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by 趙永祥 2019-04-21 09:23:15, 回應(0), 人氣(2713)



採購經理人指數

(Purchasing Managers' Index, PMI)

採購經理人指數(Purchasing Managers’Index, PMI)為一綜合性指標,
係每月對受訪企業的採購經理人進行調查,並依調查結果編製成的指數。採購經理人通常是指企業中負責支付原料或產品採購金額的最高層級負責人,以製造業而言,通常由採購相關部門(採購、資材、供應鏈管理等)經理級以上高階主管填寫問卷,少數則由財務相關部門高階人員填寫;至於非製造業因較無實體存貨概念,難以直覺定義採購經理人,問卷可能由商品企劃部、公共事務部、投資部或財務部等高階主管填寫。

臺灣採購經理人指數係參考美國ISM(Institute for Supply Management, ISM)編製方法,調查範圍包括製造業與非製造業。其中,製造業以新增訂單數量、生產數量、人力僱用數量、存貨,以及供應商交貨時間等5項細項擴散指數(Diffusion Index)綜合編製而成 ;非製造業組成項目則包括商業活動、新增訂單數量、人力僱用數量,以及供應商交貨時間等4項擴散指數。

採購經理人指數介於0%~100%之間,若高於50%表示製造業或非製造業景氣正處於擴張期(Expansion),若低於50%表示處於緊縮期(Contraction)。


註:擴散指數(Diffusion Index)係衡量景氣變動方向的一種常見指標

PMI調查請採購經理人針對各項經濟活動與上月進行比較,

並在問卷中勾選「上升」、「持平」或「下降」,而擴散指數即為「上升」比率×1 +「持平」比率×0.5。


by 趙永祥 2024-04-29 06:55:23, 回應(0), 人氣(47)

What Is Inflation and how to control?

What Is Inflation?

Inflation is a measure of how quickly prices are increasing over time. In other words, inflation measures how quickly money loses its purchasing power.

The inflation rate is calculated as the average price increase of a basket of selected goods and services over one year. High inflation means that prices are increasing quickly, with low inflation meaning that prices are increasing more slowly. Inflation can be contrasted with deflation, which occurs when prices decline and purchasing power increases.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Inflation measures how quickly the prices of goods and services are rising.
  • Inflation is sometimes classified into three types: demand-pull inflation, cost-push inflation, and built-in inflation.
  • The most commonly used inflation indexes are the Consumer Price Index and the Wholesale Price Index.
  • Inflation can be viewed positively or negatively depending on the individual viewpoint and rate of change.
  • Those with tangible assets, like property or stocked commodities, may like to see some inflation as that raises the value of their assets.
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What Is Inflation?

Understanding Inflation

While it is easy to measure the price changes of individual products over time, human needs extend beyond just one or two products. Individuals need a big and diversified set of products as well as a host of services for living a comfortable life. They include commodities like food grains, metal, fuel, utilities like electricity and transportation, and services like healthcare, entertainment, and labor.

Inflation aims to measure the overall impact of price changes for a diversified set of products and services. It allows for a single value representation of the increase in the price level of goods and services in an economy over a specified time.

Prices rise, which means that one unit of money buys fewer goods and services. This loss of purchasing power impacts the cost of living for the common public which ultimately leads to a deceleration in economic growth. The consensus view among economists is that sustained inflation occurs when a nation's money supply growth outpaces economic growth.

3.5%

The increase in the Consumer Price Index For All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) over the 12 months ending March 2024 on an unadjusted basis. Prices rose 0.4% on a seasonally adjusted basis in March 2024 from the previous month.1

To combat this, the monetary authority (in most cases, the central bank) takes the necessary steps to manage the money supply and credit to keep inflation within permissible limits and keep the economy running smoothly.

Theoretically, monetarism is a popular theory that explains the relationship between inflation and the money supply of an economy. For example, following the Spanish conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires, massive amounts of gold and silver flowed into the Spanish and other European economies. Since the money supply rapidly increased, the value of money fell, contributing to rapidly rising prices.2

Inflation is measured in a variety of ways depending on the types of goods and services. It is the opposite of deflation, which indicates a general decline in prices when the inflation rate falls below 0%. Keep in mind that deflation shouldn't be confused with disinflation, which is a related term referring to a slowing down in the (positive) rate of inflation.

Inflation Example

Investopedia / Julie Bang

Causes of Inflation

An increase in the supply of money is the root of inflation, though this can play out through different mechanisms in the economy. A country's money supply can be increased by the monetary authorities by:

  • Printing and giving away more money to citizens
  • Legally devaluing (reducing the value of) the legal tender currency
  • Loaning new money into existence as reserve account credits through the banking system by purchasing government bonds from banks on the secondary market (the most common method)
  • Supply bottlenecks and shortages of key goods, causing other prices to rise.

In all of these cases, the money ends up losing its purchasing power. The mechanisms of how this drives inflation can be classified into three types: demand-pull inflation, cost-push inflation, and built-in inflation.

Demand-Pull Effect

Demand-pull inflation occurs when an increase in the supply of money and credit stimulates the overall demand for goods and services to increase more rapidly than the economy's production capacity. This increases demand and leads to price rises.

When people have more money, it leads to positive consumer sentiment. This, in turn, leads to higher spending, which pulls prices higher. It creates a demand-supply gap with higher demand and less flexible supply, which results in higher prices.

How Does Inflation Work?

Melissa Ling {Copyright} Investopedia, 2019

Cost-Push Effect

Cost-push inflation is a result of the increase in prices working through the production process inputs. When additions to the supply of money and credit are channeled into a commodity or other asset markets, costs for all kinds of intermediate goods rise. This is especially evident when there's a negative economic shock to the supply of key commodities.

These developments lead to higher costs for the finished product or service and work their way into rising consumer prices. For instance, when the money supply is expanded, it creates a speculative boom in oil prices. This means that the cost of energy can rise and contribute to rising consumer prices, which is reflected in various measures of inflation.

Built-in Inflation

Built-in inflation is related to adaptive expectations or the idea that people expect current inflation rates to continue in the future. As the price of goods and services rises, people may expect a continuous rise in the future at a similar rate.

As such, workers may demand more costs or wages to maintain their standard of living. Their increased wages result in a higher cost of goods and services, and this wage-price spiral continues as one factor induces the other and vice-versa.

Types of Price Indexes

Depending upon the selected set of goods and services used, multiple types of baskets of goods are calculated and tracked as price indexes. The most commonly used price indexes are the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the Wholesale Price Index (WPI).

The Consumer Price Index (CPI)

The CPI is a measure that examines the weighted average of prices of a basket of goods and services that are of primary consumer needs. They include transportation, food, and medical care.

