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Published byJulie Arline Copeland Modified over 9 years ago
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Business Cycles Economic Growth is a major goal Measured by – increase in real GDP or increase in real GDP per capita Sources of growth: 1) increase resources and 2 ) increase the productivity of the resource inputs Productivity = real output per unit of input Results from Health, training, education & motivation of workers
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Business Cycles Fluctuations of economic activity levels Cycles are: Peak – maximum production level is reached temporarily (full employment) Recession – period of decline in business activity for 6 months or longer Depression - long, severe period of economic decline Trough – lowest point of recession/depression Recovery – expansion of economic activity leading to improved conditions
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Business Cycles Causes – Characteristic of the market system Changes in spending leads to production changes Innovations lead to major economic adjustments (“creative destruction”) Productivity (expands = booms; contracts = recessions) Monetary issue (too much or too little in circulation)
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Business Cycles Major problems from economic instability: unemployment & inflation Unemployment – results from economic downturn Measured by: % of labor force that is unemployed Currently 8% unemployment
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Unemployment Labor force = over 16 yrs old, able & willing to work & actively seeking work Labor force does not count: under 16 or unable to work (institutionalized) Potential workers who are not seeking work (homemakers, students, retirees ) Discouraged workers – no longer looking
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Unemployment Frictional – workers who are “between jobs” (voluntarily changing, laid off, fired, or new workers just starting to look) Structural – workers whose skills are no longer in demand; they will need to be re- trained or move to a new location Cyclical – workers who lose jobs due to economic recession & lack of spending
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Inflation Inflation – a rise in the level of prices Measured by CPI comparisons (year to year; month to month) Normal economic growth = 2-3% change Annual inflation Rate is 1.5% – “double digit” is very serious for U.S. Hyperinflation can be devastating to output and employment
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Inflation’s Negative Effects Fixed income receivers (elderly retirees, government workers, minimum wage earners, landlords, etc.) Savers (paper assets lose value over time when interest rate is lower than inflation rate) Creditors (lenders are paid back in “cheaper” dollars & have a loss of “real” income)
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Inflation’s Positive Effects Flexible-Income receivers are unaffected (COLA like SS, businesses with prices rising faster than costs, commission sales positions, any business that anticipates inflation, etc.) Debtors (borrowers pay back loans with “cheap” dollars – lower interest than inflation %)
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Types of Inflation Demand – Pull Inflation Caused by changes in spending beyond the production capacity i.e. failure to produce more drives up price “too much money chasing too few goods” In long run, wages will go up as workers are in demand & cost of living increases
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Types of Inflation Cost – Push Inflation Caused by increase in factors of production costs Per unit production costs rise Business must raise prices to make profits “wage price spirals” as wages are the largest single production cost Also caused by “supply shocks” (raw materials or energy costs rise abruptly)
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