Thanks to everyone who joined us live for this synoptic exploration of development policies. Here are the session timestamps so you can fasttrack to parts you'd like to revisit: SESSION TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction 03:58 Warmup - Name the Economy 07:12 Micro effects of high relative poverty 10:32 Macro effects of high relative poverty 13:29 Micro policies to lower poverty & inequality 17:36 Macro policies to lower poverty & inequality 22:50 Importance of productivity 23:31 Case study | Bread subsidies in Egypt 30:52 Buffer stock schemes 37:06 Alternatives to buffer stock schemes 38:00 Case study | Tourism in Sri Lanka
Geoff, im not sure if this is something you’d want to do but i think it would be really interesting if you did a video on say 5 great economics focused books you’d recommend and your thoughts on them. It would be so helpful for upcoming personal statements but also just interesting generally to hear your thoughts
@@tutor2u-official what a video to watch before the exam. The questions were on regional inequalities in the uk and policies to help tackle that. Not to get too far ahead of myself but a nice grade incoming. Geoff has sorted me right out 💪🏼 cheers Geoff
Geoff for buffer stick schemes 2 questions - why is supply perfectly inelastic - is that just for simplicity? - and i've always wondered how the government are able to store perishable goods effectively, surely they just go off - or are the price fluctuations we are talking about more short-term, every day say, than that?
Thanks to everyone who joined us live for this synoptic exploration of development policies. Here are the session timestamps so you can fasttrack to parts you'd like to revisit:
SESSION TIMESTAMPS
00:00 Introduction
03:58 Warmup - Name the Economy
07:12 Micro effects of high relative poverty
10:32 Macro effects of high relative poverty
13:29 Micro policies to lower poverty & inequality
17:36 Macro policies to lower poverty & inequality
22:50 Importance of productivity
23:31 Case study | Bread subsidies in Egypt
30:52 Buffer stock schemes
37:06 Alternatives to buffer stock schemes
38:00 Case study | Tourism in Sri Lanka
Its time to cook
Geoff, im not sure if this is something you’d want to do but i think it would be really interesting if you did a video on say 5 great economics focused books you’d recommend and your thoughts on them. It would be so helpful for upcoming personal statements but also just interesting generally to hear your thoughts
Great suggestion!
I know it’s not important but I got Mongolia straight away 💪🏼 watching this just before the exam just memorising some data
Hope it goes well today
@@tutor2u-official what a video to watch before the exam. The questions were on regional inequalities in the uk and policies to help tackle that. Not to get too far ahead of myself but a nice grade incoming. Geoff has sorted me right out 💪🏼 cheers Geoff
Geoff for buffer stick schemes 2 questions - why is supply perfectly inelastic - is that just for simplicity? - and i've always wondered how the government are able to store perishable goods effectively, surely they just go off - or are the price fluctuations we are talking about more short-term, every day say, than that?
oh is perfect inelasticity because its aggregate market for that good so essentially LR maximum supply-side capacity?
Supply assumed to be inelastic because the size of the harvest is largely independent of price - determined by other factors
Can I still talk about buffer stock schemes if I’m doing aqa?
Absolutely!
Name of the song please😂
Save Memories, by Mindme
open.spotify.com/track/5373nTRYtwn4vnpvUjFUi7