Litigation policy

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Process policy is a form of economic policy , in which the state , the economic processes directly affected, to stabilize the economic process, or to promote overall economic growth.

A distinction is made according to the target directions:

  1. Economic policy in the narrower sense: The aim is to reduce economic fluctuations. The economic policy can in turn be differentiated into demand and supply-oriented policy.
  2. Growth policy: starts with the foundations of growth (e.g. investment activity, human capital or environmental resources). In contrast to economic policy, it is more long-term.
  3. Structural policy : The reaction to regional imbalances and crises in individual branches or sectors of the economy.
  4. Distribution policy : to correct income and property relationships.
  5. Economic policy in the broader sense: Magic square : Stabilization policy (→ Stability and Growth Act ).

The most important forms of litigation policy are financial policy , fiscal policy , monetary policy , pricing policy and income policy .

Demarcation

Economic policy measures aimed at shaping the framework within which economic processes take place (→ economic order ) are assigned to regulatory policy . The process policy affects the economic processes within the prescribed regulatory framework. Measures are considered to be process policy in conformity with the order if they are predominantly limited to influencing the macroeconomy and leaving microeconomic processes to the market mechanisms. In addition to concrete political measures, there is also the indirect means of moral appeal within political linguistics .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Gabler Verlag (editor), Gabler Wirtschaftslexikon, keyword: process policy
  2. ^ Walter AS Koch / Markus Fredebeul-Krein / Margareta Kulessa, Fundamentals of Economic Policy , UTB, 2014, ISBN 9783825285562 , pp. 19-20