Government Impact on Business: Economic Objectives (Cambridge (CIE) O Level Business Studies)
Revision Note
Written by: Lisa Eades
Reviewed by: Steve Vorster
Government Economic Objectives
Most governments pursue similar objectives for their national economies
Diagram: government economic objectives
Positive economic growth
Positive economic growth is the increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of population over a period of time
The standard of living of the population is likely to increase with GDP growth
As output is rising, more workers are needed, and high levels of employment are achieved
Households can afford to buy more goods and services as most people become richer
Business owners expand their business as people have more money to spend on their products and revenue rises
Low levels of inflation
Inflation refers to a general increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money over time
Both the UK and US governments set their Central Bank an inflation target of 2%
Central Banks have a range of tools they can use to achieve this target, such as base rates and quantitative easing
Low levels of unemployment
Unemployment refers to the number of people without a job who are actively seeking and available for work
Low unemployment increases national output, improves workers’ living standards and reduces government spending on welfare benefits
A healthy balance of payments
The balance of payments is the relationship between the value of imports and exports over a period of time
Exports bring foreign currency in to an economy, whilst imports lead to currency flowing out of it
If a balance of payments deficit occurs
The country could run out of foreign currency and it may have to resort to expensive borrowing from abroad
The exchange rate (the price of one country’s currency against another) is likely to fall
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