Monetary Policy UK Themes - HOT TOPIC for Paper 2! Must Watch 🔥

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 май 2024
  • Monetary Policy UK Themes - HOT TOPIC for Paper 2! Video covering the big themes with monetary policy in the UK in 2024 focussing on the contractionary side
    For Products, Services and Bookings visit econplusdal.com
    Instagram: / econplusdal
    Twitter: / econplusdal
    Facebook: EconplusDal-...
    End Music: Relax by Peyruis / peyruis Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/b... Music promoted by Audio Library • Relax - Peyruis (No Co...

Комментарии • 82

  • @AliKhan-fx6qb
    @AliKhan-fx6qb 14 дней назад +365

    dal mate ive told my parents about us

  • @amayamacd
    @amayamacd 14 дней назад +237

    mans just summarising that the UK has cooked itself and we have to write about it 😭😭

    • @klak5458
      @klak5458 13 дней назад +10

      Rubbing salt into the wound. Ong I still find it funny that tomorrow we may have to write about how incompetent those in charge have been over the past few years lmao 🔥🔥

    • @amayamacd
      @amayamacd 13 дней назад +14

      @@klak5458 to be fair we have many examples we can use from the inspiring twats that have run this country LOL

    • @jimzimmer2048
      @jimzimmer2048 13 дней назад

      @@klak5458 for paper 1 i talked about how fatties are ruining the economy lol

  • @Ben-xf9jf
    @Ben-xf9jf 14 дней назад +166

    DAL GOT US LOCKED IN ON A SUNDAY MORNING 🔥🔥

  • @blackprior7728
    @blackprior7728 13 дней назад +28

    DAL GOT ME LOCKED IN ON THE MORNING OF THE EXAM 💪💪

  • @megatronismycat
    @megatronismycat 13 дней назад +52

    notes I made while watching the video for those in a rush, if I missed out on anything it's cause I gave up
    Contractionary policy in UK at the moment, why?
    - COVID caused economic crisis during its time, led UK to its worst recession in over 300 years. Bank of England and Monetary Policy Committee reacted by using expansionary monetary policy (cutting interest rates down to 0.1%, then forced to use 495 pounds worth of quantitative easing money to promote recovery)
    - These intended to improve growth, reduce unemployment, prevent deflation and promot economic recovery
    However:
    - Banks were not willing to lend in the beginning of the Covid crisis, as they were concerned if jobs, businesses and industries would survive crisis.
    - Also, very high inflation in the aftermaths of the Covid lockdown due to earlier policies. UK has been above inflation target for 3 years since (peak 11.1% in Oct 2022)
    Contractionary Policy
    - Interest rates have risen from 0.1% from Covid times to now 5.25%
    - Also been using Quantitative tightening
    Has it worked?
    - Inflation has come down to 3.2% at the moment, but has taken a long time to do so and we are still above target. This shows the timelagged issue when using monetary policy.
    - But inflation has also been driven by supply side causes involving the war in Ukraine, which has increased oil, electricity and food prices.
    Intentions of Contractionary Monetary Policy (Pros)
    - Reduce inflation
    - Reduce household debt (since interest rates have gone up and amounts of household debts has gone down)
    - Promote savings as returns of savings have risen
    - High interest rates can promote more sustainable, organic lending and borrowing (only borrowing when necessary, therefore moving economy away from debt-fuelled consumption)
    - Normal levels of interest rates will also provide more rate cut potential for the next time that the Bank wants to use expansionary monetary policy (this was an issue during covid as they could only cut from 0.75% to 0.1%)
    Evaluation (Cons)
    - Reduced economic growth and increased unemployment due to demand-side shocks
    - Makes it difficult to pay back any current debt:
    - [ Reduced living standards for individuals, drop in disposable income
    - bankruptcy in worst case scenario if they cannot afford to pay back - households: assets taken away, homeless. businesses: shut down, more unemployment. ]
    - Discourage investment (which is already low right now), hurting short term and long term growth
    - Bank failure as many debtors were unable to repay at such high interest rates, creating insolvency issues. People were also moving their savings out of banks chasing higher yielding assets instead, creating liquidity crisis. (potentially create a ripple effect and bring down other banks, but didn’t happen thanks to strong financial market regulations)
    Cut rates or not?
    - Current debate to cut rates due to cons of high interest rates
    - However, it is still too premature at the moment to cut rates as inflation is still high. Cutting rates at this time could refuel inflation which would take away the benefits of higher growth and employment anyways.

