An economic stimulus is a monetary or fiscal policy enacted by governments with the intent of stabilizing their economies during a fiscal crisis. The policies include an increase in government spending on infrastructure, tax cuts and lowering interest rates. After the Brexit vote in 2016 the Bank of England proposed a stimulus package designed to boost the economy and prevent a recession. The package included purchasing corporate debt and low rate commercial bank loans.
87% Yes |
13% No |
70% Yes |
9% No |
4% Yes, but in the form of tax breaks for low income citizens |
2% No, recession is a natural cycle that purges excess |
4% Yes, the government should intervene to boost a recovery |
2% No, and the government should drastically reduce spending during recessions |
3% Yes, but in the form of tax breaks for all citizens |
|
3% Yes, but in the form of increased spending on infrastructure |
|
3% Yes, but in the form of assisting sectors most heavily hit by the recession |
|
1% Yes, and collectivize all industry |
See how support for each position on “Economic Stimulus” has changed over time for 52.1k UK voters.
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See how importance of “Economic Stimulus” has changed over time for 52.1k UK voters.
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Unique answers from UK users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
@9BDPLSP1yr1Y
My knowledge on economics is limited at best
@9D7GRBK9mos9MO
Yes, consistent with the Modern Monetary Theory framework
@9CJHNNW10mos10MO
Yes, by direct cash transfers to poorer citizens
@9C2BTW812mos12MO
Yes but only on tax breaks from the bottom up and national infrastructure projects.
@9B84XHJ1yr1Y
The goverment are not on our side!
@97YWTWJ1yr1Y
Only if affordable. Recession typically comes with Government debt
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