CPI is calculated by taking price changes for each item in the predetermined basket of goods and averaging them based on their relative weight in the whole basket. The prices in consideration are the retail prices of each item, as available for purchase by the individual citizens.

Changes in the CPI are used to assess price changes associated with the cost of living, making it one of the most frequently used statistics for identifying periods of inflation or deflation. In the U.S., the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reports the CPI on a monthly basis and has calculated it as far back as 1913.3

The CPI-U, which was introduced in 1978, represents the buying habits of approximately 88% of the non-institutional population of the United States.45

The Wholesale Price Index (WPI)

The WPI is another popular measure of inflation. It measures and tracks the changes in the price of goods in the stages before the retail level.

While WPI items vary from one country to another, they mostly include items at the producer or wholesale level. For example, it includes cotton prices for raw cotton, cotton yarn, cotton gray goods, and cotton clothing.6

Although many countries and organizations use WPI, many other countries, including the U.S., use a similar variant called the producer price index (PPI).7

The Producer Price Index (PPI)

The PPI is a family of indexes that measures the average change in selling prices received by domestic producers of intermediate goods and services over time. The PPI measures price changes from the perspective of the seller and differs from the CPI which measures price changes from the perspective of the buyer.8

In all variants, the rise in the price of one component (say oil) may cancel out the price decline in another (say wheat) to a certain extent. Overall, each index represents the average weighted price change for the given constituents which may apply at the overall economy, sector, or commodity level.

The Formula for Measuring Inflation

The above-mentioned variants of price indexes can be used to calculate the value of inflation between two particular months (or years). While a lot of ready-made inflation calculators are already available on various financial portals and websites, it is always better to be aware of the underlying methodology to ensure accuracy with a clear understanding of the calculations. Mathematically,

Percent Inflation Rate = (Final CPI Index Value ÷ Initial CPI Value) x 100

Say you wish to know how the purchasing power of $10,000 changed between January 1975 and January 2024. One can find price index data on various portals in a tabular form. From that table, pick up the corresponding CPI figures for the given two months. For September 1975, it was 52.1 (initial CPI value) and for January 2024, it was 308.417 (final CPI value).910

Plugging in the formula yields:

Percent Inflation Rate = (308.417 ÷ 52.1) x 100 = (5.9197) x 100 = 591.97%

Since you wish to know how much $10,000 from January 1975 would worth be in January 2024, multiply the inflation rate by the amount to get the changed dollar value:

Change in Dollar Value = 5.9197 x $10,000 = $59,197

This means that $10,000 in January 1975 will be worth $59,197 today. Essentially, if you purchased a basket of goods and services (as included in the CPI definition) worth $10,000 in 1975, the same basket would cost you $59,197 in January 2024.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Inflation

Inflation can be construed as either a good or a bad thing, depending upon which side one takes, and how rapidly the change occurs.

Advantages

Individuals with tangible assets (like property or stocked commodities) priced in their home currency may like to see some inflation as that raises the price of their assets, which they can sell at a higher rate.

Inflation often leads to speculation by businesses in risky projects and by individuals who invest in company stocks because they expect better returns than inflation.

An optimum level of inflation is often promoted to encourage spending to a certain extent instead of saving. If the purchasing power of money falls over time, there may be a greater incentive to spend now instead of saving and spending later. It may increase spending, which may boost economic activities in a country. A balanced approach is thought to keep the inflation value in an optimum and desirable range.

Disadvantages

Buyers of such assets may not be happy with inflation, as they will be required to shell out more money. People who hold assets valued in their home currency, such as cash or bonds, may not like inflation, as it erodes the real value of their holdings.

As such, investors looking to protect their portfolios from inflation should consider inflation-hedged asset classes, such as gold, commodities, and real estate investment trusts (REITs). Inflation-indexed bonds are another popular option for investors to profit from inflation.

High and variable rates of inflation can impose major costs on an economy. Businesses, workers, and consumers must all account for the effects of generally rising prices in their buying, selling, and planning decisions.

This introduces an additional source of uncertainty into the economy, because they may guess wrong about the rate of future inflation. Time and resources expended on researching, estimating, and adjusting economic behavior are expected to rise to the general level of prices. That's opposed to real economic fundamentals, which inevitably represent a cost to the economy as a whole.

Even a low, stable, and easily predictable rate of inflation, which some consider otherwise optimal, may lead to serious problems in the economy. That's because of how, where, and when the new money enters the economy.

Whenever new money and credit enter the economy, it is always in the hands of specific individuals or business firms. The process of price level adjustments to the new money supply proceeds as they then spend the new money and it circulates from hand to hand and account to account through the economy.

Inflation does drive up some prices first and drives up other prices later. This sequential change in purchasing power and prices (known as the Cantillon effect) means that the process of inflation not only increases the general price level over time. But it also distorts relative prices, wages, and rates of return along the way.11

Economists, in general, understand that distortions of relative prices away from their economic equilibrium are not good for the economy, and Austrian economists even believe this process to be a major driver of cycles of recession in the economy.12

Pros
  • Leads to higher resale value of assets

  • Optimum levels of inflation encourage spending

Cons
  • Buyers have to pay more for products and services

  • Impose higher prices on the economy

  • Drives some prices up first and others later

Controlling Inflation

A country’s financial regulator shoulders the important responsibility of keeping inflation in check. It is done by implementing measures through monetary policy, which refers to the actions of a central bank or other committees that determine the size and rate of growth of the money supply.

In the U.S., the Fed's monetary policy goals include moderate long-term interest rates, price stability, and maximum employment. Each of these goals is intended to promote a stable financial environment. The Federal Reserve clearly communicates long-term inflation goals in order to keep a steady long-term rate of inflation, which is thought to be beneficial to the economy.

Price stability or a relatively constant level of inflation allows businesses to plan for the future since they know what to expect. The Fed believes that this will promote maximum employment, which is determined by non-monetary factors that fluctuate over time and are therefore subject to change.

