Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGary Martin Modified over 9 years ago
1
Business Cycle National Debt Unit 7 Decision, Decisions
2
GDP: Gross Domestic Product the dollar value of all final goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a given year Nominal GDP: GDP measured in current prices Real GDP: GDP measured in constant unchanging prices
3
Per Capita GDP a country’s GDP divided by population 2005 US GDP- $12.77 trillion population- 295,734,134 per capita GDP- $41,800 2005 China GDP- $8.158 trillion population- 1,306,313,812 per capita GDP- $6,200
4
standard of living Per capita GDP can often be used to compare countries and their standard of living: economic prosperity
5
GNP: Gross National Product value of goods and services produced within a country in one year, plus income earned by citizens abroad, minus income earned by foreigners in the country GNP= goods and services produced + money earned by citizens abroad – income earned by foreigners in the US
6
CPI: Consumer Price Index an average of a specified set of goods and services measures the purchasing power of the dollar
7
Business Cycle NOT a regular, predictable, or repeating phenomenon like the swing of the pendulum of a clock. Its timing is random & unpredictable A business cycle has four phases.
8
4 Phases of the Business Cycle Expansion Contraction Trough Peak
9
Expansion speedup in the pace of economic activity or Rise in GDP Recovery: right after a trough, economy is getting better Prosperity: right before a peak, economy is at its best economic growth
10
Contraction slowdown in the pace of economic activity Economic decline marked by falling GDP Recession: 6 straight months of contraction Depression: Especially long contraction
11
Trough lower turning point of a business cycle, where a contraction turns into an expansion GDP stops falling
12
Peak upward turning of a business cycle When GDP stops rising **A trough & peak both represent a turning point in the business cycle**
14
National Debt The National Debt is the total amount of money the Federal Government owes to treasury bondholders. A bond is essential an IOU issued by the government as a way for them to borrow money.
16
Problems of the National Debt Reduces the funds available for businesses to invest. The government must pay interest to bondholders, the more the government borrows, the more interest it has to pay. Roughly, to pay off the National Debt today, each citizen would have to pay just over $40,083.53
17
National Debt http://brillig.com/debt_clock/ http://www.usdebtclock.org/ http://www.usdebtclock.org/
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.