    • @ayeshaqazi2028
      @ayeshaqazi2028 13 дней назад +6

      THANK YOU MAY YOU GET FULL MARKS IN ALL YOUR EXAMS

    • @saffy2926
      @saffy2926 13 дней назад

      Thankssss

    • @mjnevxx1030
      @mjnevxx1030 13 дней назад

      i love you

    • @catismarangeyes7769
      @catismarangeyes7769 13 дней назад +2

      damn only £495 of quantitative easing. You sure they couldnt spare anymore??

    • @Jiten-pm5lz
      @Jiten-pm5lz 13 дней назад

      NOT 495. 495BILLION ​@@catismarangeyes7769

  • @yoinxisgonebtw8859
    @yoinxisgonebtw8859 14 дней назад +97

    Good luck for Monday guys we will smash it

  • @aaron1he
    @aaron1he 14 дней назад +31

    bro got me productive on a sunday morning

  • @realpauldano
    @realpauldano 13 дней назад +10

    dal we’ve really been through a lot together i think we should take our relationship to the next level

  • @quokkasrock
    @quokkasrock 14 дней назад +16

    dal got us oiled up on a sunday morning

  • @thomasstringer9829
    @thomasstringer9829 12 дней назад +4

    Just had edexcel P2. Beautiful 15 and 25 marker - cheeky bit of ML condition

  • @arjungarawal2793
    @arjungarawal2793 12 дней назад +4

    NAHHHH BRO BLESSED US WITH THESE VIDEOS

  • @ItsSapi
    @ItsSapi 13 дней назад +2

    Watching this minutes before the exam, I'm soo cooked

  • @trafalgarlaw2850
    @trafalgarlaw2850 14 дней назад +5

    Thanks daddydal

  • @Jamdog05
    @Jamdog05 14 дней назад +27

    LOCKED AND LOADED FOR THIS A* THANKS TO YOU DAL 🤩

  • @myb278
    @myb278 14 дней назад +3

    Love you Dal

  • @jaket8019
    @jaket8019 13 дней назад +2

    can you make the eval point that QE can also lead to inflation?

  • @padawan1769
    @padawan1769 14 дней назад +1

    will there be another paper 2 livestream?

  • @purpledoor22
    @purpledoor22 14 дней назад +7

    Would we also discuss exchange rates for monetary policy?

    • @SparkMediaProduction
      @SparkMediaProduction 14 дней назад

      not in the uk as exchange rate controls were abolished under Thatcher during the 1970s, so just ignore it, they most likely wont include a question about XR with monetary policy

    • @_trm_4339
      @_trm_4339 14 дней назад +1

      @@SparkMediaProductionhe’s talking about hot money inflows

    • @marycudjoe-acheampong1776
      @marycudjoe-acheampong1776 13 дней назад

      ​@@_trm_4339 I don't think we would bc the £ has depreciated.

    • @_trm_4339
      @_trm_4339 13 дней назад

      @@marycudjoe-acheampong1776 outflows, inflows, depending on the question

  • @jfolkes5477
    @jfolkes5477 14 дней назад

    Was the inflation caused by qe was demand pull inflation due to increased ad?

    • @gtaplayer8508
      @gtaplayer8508 13 дней назад +1

      yes i think from government spending, in 2020 like Furlough and increase universal credit, which fed through to high inflation after the time gap

  • @MoMaf-ul6yr
    @MoMaf-ul6yr 14 дней назад +3

    Dal live today ?

  • @Jamiejamiehamie
    @Jamiejamiehamie 14 дней назад +1

    Its final day and I’ll be watching econplusdal instead

  • @DulalrayRay-bm8tf
    @DulalrayRay-bm8tf 13 дней назад +5

    I'm favoured, $60k every week! I can now give back to the locals in my community and also
    support God's work and the church. God bless America.

    • @SameerKumar-vv7dp
      @SameerKumar-vv7dp 13 дней назад

      How please. Help me I really need to gain my losses back...

