Tommy69 said:
Unemployment can balloon in the short term due to competitive pressures, however, following structural adjustment, should ultimately decline in the medium to long term.
Tommy69 said:
inefficient industries shut down due to increased global competition
Not necessarily. Sometimes uncompetitive firms will shift their operations to more efficient sectors, or can even choose to specialise in one particular aspect of production, concentrating all resources on a single production line to the detriment of everything else. Sometimes inefficient industries will develop and implement new innovations and technologies in response to external pressure.
ando said:
If our exports are highly price inelastic
If we're talking Australia, remember that our export base is nearly monopolised by agricultural commodities and raw minerals, products whose prices are generally highly elastic and given to large fluctuations on global markets (with the exception, perhaps, of the mineral exports of which Australia has rich factor endowments).
ando said:
due to the valuation affect, the servicing costs of our foreign liabilities (ie dividends and interest) will decrease if the currency appreicates
The Valuation Effect refers to the size of Australia's foreign debt, not the servicing costs involved.
illmatic said:
An appreciation in our dollar should ultimately result in an improvement on the terms of trade because the price of the exports essentially becomes larger than the prices for the imports.
IS THIS RIGHT?
Sure is, dude.
damnation said:
As for subsides they artifically raise the prices of goods and services, meaning that consumers get less variety and choice and have to pay a higher price in order to sustain an inefficent local industry
Subsidies reduce production costs and, hence, the final selling prices of goods, enabling the subsidised industry to sell greater quantities of its product at more competitive prices on global markets. Consumers benefit from the reduced prices.
They are bad because they reduce the revenue of firms importing into the country as well breeding complacency in the subsidised firms; to the point where they are unable to survive in the absence of a barrier that was only ever supposed to be a temporary aid.
illmatic said:
The structure of Australia's export base is mainly the production of primary commodities such as timber, wool, wine etc.. However we also manufacture ETM's, but as forementioned, primary commodities are the predominant area. Demand and supply of such things fluctuates due to seasons, and weather etc, therefore our export industries are not very secure
Also raw minerals, services such as those of the tourism, education and financial industries and some niche manufactures.
MeehShanku said:
(deteriotrating TOT coz BOGS more imports than exports)
Rise in $A means deteriorating CAD and improving TOT.
Anyways, my question...
Why does an appreciation in the NAIRU curb economic growth without curbing inflation?
Meeh, dude, don't I get a question too? :'(