Session 1b.concepts
Session 1b.concepts
CONCEPTS
CONCEPTS
Consumption: Direct and final use of goodsdestruction of utility.
Savings are that part of the income which is not used for current consumption- i.e., Postponement of current consumption S = Y-C
2
Investment: Savings when mobilised and converted into real physical assets
Production: Creation or addition of utility
Productive activity: Any activity undertaken with the objective of earning an economic reward
3
CONCEPTS
Concept of scarcity- Scarcity of resources and multiplicity of wants- Choice Opportunity Cost: Benefits foregone from the alternatives that are not selectedarises from scarcity and versatility of resources
11
Shifts in PPC
15
PPF
When the PPF shifts to the right (outwards) , it shows there is growth in an economy..
Reasons: Technology Factor Endowments (shale Gas)
16
PPC
When the PPF shifts inwards, it indicates that the economy is shrinking.
A shrinking economy could be a result of huge ecological disaster , social unrest or deficiency in technology
17
PPC
An economy can be producing on the PPF curve only in theory. In reality, economies constantly struggle to reach an optimal production capacity.
18
Firm
An entity or organization that combines and organizes resources for the purpose of producing goods and /or services for sale. Identify- collect -and assign resources Types: proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations
19
20
Advantages: Simple form Easy to start and exit Undivided profits Secrets of Trade Prompt decision making Personal touch to business
21
Disadvantages: No separate entity of the firm Unlimited liability Limited availability of funds Uncertain life of business after the owner
22
2. PARTNERSHIP
Association of two or more persons Agreement/ contract to start the firm and to share profits (& losses) Individually partners , collectively firm Heir does not automatically become partner All partners are bound by a decision or act by any one of them. A partnership firm can not become a member of another firm, though partners can join another firm
23
PARTNERSHIP
Partnership Deed- as partnership is created by agreement - Easy to form - Strong credit position - Shared Risk - Shared resources
24
PARTNERSHIP
Uncertain life -Can be broken any time and reconstituted Unlimited liability- if a partner can not repay loan, creditors can claim it from the his personal assets. No legal framework for defining partners roles- Distrust can destroy Fund availability related to partners creditworthiness
25
26
Business Cycles
Widespread contraction and expansion in most sectors of the economy.
Peak
Trough
Time
28
29
Business cycles are marked by widespread expansion and contraction in most sectors of the economy Major phases of a business cycle are recession and expansion (or prosperity). Peak and trough are the turning points of the phases. If recession is severe in terms of scale and longer in duration, it is termed depression
30
Causes of Cycles
Inflationary/ deflationary pressures on price-cost relationships Agricultural and meteorological factors Aggregate demand and under consumption Monetary factors Savings-investment gap or over investment
31
Causes of Cycles
Technological innovation General over production Psychological factors Risk and uncertainty factors
32
Characteristics of Recession
Fall in consumers purchase Fall in demand for labour and other inputs. Fall in output and increase in inventories. Fall in investments and demand for credit Fall in profits General pessimism Increase in the above factors describes the phase of expansion
33
Characteristics of Recession
The Great Recession: Fall in Durable consumer goods demand Freeze on new recruitments Job cuts and pay cuts Unsold houses (Foreclosures) Bankruptcies Stock market slide and falling investor confidence General mood of pessimism
34
Global Recovery??
US sub prime lending Each phase carries the seeds of its own destruction Jobless recovery?? Double Dip?? European crisis: Sovereign Debt Crisis
35
37
39
41
42
43
J. M. Keynes during Great Depression Reduce tax rates Increase subsidies Increase public expenditure Debt polices.
45
Fiscal measures directly affect Prices Consumers disposable income Money supply Supply of goods and commodities - which in turn affect the movements of business cycles
46
3.Other measures Buffer stock operations Declaration of minimum procurement price etc are used to stabilize prices in agriculture
47
Inflation
Demand pull/ Cost- push WPI: 435 commodities tracked- time lag of only e weeks- revision later CPI is a better index as it captures cost of living, but it comes with a time lag 4 types of CPI- Industrial workers, urban Non manual workers, AL, rural labor
48
Monetary Policy
Repo rate : Rate of interest charged by central bank when banks borrow money from it Tool through which RBI infuses funds into the system by lending to banks against pledging of securities
49
Monetary Policy
Reverse repo: Rate which RBI offers to banks when they deposit funds with it. RBI drains out liquidity from the financial system through reverse repo by releasing bonds to the banks. This is a daily operation by the Bank to manage liquidity. Over a longer period, RBI can also manage liquidity through OMO.