For this reason, the Fed doesn't set a specific goal for maximum employment, and it is largely determined by employers' assessments. Maximum employment does not mean zero unemployment, as at any given time there is a certain level of volatility as people vacate and start new jobs.1314

Hyperinflation is often described as a period of inflation of 50% or more per month.15

Monetary authorities also take exceptional measures in extreme conditions of the economy. For instance, following the 2008 financial crisis, the U.S. Fed kept the interest rates near zero and pursued a bond-buying program called quantitative easing (QE).16

Some critics of the program alleged it would cause a spike in inflation in the U.S. dollar, but inflation peaked in 2007 and declined steadily over the next eight years. There are many complex reasons why QE didn't lead to inflation or hyperinflation, though the simplest explanation is that the recession itself was a very prominent deflationary environment, and quantitative easing supported its effects.1718

Consequently, U.S. policymakers have attempted to keep inflation steady at around 2% per year. The European Central Bank (ECB) has also pursued aggressive quantitative easing to counter deflation in the eurozone, and some places have experienced negative interest rates. That's due to fears that deflation could take hold in the eurozone and lead to economic stagnation.1920

Moreover, countries that experience higher rates of growth can absorb higher rates of inflation. India's target is around 4% (with an upper tolerance of 6% and a lower tolerance of 2%), while Brazil aims for 3.25% (with an upper tolerance of 4.75% and a lower tolerance of 1.75%).2122

Meaning of Inflation, Deflation, and Disinflation

While a high inflation rate means that prices are increasing, a low inflation rate does not mean that prices are falling. Counterintuitively, when the inflation rate falls, prices are still increasing, but at a slower rate than before. When the inflation rate falls (but remains positive) this is known as disinflation.

Conversely, if the inflation rate becomes negative, that means that prices are falling. This is known as deflation, which can have negative effects on an economy. Because buying power increases over time, consumers have less incentive to spend money in the short term, resulting in falling economic activity.

Hedging Against Inflation

Stocks are considered to be the best hedge against inflation, as the rise in stock prices is inclusive of the effects of inflation. Since additions to the money supply in virtually all modern economies occur as bank credit injections through the financial system, much of the immediate effect on prices happens in financial assets that are priced in their home currency, such as stocks.

Special financial instruments exist that one can use to safeguard investments against inflation. They include Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), low-risk treasury security that is indexed to inflation where the principal amount invested is increased by the percentage of inflation.23

One can also opt for a TIPS mutual fund or TIPS-based exchange-traded fund (ETF). To get access to stocks, ETFs, and other funds that can help avoid the dangers of inflation, you'll likely need a brokerage account. Choosing a stockbroker can be a tedious process due to the variety among them.

Gold is also considered to be a hedge against inflation, although this doesn't always appear to be the case looking backward.

Examples of Inflation

Since all world currencies are fiat money, the money supply could increase rapidly for political reasons, resulting in rapid price level increases. The most famous example is the hyperinflation that struck the German Weimar Republic in the early 1920s.

The nations that were victorious in World War I demanded reparations from Germany, which could not be paid in German paper currency, as this was of suspect value due to government borrowing. Germany attempted to print paper notes, buy foreign currency with them, and use that to pay their debts.

This policy led to the rapid devaluation of the German mark along with the hyperinflation that accompanied the development. German consumers responded to the cycle by trying to spend their money as fast as possible, understanding that it would be worth less and less the longer they waited. More money flooded the economy, and its value plummeted to the point where people would paper their walls with practically worthless bills. Similar situations occurred in Peru in 1990 and in Zimbabwe between 2007 and 2008.242526

What Causes Inflation?

There are three main causes of inflation: demand-pull inflation, cost-push inflation, and built-in inflation.

  • Demand-pull inflation refers to situations where there are not enough products or services being produced to keep up with demand, causing their prices to increase.
  • Cost-push inflation, on the other hand, occurs when the cost of producing products and services rises, forcing businesses to raise their prices.
  • Built-in inflation (which is sometimes referred to as a wage-price spiral) occurs when workers demand higher wages to keep up with rising living costs. This in turn causes businesses to raise their prices in order to offset their rising wage costs, leading to a self-reinforcing loop of wage and price increases.

Is Inflation Good or Bad?

Too much inflation is generally considered bad for an economy, while too little inflation is also considered harmful. Many economists advocate for a middle ground of low to moderate inflation, of around 2% per year.

Generally speaking, higher inflation harms savers because it erodes the purchasing power of the money they have saved; however, it can benefit borrowers because the inflation-adjusted value of their outstanding debts shrinks over time.

What Are the Effects of Inflation?

Inflation can affect the economy in several ways. For example, if inflation causes a nation’s currency to decline, this can benefit exporters by making their goods more affordable when priced in the currency of foreign nations.

On the other hand, this could harm importers by making foreign-made goods more expensive. Higher inflation can also encourage spending, as consumers will aim to purchase goods quickly before their prices rise further. Savers, on the other hand, could see the real value of their savings erode, limiting their ability to spend or invest in the future.

Why Is Inflation So High Right Now?

In 2022, inflation rates around the world rose to their highest levels since the early 1980s. While there is no single reason for this rapid rise in global prices, a series of events worked together to boost inflation to such high levels.2728

The COVID-19 pandemic led to lockdowns and other restrictions that greatly disrupted global supply chains, from factory closures to bottlenecks at maritime ports. Governments also issued stimulus checks and increased unemployment benefits to counter the financial impact on individuals and small businesses. When vaccines became widespread and the economy bounced back, demand (fueled in part by stimulus money and low interest rates) quickly outpaced supply, which still struggled to get back to pre-COVID levels.

Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine in early 2022 led to economic sanctions and trade restrictions on Russia, limiting the world's supply of oil and gas since Russia is a large producer of fossil fuels. Food prices also rose as Ukraine's large grain harvests could not be exported. As fuel and food prices rose, it led to similar increases down the value chains. The Fed raised interest rates to combat the high inflation, which significantly came down in 2023, though it remains above pre-pandemic levels.299

The Bottom Line

Inflation is a rise in prices, which results in the decline of purchasing power over time. Inflation is natural and the U.S. government targets an annual inflation rate of 2%; however, inflation can be dangerous when it increases too much, too fast.

Inflation makes items more expensive, especially if wages do not rise by the same levels of inflation. Additionally, inflation erodes the value of some assets, especially cash. Governments and central banks seek to control inflation through monetary policy.

by 趙永祥 2024-04-29 06:50:47, 回應(0), 人氣(51)



What Is Stagflation, What Causes It, and Why Is It Bad?

There are many theories as to why stagflation happens but no
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What Is Stagflation?

Stagflation is an economic cycle characterized by slow growth and a high unemployment rate accompanied by inflation. Economic policymakers find this combination particularly difficult to handle, as attempting to correct one of the factors can exacerbate another.

Once thought by economists to be impossible, stagflation has occurred repeatedly in the developed world since the 1970s oil crisis.

In mid-2022, many were saying that the United States had not entered a period of stagflation, but might soon experience one, at least for a short period. In June 2022, Forbes magazine argued that a period of stagflation was likely because economic policymakers would tackle unemployment first, leaving inflation to be dealt with later.1

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Stagflation is the simultaneous appearance in an economy of slow growth, high unemployment, and rising prices.
  • Once thought by economists to be impossible, stagflation has occurred repeatedly in the developed world since the 1970s.
  • Policy solutions for slow growth tend to worsen inflation, and vice versa. That makes stagflation hard to fight.
Stagflation

Investopedia / Jiaqi Zhou

Understanding Stagflation

The term stagflation was first used by British politician Iain Macleod in a speech before the House of Commons in 1965, a time of economic stress in the United Kingdom.2 He called the combined effects of inflation and stagnation a "'stagflation situation."

