- •Contents: I Semester (d.Begg, s.Fisher, r.Dornbusch. Economics.)
- •I.Part I. Economics and the Economy
- •Introduction: What is Economics?
- •Exercise 1. Listening (Guide to Economics, unit 8 “Factors of Production” – track 23)
- •Video (ttc Economics 01) “How Economists Think”
- •Exercise on Listening (Basic Economics). “What is economics?” Chapter 01
- •Exercise 1.5 (Study Guide) Complete the sentences below with prepositions where necessary:
- •Exercise 1.10 (Study Guide) Complete the text using the words in the box:
- •Exercise 1.3 (Study Guide) Give English equivalents for the following. Consult your dictionary: economic
- •Production
- •Regulation
- •Government
- •Exercise 1. Check your understanding
- •Exercise 2. Increase your vocabulary
- •Part II. Demand, Supply and the Market
- •Exercise 1. Check your understanding
- •Exercise 2. Increase your vocabulary
- •Exercise 3.2 (Study Guide, unit 3). Find in the text English equivalents for the following:
- •Exercise 3.3 (Study Guide, unit 3)
- •Exercise 3.4 (Study Guide, unit 3)
- •Соnsumption
- •Exercise 3.7 (Study Guide, unit 3). Interpret or extend the following statements:
- •Exercise 1. Check your understanding
- •Exercise 2. Listening (Guide to Economics, unit 2, f – track 06)
- •Exercise 7.3 (study Guide). Give English equivalents. Consult the Economic Dictionary.
- •Exercise 7.6 (study Guide). Complete the text using the words in the box.
- •Exercise 7.10 (study Guide). Translate into English.
- •Optional:
- •Video or Audio (Economics ttc Lecture 3 “Supply and Demand”)
- •Supply for Ice Cream Cones Near Your School
- •Part III. Types of Markets
- •Legal Monopolies
- •Совершенно конкурентный рынок
- •Part IV. Government in the Mixed Economy.
- •Impose Taxes
- •Information-related Problems
- •Income Redistribution and Merit Goods
- •Legislators
- •Civil Servants
- •Summary
- •Part V. Taxes
- •Variety of Taxes.
- •Case 1. Contracting for Prisons in Texas.
- •Case 2. Nationland.
Совершенно конкурентный рынок
Make a similar scheme for monopoly.
Exercise 7. Find additional information about the sources of monopolistic power and thus types of monopolies.
Optional:
Video or Audio (Economics TTC, Lecture 9 “From perfect competition to Monopoly”)
Listening “Perfect Competition” (www.bized.co.uk)
Video or Audio (Economics TTC, Lecture 10 “Antitrust and Competition Policy”)
Videotape “Introduction to Microeconomics”
Part IV. Government in the Mixed Economy.
IV-1. What do Governments Do?
Most resources in Western economies are allocated through markets in which individuals and privately owned firms trade with other individuals or firms. However, governments also play a major role. They set the legal rules; in the marketplace they buy goods and services, from paper clips to aircraft carriers; they produce some services, such as defence; and they make payments such as social security benefits. In financing themselves through taxation and borrowing, governments exert a major influence on prices, interest rates, and production.
Governments in modern industrial economies collect between one-quarter and one-half of GNP in taxes each year and typically spend a little more than they receive in taxes. Because governments play so large a part in economic life, to understand the operation of a modern economy we have to understand not only how markets work but also how government affects the operation of the economy.
This chapter addresses three basic questions about the government's role in economic life. What do governments actually do? How can governments in principle improve the allocation of resources in the economy? How do governments decide what to do? Our aim here is to develop an overview of the role of government as a basis for our continuing discussion of government policy in later chapters.
4-1. What Do Governments Do?
Table 3-2 shows how the scale of government activity has grown steadily over the last century. It now ranges from a third of national income in Japan to two-thirds of national income in Sweden. What do governments actually do?
Create Laws, Rules and Regulations
Governments determine the legal framework that sets the basic rules for the ownership of property and the operation of markets. If the legal framework outlaws private ownership of businesses, the economy is socialist; if businesses are owned by individuals and operated for private profit, the economy is capitalist.1 Even in the most capitalist economies, there are limits to the rights of ownership. Not everyone can own a gun, for instance. Nor are people entirely free to use their property as they please; it is usually illegal to build a factory on land in a residential area.
In addition, governments at all levels regulate economic behaviour, setting detailed rules for the operation of businesses. Regulations include planning permission (how land can be used and where businesses can locate), health and safety regulations, and attempts to prevent some types of business, such as the sale of heroin. Some regulations apply to all businesses; examples include laws against fraud and laws that prohibit competitors from agreeing to fix prices. Some regulations apply only to certain industries, such as requirements that barbers and doctors have appropriate training.
Buy and Sell Goods and Services
Governments buy and produce many goods and services, such as defence, education, parks, and roads, which they provide to firms and households. Most of these goods, such defence and education, are provided to users free of direct charge. Some, such as local bus rides and government publications, are paid for directly by the user.
Governments, like private firms, must decide what to buy and what to produce themselves. For instance, governments typically buy computers but write the programs they need to operate them. In order to do this, governments must act as buyers in the markets for the services of computer programmers.
Governments also produce and sell goods. In some countries, the phone company is government-owned; in most countries, the government owns and operates urban transport such as buses and the underground.
Make Transfer Payments
Governments also make transfer payments, such as social security and unemployment benefits, to individuals. Transfer payments are payments for which no current direct economic service is provided in return. A fireman's salary is not a transfer payment; a social security cheque is, as are unemployment benefits and interest payments on government borrowing.
Government spending is the sum of government purchases of goods and services and transfer payments. Table 3-1 gives a breakdown of government and welfare activity for several countries.
The scale of government activity is much bigger in a country like Sweden than in a country such as the United States.
Table 3-1. Government activity as a percentage of national income in the mid-1980s.
-
UK
USA
GERMANY
SWEDEN
Goods and services bought
24.1
19.9
21.2
30.4
Debt interest
3.5
2.5
2.2
3.1
Other transfer payments
19.2
14.5
20,6
30.3
Total spending
468
36.9
44.0
63.8
Tax revenue
44.1
336
42.9
60.0
Deficit
2.7
3.3
1.1
3.8
Source: OECD National Accounts
