic returns from extra education spending vary according to the stage of development that a country has achieved Government spending on education and training improves workers’ human capital Economies that have invested heavily in education are those that are well set for the future. Most economists agree, with the move away from industries that required manual skills to those that need mental skills, that investment in education, and the retraining of previously manual workers, is vital. Improved training, especially for those who lose their job in an old industry should improve the occupational mobility of workers. This should help reduce the problem of structural unemployment. A well-educated workforce acts as a magnet for foreign investment in the economy. Improved education increases opportunities which means that incentives can work more effectively 25. Explain how investment in education and training will raise the levels of human capital and have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will increase LRAS. Basically, any government policy causing an increase in labor market participation increases the supply of labor. The Graph shows how various forms of interventionist supply-side policies – notably education, (re-) training and greater labor mobility – increase the aggregate supply of labor. This in turn increases the potential output in the economy, LRAS. 25. Explain how investment in education and training will raise the levels of human capital and have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will increase LRAS. Investment in human capital as a result of government intervention takes on some of the following range of interventionism: Government grants/subsidies to employers hiring youths, older workers and long term unemployed Entrepreneurial incentives such as soft loans and subsidized rent for start-up companies and R&D loans Government tax incentives to firms which invest in education/training amongst employees risking redundancy Government/communal re-training schemes Improved information for job-seekers by way of government employment agencies, online job seeking and help/advice in job seeking Regional support and outsourcing of government agencies to depressed areas Specific youth training programs and subsidies for firms hiring under-18s (which will give these young people much needed experience to gain ‘real’ jobs) 25. Explain how investment in education and training will raise the levels of human capital and have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will increase LRAS. 26. Explain how policies that encourage research and development will have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will result in new technologies and will increase LRAS. Research and Development (R&D): Investigate activities that a business chooses to conduct with the intention of making a discovery that can either lead to the development of new products or procedures, or to improvements of existing products or procedures. Research and development is one of the means by which business can experience future growth by developing new products or processes to improve and expand their operations. Capital investment and innovation: Capital spending by firms adds to aggregate demand (C+I+G+(X-M)) but also has an important effect on long run aggregate supply. Supply side policies would include tax relief on research and development and reductions in the rate of corporation tax 26. Explain how policies that encourage research and development will have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will result in new technologies and will increase LRAS. A to B: Investment increases and AD shifts from AD0 to AD1, taking the economy from point A to point B. B to C: In due course, the effects of increased capital will increase productivity, causing aggregate supply to increase from SRAS0 to SRAS1; point C. Increase in LRAS: The increase in productivity and output capability causes LRAS to increase from LRAS0 to LRAS1, creating new long run equilibrium at YNRU1. 27. Explain how increased and improved infrastructure will have a short-term impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will increase LRAS. Investment in infrastructure: infrastructure is the stock of fixed capital equipment in a country, including factories, roads, schools, etc., considered as a determinant of economic growth. Improving information and investing in infrastructure will facilitate the firms to produce more and at a more cost efficient manner. Better infrastructure attracts more investment both domestic and foreign. In the short run increase government expenditures of infrastructure will lead to rise in AD and will fuel inflation, however in the long run it will lead to greater efficiencies and output thus shifting the LRAS to the right. 27. Explain how increased and improved infrastructure will have a shortterm impact on aggregate demand, but more importantly will increase LRAS. When economists use the term infrastructure, they are referring to the ‘internal skeleton’ which holds an economy upright and moving. Infrastructure provides the basis for an economy to function, and consists of the system of road networks, telecommunications networks, sewage facilities, water supply, electricity and power sources, financial/education/health system, public transportation networks and ports/harbors or other international points of trade access. An increase in infrastructure will initially increase aggregate demand. Infrastructure is vital to a well-functioning economy and the effects of investment here are hard to overestimate. It allows all the factors of production in a country to be productively utilized: laborers can get to their jobs; produce can be transported to urban areas from rural areas; power, water and information so vital to firms can be transported; and enhanced market accessibility increases the level of competition in an economy. 