The term was revived in the U.S. during the 1970s oil crisis, which caused a recession that included five consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth.3 Inflation doubled in 1973 and hit double digits in 1974. Unemployment reached 9% by May 1975.45

The effects of stagflation were illustrated by means of a misery index. This index, a simple sum of the inflation rate and the unemployment rate, tracked the real-world effects of stagflation on a nation's people.

History of Stagflation

Stagflation was once believed to be impossible. The economic theories that dominated academic and policy circles for much of the 20th century ruled it out of their models. In particular, the economic theory of the Phillips Curve, which developed in the context of Keynesian economics, portrayed macroeconomic policy as a trade-off between unemployment and inflation.

As a result of the Great Depression and the ascendance of Keynesian economics, economists became preoccupied with the dangers of deflation and argued that most policies designed to lower inflation tend to increase unemployment, while policies designed to lower unemployment raise inflation.

The advent of stagflation across the developed world later in the 20th century showed that this was not the case. Stagflation is a great example of how real-world experience can run roughshod over widely accepted economic theories and policy prescriptions.

Since that time, inflation has proved to be persistent even during periods of slow or negative economic growth. In the past 50 years, every declared recession in the U.S. has seen a continuous, year-over-year rise in consumer price levels.6

The sole, partial exception to this is the lowest point of the 2008 financial crisis—and even then the price decline was confined to energy and transportation prices while overall consumer prices other than energy continued to rise.7

What Causes Stagflation?

There is no real consensus among economists about the causes of stagflation. They have put forth several arguments to explain how it occurs, even though it was once considered impossible.   

Blame Oil Price Shocks

One theory states that stagflation is caused when a sudden increase in the cost of oil reduces an economy's productive capacity.

The oil crisis of the 1970s is the prime example. In October 1973, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) issued an embargo against Western countries. This caused the global price of oil to rise dramatically, therefore increasing the costs of goods and contributing to a rise in unemployment.8

Because transportation costs rose, producing products and getting them to shelves became more expensive and prices rose even as people were laid off from their jobs.

Critics of this theory point out that sudden oil price shocks like those of the 1970s did not occur in connection with any of the simultaneous periods of inflation and recession that have occurred since the embargo.9

Blame Poor Economic Policies

Another theory is that the confluence of stagnation and inflation is the result of poorly made economic policy. Harsh regulation of markets, goods, and labor in an otherwise inflationary environment are cited as the possible cause of stagflation.

Some point to former President Richard Nixon's policies, which may have led to the recession of 1970—a possible precursor to other periods of stagflation. Nixon put tariffs on imports and froze wages and prices for 90 days in an attempt to prevent prices from rising.10 Once the controls were relaxed, the rapid acceleration of prices led to economic chaos.

While appealing, this is an ad-hoc explanation of the stagflation of the 1970s which does not explain later periods that showed a simultaneous rise in prices and unemployment.

Blame the Loss of the Gold Standard

Other theories point to monetary factors that may also play a role in stagflation.

Nixon removed the last indirect vestiges of the gold standard, bringing down the Bretton Woods system that had controlled currency exchange rates.11

This decision removed commodity backing for the currency and put the U.S. dollar and most other world currencies on a fiat basis, ending most practical constraints on monetary expansion and currency devaluation.

Stagflation vs. Inflation

Whatever the explanation, we have seen inflation persist during periods of economic stagnation since the 1970s. 

Even before the 1970s, some economists criticized the notion of a stable relationship between inflation and unemployment. They argue that consumers and producers adjust their economic behavior to rising price levels either in reaction to—or in expectation of—monetary policy changes.

As a result, prices rise in response to expansionary monetary policy without any corresponding decrease in unemployment, while unemployment rates rise or fall based on real economic shocks to the economy.

This implies that attempts to stimulate the economy during recessions could simply inflate prices without promoting real economic growth.  

Urbanist and author Jane Jacobs saw the disagreements between economists on the causes of the stagflation of the ‘70s as a misplacement of scholarly focus on the nation rather than the city as the primary economic engine. She believed that to avoid the phenomenon of stagflation, a country needed to provide an incentive to develop "import-replacing cities"—that is, cities that balance import with production. This idea, essentially the diversification of the economies of cities, was critiqued for its lack of scholarship by some, but held weight with others.12

Special Considerations

The de facto consensus on stagflation among most economists and policymakers has been to essentially redefine what they mean by the term inflation in the era of modern currency and financial systems. Persistently rising price levels and falling purchasing power—i.e., inflation—are just normal conditions of good and bad economic times.

Economists and policymakers generally assume that prices will rise, and largely focus on accelerating and decelerating inflation rather than on inflation itself.

The dramatic episodes of stagflation in the 1970s may be historical footnotes today. But, since then, simultaneous economic stagnation and rising prices appear to be part of the new normal of economic downturns.

What Causes Stagflation?

Economists argue about the root causes of stagflation.

In general, the stage is set for stagflation when a supply shock occurs. This is an unexpected event, such as a disruption in the oil supply or a shortage of essential parts. Such a shock occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic with a disruption of the flow of semiconductors that slowed the production of everything from laptops to cars and appliances.

Such a shock can affect all of the factors that make up stagflation: inflation, employment, and economic growth.

Why Is Stagflation Bad?

Stagflation is a combination of three negatives: slower economic growth, higher unemployment, and higher prices.

This is a combination that isn't supposed to occur, in the logic of economics. Prices shouldn't go up when people have less money to spend.

What Is the Cure for Stagflation?

There is no definitive cure for stagflation. The consensus among economists is that productivity has to be increased to the point where it will lead to higher growth without additional inflation. This would then allow for the tightening of monetary policy to rein in the inflation component of stagflation.

That is easier said than done, so the key to preventing stagflation is for economic policymakers to be extremely proactive in avoiding it.

by 趙永祥 2023-08-16 01:19:06, 回應(0), 人氣(166)


What Is the Invisible Hand in Economics?

By CHRISTINA MAJASKI 

Updated: March 21, 2023

Reviewed by THOMAS J. CATALANO

Fact checked by ARIEL COURAGE

Invisible Hand

Investopedia / Madelyn Goodnight

 

What Is the Invisible Hand?

The invisible hand is a metaphor for the unseen forces that move the free market economy. Through individual self-interest and freedom of production and consumption, the best interest of society, as a whole, are fulfilled. The constant interplay of individual pressures on market supply and demand causes the natural movement of prices and the flow of trade.

