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The Economist Newspaper Ltd
Industry: Economy; Printing & publishing
Number of terms: 15233
Number of blossaries: 1
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Loans to boost exports. In many countries these are subsidized by a government keen to encourage exports. Typically, the credit comes in two forms: loans to foreign buyers of domestic produce; and guarantees on loans made by banks to domestic companies so they can produce the exports that should pay off the loan. This effectively insures producers against non-payment. When governments compete aggressively with export credits to win business for domestic firms the sums involved can become large. The economic benefit of export credits is unclear at the best of times. This may be because they are largely motivated by political goals.
Industry:Economy
A tax on what people spend, rather than what they earn or their wealth. Economists often regard it as more efficient than other taxes because it may discourage productive economic activity less; it is not the creating of income and wealth that is taxed, but the spending of it. It can be a form of indirect taxation, added to the price of a good or service when it is sold, or direct taxation, levied on people’s income minus their savings over a year.
Industry:Economy
The capital gain plus income that investors think they will earn by making an investment, at the time they invest.
Industry:Economy
What people assume about the future, especially when they make decisions. Economists debate whether people have irrational or rational expectations, or adaptive expectations that change to reflect learning from past mistakes.
Industry:Economy
Outside the model. For instance, in traditional Neo-classical economics, models of growth rely on an exogenous factor. To keep growing, an eco¬nomy needs continual infusions of technological progress. Yet this is a force that the neo-classical model makes no attempt to explain. The rate of technological progress comes from outside the model; it is simply assumed by the economic modelers. In other words, it is exogenous. New growth theory tries to calculate the rate of technological progress inside the economic model by mapping its relationship to factors such as human capital, free markets, competition and government expenditure. Thus, in these models, growth is ¬endogenous.
Industry:Economy
The price at which one currency can be converted into another. Over the years, economists and politicians have often changed their minds about whether it is a good idea to try to hold a country’s exchange rate steady, rather than let it be decided by market forces. For two decades after the second world war, many of the major currencies were fixed under the Bretton Woods agreement. During the following two decades, the number of currencies allowed to float increased, although in the late 1990s a number of European currencies were permanently fixed under economic and monetary union and some other countries established a currency board. When capital can flow easily around the world, countries cannot fix their exchange rate and at the same time maintain an independent monetary policy. They must choose between the confidence and stability provided by a fixed exchange rate and the control over interest rate policy offered by a floating exchange rate. On the face of it, in a world of capital mobility a more flexible exchange rate seems the best bet. A floating currency will force firms and investors to hedge against fluctuations, not lull them into a false sense of stability. It should make foreign banks more circumspect about lending. At the same time it gives policymakers the option of devising their own monetary policy. But floating exchange rates have a big drawback: when moving from one equilibrium to another, currencies can overshoot and become highly unstable, especially if large amounts of capital flow in or out of a country. This instability has real economic costs. To get the best of both worlds, many emerging economies have tried a hybrid approach, loosely tying their exchange rate either to a single foreign currency, such as the dollar, or to a basket of currencies. But the currency crises of the late 1990s, and the failure of Argentina's currency board, led many economists to conclude that, if not a currency union such as the Euro, the best policy may be to have a freely floating exchange rate.
Industry:Economy
Limits on the amount of foreign currency that can be taken into a country, or of domestic currency that can be taken abroad.
Industry:Economy
Getting more money from an economic investment than you needed to justify investing. In perfect competition, the factors of production earn only normal returns, that is, the minimum amount of wages, profit, interest or rent needed to secure their use in the economic activity in question, rather than in an alternative. Excess returns can only be earned for more than a short period when there is market failure, especially monopoly, because otherwise the existence of excess returns would quickly attract competition, which would drive down returns until they were normal.
Industry:Economy
A Darwinian approach to economics, sometimes called institutional economics. Following the tradition of Schumpeter, it views the economy as an evolving system and places a strong emphasis on dynamics, changing structures (including technologies, institutions, beliefs and behavior) and disequilibrium processes (such as innovation, selection and imitation).
Industry:Economy
A club of European countries. Initially a six-country trade area established by the 1957 Treaty of Rome and known as the European Economic Community, it has become an increasingly political union. In 1999 a single currency, the Euro, was launched in 11 of the then 15 member countries. Viewed as a single entity, the EU has a bigger economy than the United States. In 2002, a further 10 countries were invited to join the EU in 2004, increasing its membership to 25 countries, with more countries likely to follow later.
Industry:Economy