28. Explain that targeting specific industries through policies including tax cuts, tax allowances and subsidized lending promotes growth in key areas of the economy and will have a short-term impact on aggregate demand but, more importantly, will increase LRAS. Improving the performance of firms Measures to improve competition and efficiency in product markets, especially in global markets, are also a significant part of supply-side policy. Example of measures include: Government may help to improve supply-side performance by giving assistance to firms to encourage them to use new technology, and innovate. This can be done through grants, or through the tax system. Deregulation of product markets may be implemented to bring down barriers to entry, encourage new and dynamic market entrants, and improve overall supplyside performance. The effect of this would be to make markets more competitive and increase efficiency. Promoting competition is called competition policy. Privatization of state industry was a central part of supply-side policy during the 1980s and 1990s, and helped contribute to the spread of an enterprise culture. As long as privatization is accompanied by measures to promote competition, there are likely to be efficiency gains for the firm, and productivity gains for the employees. Supply side performance can also be improved if there is a constant supply of new firms. Small businesses are often innovative and flexible, and can be helped in a number of ways, including start-up loans and tax breaks. 28. Explain that targeting specific industries through policies including tax cuts, tax allowances and subsidized lending promotes growth in key areas of the economy and will have a short-term impact on aggregate demand but, more importantly, will increase LRAS. The following industrial policies can increase long run potential: R&D grants to firms together with government support for R&D units linked to state universities Regional support for fledgling industries Relocation subsidies for workers to seek and take jobs in other regions Active promotion of Home Country industries and products via trade legations at embassies abroad 29. Explain how factors including deregulation, privatization, trade liberalization and antimonopoly regulation are used to encourage competition. Deregulation of Markets: De-regulation or liberalization means the opening up of markets to greater competition The aim of this is to increase market supply (driving prices down) and widen the choice available to consumers Good examples of deregulation to use include: urban bus transport, post and parcel delivery service, telecommunications, and gas and electricity supply. 29. Explain how factors including deregulation, privatization, trade liberalization and antimonopoly regulation are used to encourage competition. 29. Explain how factors including deregulation, privatization, trade liberalization and antimonopoly regulation are used to encourage competition. Privatization: Over the last twenty-five years, many former stateowned businesses have been privatized – i.e. transferred from the public to private sector. Privatization is designed to break-up state monopolies and create more competition. The government also created utility regulators who have in the past imposed price controls and who are now in charge of over-seeing moves towards competitive markets in areas such as gas and electricity supply and telecommunications. 29. Explain how factors including deregulation, privatization, trade liberalization and antimonopoly regulation are used to encourage competition. 29. Explain how factors including deregulation, privatization, trade liberalization and antimonopoly regulation are used to encourage competition. Toughening up of Competition Policy: Most supply-side economists believe that competition forces business to become more efficient in the way in which they use scarce resources. A tougher competition policy regime includes policies designed to curb anti-competitive practices such as pricefixing cartels and other abuses of a dominant market position – in other words – intervention to curb some of the market failure that can come from monopoly power 29. Explain how factors including deregulation, privatization, trade liberalization and antimonopoly regulation are used to encourage competition. Measures to encourage small business start-ups / entrepreneurship: The small businesses of today often become the larger businesses of tomorrow employing more workers and contributing to innovation that can have positive spill-over effects in other industries. Governments of all political persuasions argue that they want to promote an entrepreneurial culture and to increase the rate of new business start-ups. Supply side policies include loan guarantees for new businesses; regional policy assistance for entrepreneurs in depressed areas of the country; advice for new firms 30. Explain how factors including reducing the power of labor unions, reducing unemployment benefits and abolishing minimum wages are used to make the labor market more flexible (more responsive to supply and demand). Reducing the power of Trades Unions: This should a) increase efficiency of firms e.g. less time lost to strikes b) reduce unemployment ( if labor markets are competitive) Reducing State Welfare Benefits This may encourage unemployed to take jobs. Providing better information about jobs This may also help reduce frictional unemployment Deregulate Labor Markets This is said to be an important objective to increase competitiveness. E.g. Make it easier to hire and fire workers. 30. Explain how factors including reducing the power of labor unions, reducing unemployment benefits and abolishing minimum wages are used to make the labor market more flexible (more responsive to supply and demand). 