Thank you very much for your detailed explanations! Your videos have helped me a lot to prepare for my Econ exam. Thanks to you, I can understand most of the topics I "learn" at university.
I hope someone can relate to me but I went from a D & U in Sept & Dec mocks (used as evidence) to getting a B & A in April & May final exams. It could only be done by pretending Econplusdal was Netflixanomics
I can relate to you on this. My first ever economics exam i got an E and then went to a C and then 3 B’s in a row 😂some topics are just harder to grasp🤷🏼♂️
@@Tsteezzz Great to hear! It's so amazing to hear that people my age are having identical struggles cos it makes me think I'm not alone to struggle. Good luck🤞
@@bigup2you trust me you’re not alone ahaha, I quite struggled with economics and still do with some topics but watching Dal helps me understand alot more✊🏼
I fail to understand how increasing the cost of banking, which raises costs across all sectors, and increasing unemployment would be deflationary in any way other than lowering the seemingly arbitrary measure that we call GDP. It seems like it would decrease demand pull pressures but would simultaneously increase cost push forces. It would also cause automatic stabilizers in the federal budget to increase. If the federal government were foolish enough to seek deflationary fiscal policy at the same time as interest rate hikes, it seems like it would only result in economic destruction and stagnation spiral while not solving inflation at all. Supply-side policy has proven to be, almost without exclusion to, over the long run, result in the exact opposite of what was intended as well. Privatization privatizes profits but socializes costs as most programs privatized are socially necessary and are not things that can be allowed to fail. Deregulation decreases competition as it encourages monopoly. This stifles innovation, increases inefficiency, and raises costs. It really seems to me that the majority of mainstream economics is only correct on opposite day.
I can see your concerns about the viability of some economic strategies and their possible effects on inflation, unemployment, and economic expansion. While economic theories and policies can be complex, they are designed to address certain economic concerns and achieve certain aims. Addressing the particular concerns you brought up, higher banking costs and unemployment can have deflationary effects on the economy by reducing demand for products and services, which can lead to reduced pricing. On the other hand, as you noted, it can potentially heighten cost-push pressures and cause long-term economic issues. Hence, the long-term costs of these programmes must be carefully weighed against the short-term advantages. Depending on the precise implementation and setting, supply-side strategies can also produce varying consequences s based on the particular application and situation. While their primary goals are cost-cutting and cost-efficiency, they can also result in market concentration, diminished competition, and societal consequences. Thus, it is crucial to thoroughly weigh the advantages and disadvantages of such regulations before putting them into effect. The best policies and approaches to handle various economic difficulties are always being discussed and researched in the complicated and developing discipline of economics. Even if no theory or policy is flawless, it is crucial to continuously assess their effects and make improvements as necessary.
its all bollocks and lies people and am poor but i have my ways out of all this and you realy going to let all this affect you and its all just control
I have my paper in a few hours, so sirr you are a hero
Goodluck, mine is today in a few hours
@@javierdie2616 tenks :)) goodluck
inflation came
@@arqamtariq5254 lol yeah I attempted that one too
tysm for the videos, Dal. just gave my autumn session exams, done all the notes, smashed the papers. all thanks to you ^-^
Thank you very much for your detailed explanations! Your videos have helped me a lot to prepare for my Econ exam. Thanks to you, I can understand most of the topics I "learn" at university.
Canada needs this for sure
What an incredible lecturer u are.... Wanna copy ur productivity
I hope someone can relate to me but I went from a D & U in Sept & Dec mocks (used as evidence) to getting a B & A in April & May final exams. It could only be done by pretending Econplusdal was Netflixanomics
I can relate to you on this. My first ever economics exam i got an E and then went to a C and then 3 B’s in a row 😂some topics are just harder to grasp🤷🏼♂️
@@Tsteezzz Great to hear! It's so amazing to hear that people my age are having identical struggles cos it makes me think I'm not alone to struggle. Good luck🤞
@@bigup2you trust me you’re not alone ahaha, I quite struggled with economics and still do with some topics but watching Dal helps me understand alot more✊🏼
I LOVE YOU ECONPLUSDAL you have made my life so much easier:)))
Glad to see you back - great video 😊
WE LOVE YOU ECONDAL, we're from jcid
YERSSSSS
YEAA
yeah, brand loyalty!
Yessss!!! Let's go EconDal
YSSS
Your channel is great, really appreciate your content
I LOVE YOU ECONDAL, WE FROM JCID
WE all watch your videos
Yayyyy economics!!
@econplusdal can you explain why you used the LRAS diagram for the demand pull inflation and the SRAS diagram for the cost push inflation?
The king returns
You should take over from Rishi
Hero is back
You are an angel bro
you are a legend
Can you make an indifference curve video? Thanks so much in advance
Damn that was super interesting
econplusdal the legend!
U are so wonderful, can't stop admiring u
bro nice vids 🧑🍳
My goat
How about just “stop printing money”
Who else is watching this the day before final IB exams?
The morning of the exam💪💪
@@Ziyanasto an hour before the exam
@@ismail.mahmood11 good luck broo let me know how it goes
@@Ziyanasto you 2 bro, we got this 👍
@@ismail.mahmood11 ay bro how was it. 15 marker was atrocious rest was ok
I fail to understand how increasing the cost of banking, which raises costs across all sectors, and increasing unemployment would be deflationary in any way other than lowering the seemingly arbitrary measure that we call GDP. It seems like it would decrease demand pull pressures but would simultaneously increase cost push forces. It would also cause automatic stabilizers in the federal budget to increase. If the federal government were foolish enough to seek deflationary fiscal policy at the same time as interest rate hikes, it seems like it would only result in economic destruction and stagnation spiral while not solving inflation at all.
Supply-side policy has proven to be, almost without exclusion to, over the long run, result in the exact opposite of what was intended as well. Privatization privatizes profits but socializes costs as most programs privatized are socially necessary and are not things that can be allowed to fail. Deregulation decreases competition as it encourages monopoly. This stifles innovation, increases inefficiency, and raises costs.
It really seems to me that the majority of mainstream economics is only correct on opposite day.
mainstream economics is mostly wrong lol
I can see your concerns about the viability of some economic strategies and their possible effects on inflation, unemployment, and economic expansion. While economic theories and policies can be complex, they are designed to address certain economic concerns and achieve certain aims.
Addressing the particular concerns you brought up, higher banking costs and unemployment can have deflationary effects on the economy by reducing demand for products and services, which can lead to reduced pricing. On the other hand, as you noted, it can potentially heighten cost-push pressures and cause long-term economic issues. Hence, the long-term costs of these programmes must be carefully weighed against the short-term advantages.
Depending on the precise implementation and setting, supply-side strategies can also produce varying consequences s based on the particular application and situation. While their primary goals are cost-cutting and cost-efficiency, they can also result in market concentration, diminished competition, and societal consequences. Thus, it is crucial to thoroughly weigh the advantages and disadvantages of such regulations before putting them into effect.
The best policies and approaches to handle various economic difficulties are always being discussed and researched in the complicated and developing discipline of economics. Even if no theory or policy is flawless, it is crucial to continuously assess their effects and make improvements as necessary.
"2% target" aged well.
The US government now buying Bitcoin ahead if economic inflation....most people will regret if they fail to invest now
Doubt they’d regret it now
Adonisss
Hiiii
Daddy
its all bollocks and lies people and am poor but i have my ways out of all this and you realy going to let all this affect you and its all just control