The term "invisible hand" first appeared in Adam Smith's famous work, The Wealth of Nations, to describe how free markets can incentivize individuals, acting in their own self-interest, to produce what is societally necessary.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

The invisible hand is a metaphor for how, in a free market economy, self-interested individuals operate through a system of mutual interdependence.

This interdependence incentivizes producers to make what is socially necessary, even though they may care only about their own well-being.

Adam Smith introduced the concept in his 1759 book The Theory of Moral Sentiments and later in his 1776 book An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.

Each free exchange creates signals about which goods and services are valuable and how difficult they are to bring to market.

Critics argue that the invisible hand does not always produce socially beneficial outcomes, and can encourage greed, negative externalities, inequalities, and other harms.

Click Play to Learn the Definition of the Invisible Hand

How the Invisible Hand Works

The invisible hand is part of laissez-faire, meaning the "let do/let go," approach to the market. In other words, the approach holds that the market will find equilibrium without government or other interventions forcing it into unnatural patterns.

 

Scottish Enlightenment thinker Adam Smith introduced the concept in several of his writings, such as the economic interpretation in his book An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (often shortened to just The Wealth of Nations) published in 1776 and in The Theory of Moral Sentiments published in 1759. The term found use in an economic sense during the 1900s.

 

The invisible hand metaphor distills two critical ideas. First, voluntary trades in a free market produce unintentional and widespread benefits. Second, these benefits are greater than those of a regulated, planned economy.

 

Each free exchange creates signals about which goods and services are valuable and how difficult they are to bring to market. These signals, captured in the price system, spontaneously direct competing consumers, producers, distributors, and intermediaries—each pursuing their plans—to fulfill the needs and desires of others.

Adam Smith

The term "invisible hand" only appears twice in The Wealth of Nations, a volume of around 1,000 pages.

 

The Invisible Hand and Market Economies

Business productivity and profitability are improved when profits and losses accurately reflect what investors and consumers want. This concept is well-demonstrated through a famous example in Richard Cantillon’s An Essay on Economic Theory (1755), the book from which Smith developed his invisible hand concept.

 

Smith's An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations was published during the first Industrial Revolution and the same year as the American Declaration of Independence. Smith’s invisible hand became one of the primary justifications for an economic system of free-market capitalism.

 

As a result, the business climate of the U.S. developed with a general understanding that voluntary private markets are more productive than government-run economies. Even government rules sometimes try to incorporate the invisible hand.

 

Former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke explained the "market-based approach is regulation by the invisible hand" which "aims to align the incentives of market participants with the objectives of the regulator."

 

Example of the Invisible Hand

Consider an example of a small business facing stiff competition. To best position itself in the market, the small business decides it will invest in higher quality materials for its manufacturing process as well as reduce its prices. though the small business may be doing so out of the best interest of its company (i.e. to drive sales and steal market share), the invisible hand is at work as the market now has access to more affordable yet higher quality goods.

 

Another example of the invisible hand is the ripple effect a retail company can have when attempting to meet consumer demand. Consider a hardware store that anticipates demand for yard maintenance tools. The hardware store will coordinate with a manufacturer to secure the appropriate goods. Meanwhile, the manufacturer will communicate with a raw materials distributor to ensure it has the items it needs.

 

In this second example, each entity is acting in its own best interest. However, each entity is also creating economic activity for other parties. In addition, the entities are stringing together a process that results in a consumer receiving a product it needs. Though each individual action taken by itself may not amount to much, the invisible hand helps move resources along a process to deliver a final product.

 

Why Is the Invisible Hand Important?

The invisible hand allows the market to reach equilibrium without government or other interventions forcing it into unnatural patterns. When supply and demand find equilibrium naturally, oversupply and shortages are avoided. The best interest of society is achieved via self-interest and freedom of production and consumption.

 

How Is the Invisible Hand Used Today?

As former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke explained, the "market-based approach is regulation by the invisible hand" which "aims to align the incentives of market participants with the objectives of the regulator."

 

What Did Adam Smith Say About the Invisible Hand?

Adam Smith wrote about an invisible hand in his writings during the 1700s, noting that the mechanism of an invisible hand benefits the economy and society thanks to self-interested individuals. Smith mentions "an" invisible hand, which is the automatic pricing and distribution mechanisms in the economy that interact directly and indirectly with centralized, top-down planning authorities.

 

Why Is the Invisible Hand Controversial?

Critics argue that the idea that self-interested, profit-driven actors will converge on some social optimum is clearly false, and that instead it naturally leads to negative externalities, economic and social inequalities, greed, and exploitation. Moreover, competition driven by the invisible hand can ultimately result in monopolies and the concentration of economic power, both of which are undesirable for society.

 

Other critiques hone in on the fact that the concept relies on the assumption that producers can easily switch from producing one type of good to any other, depending on its relative profitability at a given moment. This does not account for the sometimes enormous costs of switching and the idea that people may engage in a business that they enjoy doing, or which has been passed down in a family, regardless of profitability.




by 趙永祥 2023-04-04 17:22:56, 回應(1), 人氣(444)


循環經濟(英語:circular economy

是一種再生系統,藉由減緩、封閉與縮小物質能量循環,使得資源的投入與廢棄、排放達成減量化的目標。循環經濟有很多不同的定義,好比說是一個未來真正可永續發展、零浪費,並可與我們所處的環境和所擁有的資源共生的想法。循環經濟所構築的未來是所製造生產的每個產品都經過精心設計,並可用於多個循環來使用,不同的材料生產製造的循環皆經過仔細考量搭配,如此一來,一個製程的輸出始終可成為另一個製程的輸入。

在循環經濟中,將是零排放、零廢棄,所生產出的副產品或受損壞的產品或不再想用的貨物並不會被看作是「廢物」,而是可成為新的生產週期的原材料和素材。



循環經濟不同於傳統生產模式

工業革命以來,人們一直採用線性的生產消費模式:從自然環境開採原物料後,加工製造成商品,商品被購買使用後就直接丟棄。工業製程和人們的生活方式不斷的消耗著有限的資源創造產品,最後再直接掩埋或焚燒。


隨著原物料需求持續增加、開採成本持續成長,商品的價格也越來越高,這樣的現象促使少數科學家開始思考新的解決方法,包含永續工業之父Walter R. Stahel。 Walter R. Stahel 在1970晚開始「搖籃到搖籃(相對於搖籃到墳墓)」的論述,與Product-Life機構共同致力於發展封閉式循環的商品製程。