50
Monetary Policy
When liquidity is tight and banks need short term funds from RBI to manage mismatches, then repo rate emerges as the effective policy rate. But if liquidity returns to the system reverse repo rate would become the operative rate as RBI would be draining out funds from the system,
51
Monetary Policy
. In US there is a single Fed Fund Rate. This is the key interest rate and short term funds are available to eligible borrowers at this rate.
52
Policy Rates
SLR Every bank in India has to maintain a minimum proportion of their net demand and time liabilities as liquid assets in the form of cash, gold and unencumbered approved securities.
Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR). Simply put, SLR is the percentage of total deposits banks have to invest in government bonds and other approved securities
53
The maximum limit of SLR is 40% and minimum limit of SLR is 25%. Its 25% now. This restriction is imposed by RBI on banks to make funds available to customers on demand as soon as possible. (Gold and G Secs (or Gilts) are included along with cash because they are highly liquid and safe assets.)
54
CRR, or cash reserve ratio, is the portion of deposits that the banks have to maintain with the RBI. Higher the ratio, the lower is the amount that banks will be able to use for lending and investment
55
Difference between SLR and CRR: To meet SLR, banks can use cash, gold or approved securities - CRR has to be only cash. CRR is maintained in cash form with RBI, where as SLR is maintained in liquid form with banks themselves.
56
Reverse logic in recession A cut in SLR means that the home, car and commercial loan rates will go down.
57
SLR:
58
FISCAL MEASURES
Recession: Increase government spending (stimulus packages) Reduce taxes
59
ROLE PLAY
Company XYZ earns 70% of its revenue from exports to USA. Of late export orders have fallen , leading to fall in revenues. A meeting is called to find out solutions to the crisis.
60
Role Play
The HR manager wants to cut jobs Finance department does not want to cut jobs as he does not want to lose trained manpower who will be handy in the case of a recovery.
61
Product manager wants to create new products by investing in R& D The Marketing Department is not sure new products can be sold in a recession. they have 2 suggestions: A) more advertisements for the old products B) Concentrating on domestic demand
62
The IT Department wants to keep more people ready for future demand How will a decision be arrived at?
63
END of SESSION
64
66
According to NCAER
How India Earns, Spends & saves by Rajesh Shukla: Rising middle class numbers Rural jobs growing (Expenditure on NREGA : 07-08: Rs.15,857 09-10: Rs. 37, 938 10-11: Rs. 40,100 NREGA wage rates have gone up from Rs.80 to Rs. 100
67
Rural economy is no more synonymous with agriculture Every new car creates 5 new jobscleaner, driver, parking attendant, mechanic & auto insurance surveyor
68
According to Morgan Stanley report, the Indian economy will start growing faster than China in 2013. Reason : demographic dividend- India will see a declining trend in the share of non-working population and add 136 mn to working population over the next 10 years; China, only 23 mn.
69
Indias savings rate will go up, while share of consumption in Chinas GDP will go up Assumptions: Sustained increase in Indias infra spending, Educational levels Fiscal consolidation.
70
71
Raghuram Rajan: Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy
We must create real jobs,- not make-work jobsto increase productivity of rural worker to the levels of manufacturing/ service workers His prescription for population dividend: Infrastructure Education Health Financial Inclusion- credit only one aspect
72
ETs warning: Need inclusive growth and internal security. To tackle the second, you need inclusive growth
73
75
76
77
Chinas problems: Inequality All areas not fully developed Rural neglect Absence of democracy Trade wars with Us Strikes in plants Housing bubble?
78
79
Role Play
Company XYZ is an exporter whose major profits come from the US market. Of late, it has been facing falling demand and dropping profits. A meeting is called to discuss the problem: The HR head wants to reduce manpower to revive profits. The operations head wants to have a stable workforce which is well-trained and highly skilled so that resources do not migrate to competitors and morale is not 80
The Product Development head wants increased R&D spending so that new product lines can help beat the falling demand. The Finance Head wants to avoid any new investments because the company has limited capital and will be hit hard if new products do not do well.
81
The Marketing Head has two alternatives : Either explore new foreign markets or to launch an exciting campaign to rejuvenate domestic demand. What should the Managerial Economist Do? What lessons did you learn?
82