Business Cycle

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Business Cycle

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Title: Business Cycle


1
Business Cycle
2
Economic Phases
  • Prosperity Boom
  • Economy is improving Economic activity peaks
  • Business activity is increasing Businesses work
    at full capacity
  • Businesses hire more workers Stores sell at
    record amounts
  • Consumers buy more Peak High point of boom
  • Decline Recession
  • Economy slows down Lowest period for
    production
  • Production is cut down High unemployment
  • Workers are laid off Low consumer
    spending Trough Low point of recession
  • Depression Severe recession

3
Great Depression
  • The depression begins in 1929.
  • By 1933, salaries decreased by 40 and hourly
    wages by 60 compared to 1929 levels.
  • The average family income fell from 2,300 to
    1,600.
  • 1930 4 million Americans were unemployed. By
    1933 the number tripled.
  • Many Americans marked this as the end of
    capitalism. Communists and Socialists fought
    with each other leading to the decline of this
    movement.

4
Men looking for jobs at an unemployment office.
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Soup Kitchen
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Hooverville
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New Deal
  • FDRs plan to end the depression. First had to
    restore faith in banks.
  • Began fireside chats insuring Americans the
    situation would improve.
  • Hundred Days March 9-June 16, 1933. Congress
    passed 15 bills. Most were written by FDR.

11
Financial Reform
  • Glass-Steagall Act (1933) Banks could not
    invest in the stock market. Created the FDIC to
    insure deposits.
  • Federal Securities Act (1933) No stock market
    fraud.
  • The nations economy would now be split into
    fiscal and monetary policy.

12
Fiscal Policy
  • The way the government taxes and spends money.
  • In a recession
  • The government spends more money on public works
    projects in order to provide jobs. This keeps
    companies running and workers employed.
  • Provides money to people and increases demand.
    Producers will then increase supply.
  • Tax cuts Gives people more money to spend.
  • The government will control peaks by increasing
    taxes.

13
Monetary Policy
  • The way the government regulates the amount of
    money in circulation. Accomplished through
    raising or decreasing interest rates. The
    Federal Reserve (FED) is in control of monetary
    policy.
  • There are 12 district banks to the Federal
    Reserve.

14
Loose and Tight Money
  • Loose Money
  • Easy to borrow
  • Consumers buy more
  • Business Expansion
  • Employment increases
  • Spending increases
  • This can lead to inflation
  • Tight Money
  • Difficult to borrow
  • Consumers buy less
  • No business expansion
  • Unemployment increases
  • Production decreases
  • This can lead to a recession

15
Fractional Reserve Banking
  • The way banks create money.
  • Discount Rate Prime rate that banks can borrow
    money from the FED.
  • Reserve Requirements Percentage of deposits
    that banks must hold.
  • Banks are free to loan out money that is not on
    reserve leading to expansion.

16
Inflation
  • A decline in the value on money.
  • Purchasing power Amount a dollar can buy.
  • Inflation is measured by the Consumer Price Index
    and the Implicit GDP price deflator.

17
Consumer Price Index
  • Change in price over time of a specific group of
    goods and services the average household uses.
  • Each year is compared to the average of
    1982-1984. This makes the base year.
  • This tells us the change in the standard of
    living.

18
Implicit GDP Price Deflator
  • Takes inflation away for year comparisons.
  • The base year used for comparisons is 1987.

19
Gross Domestic Product
  • The total dollar value of all final goods and
    services produced and sold in the nation during a
    single year.
  • Value is always expressed in terms of the dollar.
  • Final means only finished goods.
  • Only new items are counted. Anything bought used
    is not counted.

20
GDP Categories
  • Consumer Goods Goods or services bought by
    consumers for direct use.
  • Business Goods Business purchase of tools,
    machines, and buildings used to produce other
    goods.
  • Government Goods Anything bought by federal,
    state, and local governments.
  • Export Anything sold to other countries.
  • Import Anything bought from other countries.
  • Net Exports The difference in what the nation
    buys and sells with other countries.

21
Unemployment
  • Unemployment rate Percentage of the labor force
    without jobs but actively looking for work.
  • Unemployment reduces living standards, disrupts
    families, and causes a loss of self-respect.
  • Reaches its height during recession.

22
Types of unemployment
  • Cyclical Associated with the ups and downs of
    the economy.
  • Structural Changes in the economy based on
    technology.
  • Seasonal Based on weather.
  • Frictional Based on people being terminated or
    looking for new jobs.
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