與線性經濟造成的資源衰竭不同,循環經濟認為是建立在物質的不斷循環、利用上的經濟發展模式,形成「資源、產品、再生資源」的循環,使整個系統產生極少的廢棄物,甚至達成零廢棄的終極目標。循環經濟相信:只有放錯地方的資源,沒有真正的廢棄物。進而從根本上解決經濟發展與環境衝擊的矛盾。


循環經濟所涵蓋的範圍涵括有形及無形的產品、理念、模式及行為,包括產品基礎設施設備服務。這個概念適用於所有行業,包括「技術」資源(金屬礦物石化資源)和「生物」資源(食物纖維木材等)。由於石化工業遍及人類生活周遭,對人類生產模式有決定性的影響,許多思想領導者主張從化石燃料做起,將產業模式轉向使用循環可再生的能源,並強調多樣性、具有彈性,以及系統永續的特徵。在各界廣泛的討論中,循環經濟的實踐範疇並也包括貨幣金融體系,透過廣義的生產體系,達成人類經濟資源利用的全面翻轉。另有些思想先驅者已經開始呼籲,建議對經濟表現的衡量工具進行改造,增加循環生產模式在衡量體系中的權重

by 趙永祥 2022-09-18 06:20:27, 回應(0), 人氣(259)

                      Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA)


by 趙永祥 2022-08-02 16:21:17, 回應(0), 人氣(358)
                                                        

                                                              Unemployment Rate

by 趙永祥 2022-07-30 13:16:23, 回應(0), 人氣(292)
                                                                Recession



by 趙永祥 2022-07-15 16:14:58, 回應(0), 人氣(411)


Investment (annual variation in %)

Investment typically refers to gross fixed investment or, more precisely, gross fixed capital formation (GFCF). Gross fixed capital formation is a macroeconomic aggregate used in national accounting that measures the value of acquisitions of new or existing fixed assets with a life span of more than one year by the business sector (national accounting generally considers personal spending and most government spending as consumption).

Gross fixed capital formation includes spending on factories, machinery, equipment, buildings (including private residential dwellings) and infrastructure. Investment is called “gross” because it does not consider the consumption of fixed assets (depreciation); the term “fixed” is used because inventories (stocks) are not included; and the term “capital formation” is used because financial investments are not included.

The investment component of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is much more cyclical than consumption. When businesses expect economic growth to be strong, they are more likely to invest. The level of capacity utilization and interest rates also determine investment decisions.

The table below shows the percent changes in gross fixed investment for the last five years.

Looking for forecasts? 

FocusEconomics Consensus Forecasts cover approx. 30 macro-economic indicators per country for a 5-year forecast period and quarterly forecasts for the most important economic variables. Get Details.



by 趙永祥 2022-07-15 16:13:32, 回應(0), 人氣(312)

What is GDP per capita?

GDP per capita stands for Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita (per person). It is derived from a straightforward division of total GDP (see definition of GDP) by the population. Per capita GDP is typically expressed in local current currency, local constant currency or a standard unit of currency in international markets, such as the U.S. dollar (USD).

GDP per capita is an important indicator of economic performance and a useful unit to make cross-country comparisons of average living standards and economic wellbeing. However, GDP per capita is not a measure of personal income and using it for cross-country comparisons also has some known weaknesses. In particular, GDP per capita does not take into account income distribution in a country. In addition, cross-country comparisons based on the U.S. dollar can be distorted by exchange rate fluctuations and often don’t reflect the purchasing power in the countries being compared.

The table below shows the GDP per capita in current U.S. dollars (USD) by country for the last five years. 

Looking for forecasts? 

FocusEconomics Consensus Forecasts cover approx. 30 macro-economic indicators per country for a 5-year forecast period and quarterly forecasts for the most important economic variables. Get Details.

by 趙永祥 2022-07-15 16:12:12, 回應(0), 人氣(340)

Economic Growth (GDP, annual variation in %)

GDP, short for Gross Domestic Product, is defined as the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period. It includes private and public consumption, private and public investment, and exports less imports.

GDP is the most commonly used measure of economic activity and serves as a good indicator to track the economic health of a country. Economic growth (GDP growth) refers to the percent change in real GDP, which corrects the nominal GDP figure for inflation. Real GDP is therefore also referred to as inflation-adjusted GDP or GDP in constant prices.

The table below shows the percent changes in real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per country for the last five years.

Looking for forecasts? 

FocusEconomics Consensus Forecasts cover approx. 30 macro-economic indicators per country for a 5-year forecast period and quarterly forecasts for the most important economic variables. Get Details.

by 趙永祥 2022-06-05 04:23:29, 回應(0), 人氣(417)



採購經理人指數(PMI)

(Purchasing Managers' Index, PMI)

採購經理人指數(Purchasing Managers’Index, PMI)為一綜合性指標,
係每月對受訪企業的採購經理人進行調查,並依調查結果編製成的指數。採購經理人通常是指企業中負責支付原料或產品採購金額的最高層級負責人,以製造業而言,通常由採購相關部門(採購、資材、供應鏈管理等)經理級以上高階主管填寫問卷,少數則由財務相關部門高階人員填寫;至於非製造業因較無實體存貨概念,難以直覺定義採購經理人,問卷可能由商品企劃部、公共事務部、投資部或財務部等高階主管填寫。

臺灣採購經理人指數係參考美國ISM(Institute for Supply Management, ISM)編製方法,調查範圍包括製造業與非製造業。其中,製造業以新增訂單數量、生產數量、人力僱用數量、存貨,以及供應商交貨時間等5項細項擴散指數(Diffusion Index)綜合編製而成 ;非製造業組成項目則包括商業活動、新增訂單數量、人力僱用數量,以及供應商交貨時間等4項擴散指數。

採購經理人指數介於0%~100%之間,若高於50%表示製造業或非製造業景氣正處於擴張期(Expansion),若低於50%表示處於緊縮期(Contraction)。


註:擴散指數(Diffusion Index)係衡量景氣變動方向的一種常見指標

PMI調查請採購經理人針對各項經濟活動與上月進行比較,

並在問卷中勾選「上升」、「持平」或「下降」,而擴散指數即為「上升」比率×1 +「持平」比率×0.5。


by 趙永祥 2020-09-08 01:12:19, 回應(2), 人氣(2112)


賽局理論(Game Theory


又譯為對策論博弈論,是經濟學的一個分支,1944年馮·諾伊曼奧斯卡·摩根斯特恩合著《賽局理論與經濟行為》,標誌著現代系統賽局理論的的初步形成,因此他被稱為「賽局理論之父」。賽局理論被認為是20世紀經濟學最偉大的成果之一。目前在生物學經濟學國際關係計算機科學政治學軍事戰略和其他很多學科都有廣泛的應用。

