Title: Business Cycle
1Business Cycle
2Economic 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
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3Great 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.
4Men looking for jobs at an unemployment office.
5Soup Kitchen
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9Hooverville
10New 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.
11Financial 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.
12Fiscal 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.
13Monetary 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.
14Loose 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
15Fractional 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.
16Inflation
- 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.
17Consumer 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.
18Implicit GDP Price Deflator
- Takes inflation away for year comparisons.
- The base year used for comparisons is 1987.
19Gross 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.
20GDP 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.
21Unemployment
- 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.
22Types 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.