31. Explain how factors including personal income tax cuts are used to increase the incentive to work, and how cuts in business tax and capital gains tax are used to increase the incentive to invest. Income Tax Reforms and the Incentive to Work: Economists who support supply-side policies believe that lower rates of income tax provide a short-term boost to demand, and they improve incentives for people to work longer hours or take a new job – because they get to keep more of the money they earn. Cutting tax rates for lower paid workers may help to reduce the extent of the ‘unemployment trap’ – where people calculate that they may be no better off from working than if they stay outside the labor force. Do lower taxes always help to increase the active labor supply in the economy? It seems obvious that lower taxes should boost the incentive to work because tax cuts increase the reward from a job. But some people may choose to work the same number of hours and simply take a rise in their post-tax income! Millions of other workers have little choice over the hours that they work. 31. Explain how factors including personal income tax cuts are used to increase the incentive to work, and how cuts in business tax and capital gains tax are used to increase the incentive to invest. Reductions in business taxation: For example lowering the rate of corporation tax (to stimulate investment) or reducing employers’ national insurance contributions (to boost the demand for labor). Lower taxes for business research and development spending or tax relief for inward investment projects also have a supply-side aspect to them. capital gains tax cuts: Encourages investors to retain funds for a long period. Facilitates investment in new equipment and machinery. 31. Explain how factors including personal income tax cuts are used to increase the incentive to work, and how cuts in business tax and capital gains tax are used to increase the incentive to invest. 31. Explain how factors including personal income tax cuts are used to increase the incentive to work, and how cuts in business tax and capital gains tax are used to increase the incentive to invest. It is argued that lower taxes (income and corporation) increase the incentives for people to work harder, leading to more output. The Laffer curve is a representation of the relationship between government revenue raised by taxation and possible rates of taxation. It illustrates the concept of taxable income elasticity – that taxable income will change in response to changes in the rate of taxation. 31. Explain how factors including personal income tax cuts are used to increase the incentive to work, and how cuts in business tax and capital gains tax are used to increase the incentive to invest. The Laffer curve usually postulates that no tax revenue will be raised at the extreme tax rates of 0% and 100%. If both a 0% and 100% rate of taxation generate no revenue, but some intermediate tax rate generates some tax revenue, it follows that there must exist at least one rate where tax revenue would be a non-zero maximum. The Laffer curve is typically represented as a graph which starts at 0% tax with zero revenue, rises to a maximum rate of revenue at an intermediate rate of taxation, and then falls again to zero revenue at a 100% tax rate. The actual existence and shape of the curve is uncertain and disputed. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. Time lags: Supply-side policy can take a long time to work its way through the economy. For example, improving the quality of human capital, through education and training, is unlikely to yield quick results. The benefits of deregulation can only be seen after new firms have entered the market, and this may also take a long time. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The ability to create employment: They can also help create real jobs and sustainable growth through their positive effect on labor productivity and competitiveness. Furthermore, some specific types of supply-side policy may be strongly resisted as they may reduce the power of various interest groups. For example, in labor markets the interests of trade unions may be threatened by labor market reforms. Power of labor unions, reducing unemployment benefits and abolishing minimum wages can lead to wide spread discontent among the labor force in the economy. Thus governments are usually hesitant in taking these steps. Moreover, these might also lead to worsening of working conditions in the long run which will affect labor productivity. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. Suggested Supply Side Policies to Reduce Unemployment Better job information to help reduce frictional unemployment. Lower unemployment benefits to increase the incentive to get a job. It is argued generous unemployment benefits create an unemployment trap, where those on benefits would get only a small increase in after tax income if they decided to work. Reduced Power of Trades Unions. Trades unions can cause real wage / classical unemployment (where wages are pushed above the equilibrium. If you reduce the power of unions, wages will fall to equilibrium levels leading to less unemployment. Also reducing minimum wages should have similar effect. However, this could leave workers without protection against monopsonist employers leading to lower wages. Better education and training. This provides skills which will help the long-term unemployed to retrain and find jobs in a fast changing labor market. This can help reduce structural unemployment. However, it depends whether the government can provide skills that employers really need; there is no guarantee that government spending will be able to solve the skills gap. Demand Deficient Unemployment Supply side policies will not reduce unemployment caused by a fall in aggregate demand (demand-deficient unemployment) They can only reduce long term structural unemployment.(natural rate of unemployment) 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The ability to reduce inflationary pressure: Supply-side policies can help reduce inflationary pressure in the long term because of efficiency and productivity gains in the product and labor markets. Supply side policies appear to answer the problem of stagflation. By increasing aggregate supply, both falling real GDP and inflation can be revered. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The impact on economic growth: They can also help create real jobs and sustainable growth through their positive effect on labor productivity and competitiveness. Supply-side policies are mainly micro-economic policies aimed at making markets and industries operate more efficiently and contribute to a faster underlying-rate of growth of real national output Successful policies have the effect of shifting the LRAS curve to the right leading to a rise in potential output Most governments believe that improved supply-side performance is the key to achieving sustained growth without causing a rise in inflation. Supply-side reform on its own is not enough to achieve this growth. There must also be a high enough level of AD so that the productive capacity of an economy is actually brought into play. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The impact on the government budget: Supply-side policy is very costly to implement and have severe impact on the government budget. For example, the provision of education and training is highly labor intensive and extremely costly. The government has to carefully plan these spending over a period of time. In the short run market oriented supply side policies such as reducing in income and corporate taxes can reduce government’s main source of revenue, however in the long run size of the economic growth would be significant enough that the increased government revenue from a faster growing economy would cause overall revenue to increase. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The effect on equity: Many supply-side measures have a negative effect on the distribution of income, at least in the short-term. For example, lower taxes rates, reduced union power, and privatization have all contributed to a widening of the gap between rich and poor. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The effect on the environment: Supply side policies can lead to exploitation of natural resources and environment if environmental regulations are relaxed thus creating negative externalities of production. The social cost of deregulation may be borne out in unsafe products, dangerous work places and polluted environments. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The advantages: Supply-side policies can help reduce inflationary pressure in the long term because of efficiency and productivity gains in the product and labor markets. They can also help create real jobs and sustainable growth through their positive effect on labor productivity and competitiveness. Increases in competitiveness will also help improve the balance of payments. Finally, supply-side policy is less likely to create conflicts between the main objectives of stable prices, sustainable growth, full employment and a balance of payments. This partly explains the popularity of supply-side policies over the last 25 years. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. The disadvantages: However, supply-side policy can take a long time to work its way through the economy. For example, improving the quality of human capital, through education and training, is unlikely to yield quick results. The benefits of deregulation can only be seen after new firms have entered the market, and this may also take a long time. In addition, supply-side policy is very costly to implement. For example, the provision of education and training is highly labor intensive and extremely costly, certainly in comparison with changes in interest rates. Furthermore, some specific types of supply-side policy may be strongly resisted as they may reduce the power of various interest groups. For example, in product markets, profits may suffer as a result of competition policy, and in labor markets the interests of trade unions may be threatened by labor market reforms. Finally, there is the issue of equity. Many supply-side measures have a negative effect on the distribution of income, at least in the short-term. For example, lower taxes rates, reduced union power, and privatization have all contributed to a widening of the gap between rich and poor. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. Demand-Side Vs. Supply-Side Policies Demand- and supply-side economics are both based on the general faith in markets. In both cases, the differing views suggest that markets are essentially rational allocators of resources and rewards, but the engine of that market is the area of difference. These two schools of economics seek the alleviation of unemployment and the most rational uses of government to achieve the ends of rational and justifiable rewards. Government Policies Governments have a fairly limited arsenal of policy weapons to use in the economy. Taxation and regulation are always the two major sources of government intervention. In addition to those, governments can buy industry, promote public works, increase welfare and unemployment payments, start wars, restrict imports and mobilize labor. These government weapons in the economy are seen very differently by demand- and supply-side economists. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. Supply-side Policies Supply side, as the name suggests, takes the producers and investors of wealth as the main engine of economic development. The basic argument is that the producers and investors need a set of incentives to promote investment and innovation. This set of incentives requires the state -- seen as an unproductive and parasitical entity -- to reduce taxes on those groups and classes most likely to invest their money wisely in production and innovation. Therefore, taxes should be low, budgets should be balanced, regulation kept at a minimum and international trade should be kept free. Demand-side Policies The demand side takes most of its theoretical work from the British economist John Maynard Keynes. He held that the real engine of economic development comes at the level of the consumer. Therefore, governments should be deeply involved in the economy. If the consumer -- and therefore, demand -- is the engine of economic growth, then the state should do all in its power to increase the spending power of the average person. This, in turn, requires that the state engage in public works and increase all forms of entitlements. Full employment is the goal of the demand-side economist, and it matters not where the source of that employment is. All that matters is that consumers continue to buy products and services, and keep the economy spinning. 32. Evaluate the effectiveness of supply-side policies through consideration of factors including time lags, the ability to create employment, the ability to reduce inflationary pressure, the impact on economic growth, the impact on the government budget, the effect on equity, and the effect on the environment. States and Markets These two schools of thought, while believing in the market mechanism, view the market differently. The supply-side advocate sees markets as closed, self-contained units. They are inherently rational since consumer demand is quickly translated into prices that then send signals to producers to make more of an item. Demand-side advocates hold that there is no real reason to believe that cutting taxes will mean that producers and investors will rationally invest their saved money. The differing views on government policy relative to markets are based on the two schools' views on human rationality. For the supply-side advocate, low taxes and minimal regulation will lead to rational outcomes, since everyone wants to profit. The demand-side will hold that the market does not guarantee full employment and therefore is self-defeating, since the unemployed cannot buy anything. The investor is just as likely to invest in non-productive things as in productive things. Policy matters here because the government can "fill in" where the market fails. Supply-Side vs Demand-Side Policies DEMAND-SIDE POLICY: an economic theory that advocates use of government spending and growth in the money supply to stimulate the demand for goods and services and therefore expand economic activity. SUPPLY-SIDE POLICY: an economic theory that reduction of tax rates encourages more earnings, savings, and investment and thereby expands economic activity and the total taxable national income. Advantages & Disadvantages of demand side policies: Advantages: By using demand side policies it is possible to influence the level of economic activity and therefore output, unemployment, inflation and the trade balance. It helps to achieve macro- economic goals. Automatic stabilizers help even out economic cycles and create stability and predictability in the economy. Discretionary fiscal policy allows government to steer the economy in line with economic goals and economic welfare. Advantages & Disadvantages of demand side policies: Disadvantages: Inflation Inflation is the leading disadvantage of demand-side economics. The demand-side perspective argues that the market economy, left to its own devices, will not ensure sufficient adequate demand, which means that society will not utilize its full production capacity. Budget Deficits During a recession or other economic slowdown, output declines as a result of reduced activity. Higher government spending to compensate for the decline in aggregate demand is generally financed by borrowing, which increases government deficits and raises the national debt. Policy Lags The problem is the lag between recognition of the need for government action and the actual implementation of appropriate policy measures. Often, the policy-making process itself is responsible for the delay in the adoption and implementation of policy measures. Further, there is an additional lag between the policy itself and the effects resulting from it. Often, many months may elapse between a change in government economic policy and the policy's effect on the economy. Advantages & Disadvantages of supply- side policies: The advantages: Supply-side policies can help reduce inflationary pressure in the long term because of efficiency and productivity gains in the product and labor markets. They can also help create real jobs and sustainable growth through their positive effect on labor productivity and competitiveness. Increases in competitiveness will also help improve the balance of payments. Finally, supply-side policy is less likely to create conflicts between the main objectives of stable prices, sustainable growth, full employment and a balance of payments. Advantages & Disadvantages of supply- side policies: The disadvantages: However, supply-side policy can take a long time to work its way through the economy. For example, improving the quality of human capital, through education and training, is unlikely to yield quick results. The benefits of deregulation can only be seen after new firms have entered the market, and this may also take a long time. In addition, supply-side policy is very costly to implement. For example, the provision of education and training is highly labor intensive and extremely costly, certainly in comparison with changes in interest rates. Furthermore, some specific types of supply-side policy may be strongly resisted as they may reduce the power of various interest groups. For example, in product markets, profits may suffer as a result of competition policy, and in labor markets the interests of trade unions may be threatened by labor market reforms. Finally, there is the issue of equity. Many supply-side measures have a negative effect on the distribution of income, at least in the short-term. For example, lower taxes rates, reduced union power, and privatization have all contributed to a widening of the gap between rich and poor.