主要研究公式化了的激勵結構(遊戲或者賽局)間的相互作用。是研究具有鬥爭或競爭性質現象的數學理論和方法。也是運籌學的一個重要學科。 

現代的賽局理論的源頭是約翰·馮·諾伊曼對於雙人零和賽局的混合策略均衡點的發想和證明。



概述[編輯]

賽局理論考慮遊戲中的個體的預測行為和實際行為,並研究它們的優化策略。表面上不同的相互作用可能表現出相似的激勵結構(incentive structure),所以它們是同一個遊戲的特例。其中一個有名有趣的應用例子是囚徒困境

具有競爭或對抗性質的行為稱為賽局行為。在這類行為中,參加鬥爭或競爭的各方各自具有不同的目標或利益。為了達到各自的目標和利益,各方必須考慮對手的各種可能的行動方案,並力圖選取對自己最為有利或最為合理的方案。比如日常生活中的下棋,打牌等。賽局理論就是研究賽局行為中鬥爭各方是否存在著最合理的行為方案,以及如何找到這個合理的行為方案的數學理論和方法。

生物學家使用賽局理論來理解和預測演化(論)的某些結果。

例如,John Maynard Smith和George R. Price在1973年發表於《自然》雜誌上的論文中提出的「evolutionarily stable strategy」的這個概念就是使用了賽局理論。還可以參見演化賽局理論和行為生態學(behavioral ecology)。

賽局理論也應用於數學的其他分支,如概率統計線性規劃等。

數學定義[編輯]

對於「賽局」(game)有不少可以互換的定義。這裡給出簡短的介紹和相互關係的說明。

範式賽局(Normal form game)[編輯]

範式賽局又被譯為正則形式的賽局、策略型賽局或標準型賽局。

設定是一個「參與者」(players)的集合。對於每一個「參與者」都有一個給定的「策略」集合賽局(遊戲)是一個函數,定義為:

也就是說,如果我們知道了參與者的策略集合是什麼,那麼就可以有一個實數值與之對應。我們可以把上面的方程拆成兩個方程來進一步把它一般化。一個方程是正則形式(Normal form game)的參與者方程,描述策略規定結果的方式。另外一個方程描寫參與者對於結果(outcome)集合的偏好(preference)。也就是:

這裡是遊戲(賽局)的結果集合(outcome set)。對於每一個參與者都有一個偏好函數preference function

展開形式的賽局(Extensive form game)[編輯]

展開形式的賽局又可譯為擴展形式的賽局、擴展式賽局或擴展型賽局。

正則形式的定義為數學家們提供了「均衡」(equilibria)問題的研究一個容易使用的表達式。因為它避免了怎麼計算「策略」的問題,也就是說遊戲是怎麼進行的問題。

若要考慮遊戲是如何進行的,展開形式的賽局是一個比較方便的表達式。這個形式與組合賽局理論關係密切。這個定義通過一個的形式給定。在樹的每一個節點(vertex),不同的參與者選擇一個邊(edge)。


賽局分類[編輯]

賽局的分類根據不同的基準也有不同的分類。一般認為,賽局主要可以分為合作賽局非合作賽局。它們的區別在於相互發生作用的當事人之間有沒有一個具有約束力的協議,如果有,就是合作賽局,如果沒有,就是非合作賽局。

從行為的時間序列性,賽局理論進一步分為兩類:靜態賽局是指在賽局中,參與人同時選擇或雖非同時選擇但後行動者並不知道先行動者採取了什麼具體行動;動態賽局是指在賽局中,參與人的行動有先後順序,且後行動者能夠觀察到先行動者所選擇的行動。通俗的理解:「囚徒困境」就是同時決策的,屬於靜態賽局;而棋牌類遊戲等決策或行動有先後次序的,屬於動態賽局。

按照參與人對其他參與人的了解程度分為完全訊息賽局不完全訊息賽局。完全賽局是指在賽局過程中,每一位參與人對其他參與人的特徵、策略空間及收益函數有準確的資訊。如果參與人對其他參與人的特徵、策略空間及收益函數資訊了解的不夠準確、或者不是對所有參與人的特徵、策略空間及收益函數都有準確的準確資訊,在這種情況下進行的賽局就是不完全訊息賽局。

目前經濟學家們現在所談的賽局理論一般是指非合作賽局,由於合作賽局理論比非合作賽局理論複雜,在理論上的成熟度遠遠不如非合作賽局理論。非合作賽局又分為:完全訊息靜態賽局,完全訊息動態賽局,不完全訊息靜態賽局,不完全訊息動態賽局。

與上述四種賽局相對應的均衡概念為:納許均衡子賽局精煉納許均衡貝葉斯納許均衡、精煉貝葉斯納許均衡(perfect Bayesian Nash equilibrium)。

賽局理論還有很多分類,比如:以賽局進行的次數或者持續長短可以分為有限賽局和無限賽局;以表現形式也可以分為一般型(戰略型)或者展開型,等等。


https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E5%8D%9A%E5%BC%88%E8%AE%BA


by 趙永祥 2020-08-08 21:44:22, 回應(0), 人氣(1181)


消費者剩餘(consumer surplus),也稱消費者盈餘

目錄

什麼是消費者剩餘?

  消費者剩餘的概念,是紐約大學教授馬歇爾《經濟學原理》一書中提出來的。消費者剩餘是衡量消費者福利的重要指標,被廣泛地作為一種分析工具來應用。產業的社會福利等於消費者剩餘加上生產者剩餘之和,或者等於總消費效用與生產成本之差。1977年a.k.迪克西特斯蒂格利茨內在規模經濟引進一般均衡模型,推出了市場考慮最適度邊際利潤而社會考慮消費者剩餘的結論。一般認為, 消費者剩餘最大的條件是邊際效用等於邊際支出。


  消費者剩餘(consumer surplus)又稱為消費者的凈收益,是指買者的支付意願減去買者的實際支付量。消費者剩餘衡量了買者自己感覺到所獲得的額外利益。簡單地說,就是買者賣者都希望從市場活動中獲得收益


  消費者總剩餘可以用需求曲線下方,價格線上方和價格軸圍成的三角形的面積表示。如圖以OQ代表商品數量,OP代表商品價格,PQ代表需求曲線,則消費者購買的商品時所獲得的消費者剩餘為圖中的灰色面積。

  消费者剩余

  由上圖可見:

  第一,如果價格上升,則消費者剩餘下降,反之,如果價格下降,則消費者剩餘上升;