    • @DulalrayRay-bm8tf
      @DulalrayRay-bm8tf 13 дней назад

      It might be beneficial to consult with a financial advisor who can provide personalized guidance on your specific situation

    • @DulalrayRay-bm8tf
      @DulalrayRay-bm8tf 13 дней назад

      I'm guide by. Jennifer Smith. God bless you ma'am

    • @MukeshDodiya-lo2ek
      @MukeshDodiya-lo2ek 13 дней назад

      😳🙄Woah! what a coincidence

    • @MukeshDodiya-lo2ek
      @MukeshDodiya-lo2ek 13 дней назад

      For the last yrs, expert ma'am Jennifer Smith has made impact on my financial and actual quality of life than any other job

  • @iadrian7569
    @iadrian7569 14 дней назад

    10:00 - How does higher interest rates lead to capital flight? Maybe investors chasing higher yielding assets such as short term government bonds or corporate bonds???
    let me know

    • @GaneshMullaparthi
      @GaneshMullaparthi 14 дней назад +1

      When interest rates are high, it becomes harder to borrow money due to the higher interest payments. So, companies may move their money (assets) elsewhere where interest rates are lower. Not necessarily just bonds

  • @tedh6320
    @tedh6320 14 дней назад

    Live stream when ?

  • @pdog9391
    @pdog9391 14 дней назад +3

    Surely with an increase in interest rate, household debt would increase, not fall.

    • @haniidlibi4011
      @haniidlibi4011 14 дней назад +7

      No increase intrested rates encourage savings so people can pay off debts which would decrease it

    • @pdog9391
      @pdog9391 14 дней назад

      @@haniidlibi4011 ok, thanks

    • @tomhughes1868
      @tomhughes1868 13 дней назад +1

      my thoughts were that with higher interest rates less people would be willing to take out debt, so overall household debt would fall- although it would still be negative towards those already indebted

    • @gtaplayer8508
      @gtaplayer8508 13 дней назад +1

      increase IR discourages ppl from taking on the debt, by letting enterprises who need to borrow borrow, reducing the risk of failing to recoupe loans as high IR prevents bad debtors with bad credit rating to borrow, unlike when IR was low like 0.1%

  • @apexsoda1422
    @apexsoda1422 14 дней назад

    The goat

  • @ruben_9868
    @ruben_9868 14 дней назад

    Hello :)

  • @qbtw_5419
    @qbtw_5419 14 дней назад

    Dal where do I begin.....

  • @lucasschrader7942
    @lucasschrader7942 13 дней назад

    all hail king dal

  • @jarchivist
    @jarchivist 14 дней назад +4

    my demand for you is price inelastic dal

  • @iadrian7569
    @iadrian7569 14 дней назад +2

    6:52 - How does increasing interest rates reduce household debt?
    From my understanding, households with variable rate mortgages find themselves paying more on their interest.

    • @michaelmoule7157
      @michaelmoule7157 14 дней назад

      I guess the idea is that households that are in debt from other assets can be paid off more easily if they are receiving a higher ROR on their savings.

    • @salmanuddin9018
      @salmanuddin9018 14 дней назад

      As a result of interest rates increasing , it becomes more expensive for individuals to take out loans therefore the average household will have reduced level of debt

    • @salmanuddin9018
      @salmanuddin9018 14 дней назад

      @@michaelmoule7157 But also what Michael is saying is correct

    • @megatronismycat
      @megatronismycat 13 дней назад +1

      @@salmanuddin9018 but this will make it more difficult to pay off current debts right?

  • @maxjhawkins
    @maxjhawkins 14 дней назад +2

    You quantitative edge me dal

  • @someguy5539
    @someguy5539 13 дней назад

    interest rates are no longer flacid is what im hearing

  • @lewismorgan4866
    @lewismorgan4866 14 дней назад +4

    How likely do you think financial markets are going to come up as I’ve not done a lot on them shall I just leave it..?

    • @docenz
      @docenz 14 дней назад +1

      It was on his paper 2 hot topics

    • @calumlyonsx9
      @calumlyonsx9 14 дней назад +1

      i got the same issue

    • @SparkMediaProduction
      @SparkMediaProduction 14 дней назад +1

      I seriously predict it being section B on the exam because of what happened to banks in '23 but could be too obvious, financial sector hasn't really been examined that much in previous years

    • @lewismorgan4866
      @lewismorgan4866 13 дней назад

      @@SparkMediaProduction thanks think i’ll just have a quick look over it

  • @MoMaf-ul6yr
    @MoMaf-ul6yr 14 дней назад

    W dal

  • @rufus4203
    @rufus4203 12 дней назад +1

    what a glow up, sexy beast

  • @zacwood5835
    @zacwood5835 14 дней назад +1

    worst recession in over 300 years?

    • @jfolkes5477
      @jfolkes5477 14 дней назад +1

      Thats what he said so itake his word for it

  • @MoMaf-ul6yr
    @MoMaf-ul6yr 14 дней назад

    W dal