  第二,如果需求曲線是平的,則消費者剩餘為0。

  比如一場電影的票價為20元,可消費者對它的價值是50元,那麼消費者剩餘則是30元。如果想尊重買者的偏好,那麼消費者剩餘不失為經濟福利的一種好的衡量標準。

  消費者剩餘概念的提出目的是告訴我們每一個消費者:我們的付出總是少於我們的所獲。我們總是在交易當中獲取額外的利益,我們社會的總福利總是在交易當中不斷增長。

by 趙永祥 2020-08-08 21:41:31, 回應(0), 人氣(1064)


絕對優勢理論(Theory of Absolute Advantage)

又稱絕對成本說(Theory of Absolute Cost)

地域分工說(Theory of Territorial Division of Labor)

理論將一國內部不同職業之間、不同工種之間的分工原則推演到各國之間的分工,從而形成其國際分工理論。絕對優勢理論是最早的主張自由貿易的理論,由英國古典經濟學派主要代表人物亞當·斯密創立。

  亞當·斯密(1723-1790)是英國產業革命前夕工場手工業時期的經濟學家產業革命是指從工場手工業轉向機械大工業的過渡,在這一過程中封建主義和重商主義是實現這一變革的障礙。亞當·斯密代表工業資產階級的要求,在他1776年出版的代表作《國民財富的性質和原因的研究》(簡稱《國富論》)中猛烈抨擊了重商主義,鼓吹自由放任,系統的提出了絕對成本說。亞當·斯密因此成為自由貿易理論的首先倡導者和鼻祖。

絕對優勢理論的主要內容

  所謂絕對成本,是指某兩個國家之間生產某種產品的勞動成本的絕對差異,即一個國家所耗費的勞動成本絕對低於另一個國家。

  亞當·斯密的絕對成本說主要闡明瞭如下內容:

  (1)分工可以提高勞動生產率,增加國民財富。斯密認為 ,交換是出於利己心併為達到利己目的而進行的活動,是人類的一種天然傾向。人類的交換傾向產生分工,社會勞動生產率的巨大進步是分工的結果。他以制針業為例說明其觀點。根據斯密所舉的例子,分工前,一個粗工每天至多能製造20枚針;分工後,平均每人每天可製造4800枚針,每個工人的勞動生產率提高了幾百倍。由此可見,分工可以提高勞動生產率,增加國民財富。

  (2)分工的原則是成本的絕對優勢或絕對利益。斯密進而分析到,分工既然可以極大地提高勞動生產率,那麼每個人專門從事他最有優勢的產品的生產,然後彼此交換,則對每個人都是有利的。即分工的原則是成本的絕對優勢或絕對利益。他以家庭之間的分工為例說明瞭這個道理。他說,如果一件東西購買所花費用比在家內生產的少,就應該去購買而不要在家內生產,這是每一個精明的家長都知道的格言 。裁縫不為自己做鞋子,鞋匠不為自己裁衣服,農場主既不打算自己做鞋子,也不打算縫衣服。他們都認識到,應當把他們的全部精力集中用於比鄰人有利地位的職業,用自己的產品去交換其他物品,會比自己生產一切物品得到更多的利益。

  (3)國際分工是各種形式分工中的最高階段,在國際分工基礎上開展國際貿易,對各國都會產生良好效果。斯密由家庭推及國家,論證了國際分工和國際貿易的必要性。他認為,適用於一國內部不同個人或家庭之間的分工原則,也適用於各國之間。國際分工是各種形式分工中的最高階段。他主張,如果外國的產品比自己國內生產的要便宜,那麼最好是輸出在本國有利的生產條件下生產的產品,去交換外國的產品,而不要自己去生產。他舉例說,在蘇格蘭可以利用溫室種植葡萄,並釀造出同國外一樣好的葡萄酒,但要付出比國外高30倍的代價。他認為,如果真的這樣做,顯然是愚蠢的行為。每一個國家都有其適宜於生產某些特定產品的絕對有利的生產條件,如果每一個國家都按照其絕對有利的生產條件(即生產成本絕對低)去進行專業化生產,然後彼此進行交換,則對所有國家都是有利的,世界的財富也會因此而增加。

  (4)國際分工的基礎是有利的自然稟賦或後天的有利條件。斯密認為,有利的生產條件來源於有利的自然稟賦或後天的有利條件。自然稟賦和後天的條件因國家而不同,這就為國際分工提供了基礎。因為有利的自然稟賦或後天的有利條件可以使一個國家生產某種產品的成本絕對低於別國而在該產品的生產和交換上處於絕對有利地位。各國按照各自的有利條件進行分工和交換,將會使各國的資源、勞動和資本得到最有效的利用,將會大大提高勞動生產率和增加物質財富,並使各國從貿易中獲益。這便是絕對成本說的基本精神。


by 趙永祥 2019-04-22 23:41:15, 回應(0), 人氣(968)



B 字首的經濟學專有術語


 經濟學專有術語 (B字首專有名詞)


投資的βBetaβ度量的是與投資相聯的不可分散的風險。對於一種股票而言,它表示所有現行股票的收益發生變化時,一種股票的收益會如何敏感地變化。
債券收益Bond yield債券收益是債券所獲得的利率
收支平衡圖Break-even chart收支平衡圖表示一種產品所出售的總數量改變時總收益和總成本是如何變化的。收支平衡點是為避免損失而必須賣出的最小數量。
預算線Budget line預算線表示消費者所能購買的商品X和商品Y的數量的全部組合。它的斜率等於商品X的價格除以商品Y的價格再乘以一1。
捆綁銷售Bundling Sale捆綁銷售指這樣一種市場營銷手段,出售兩種產品的廠商,要求購買其中一種產品的客戶,也要購買另一種產品。

C

by 趙永祥 2019-04-22 23:38:49, 回應(0), 人氣(928)



A 字首的經濟學專有術語


絕對優勢Absolute advantage如果一個國家用一單位資源生產的某種產品比另一個國家多,那麼,這個國家在這種產品的生產上與另一國相比就具有絕對優勢。
逆向選擇Adverse choice在此狀況下,保險公司發現它們的客戶中有太大的一部分來自高風險群體。
選擇成本Alternative cost如果以最好的另一種方式使用的某種資源,它所能生產的價值就是選擇成本,也可以稱之為機會成本
需求的弧彈性Arc elasticity of demand如果P1和Q1分別是價格和需求量的初始值,P2 和Q2 為第二組值,那麼,弧彈性就等於
非對稱的信息Asymmetric information在某些市場中,每個參與者擁有的信息並不相同。例如,在舊車市場上,有關舊車質量的信息,賣者通常要比潛在的買者知道得多。
平均成本Average cost平均成本總成本除以產量。也稱為平均總成本
平均固定成本Average fixed cost平均固定成本總固定成本除以產量。
平均產品Average product平均產品是總產量除以投入品的數量。
平均可變成本Average variable cost平均可變成本是總可變成本除以產量。