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1 Chapter 16 Business Cycles and Unemployment Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2000 South-Western.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Chapter 16 Business Cycles and Unemployment Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2000 South-Western."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Chapter 16 Business Cycles and Unemployment Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2000 South-Western College Publishing

2 2 In this chapter, you will learn to solve these economic puzzles: What is the difference between a recession and a depression? Is a worker who has given up searching for work counted as unemployed? Can an economy produce more output than its potential?

3 3 What is a Business Cycle? Alternating periods of economic growth and contraction, which can be measured by changes in real GDP

4 4 What are the four phases of a Business Cycle? Peak Recession Trough Recovery

5 5 What is a Peak? The phase of the business cycle during which real GDP reaches its maximum after rising during a recovery

6 6 What is a Recession? A downturn in the business cycle during which real GDP declines

7 7 What is a Trough? The phase of the business cycle in which real GDP reaches its minimum after falling during a recession

8 8 What is a Recovery? An upturn in the business cycle during which real GDP rises

9 9 Hypothetical Business Cycle Peak Trough RecessionRecovery Growth trend line Real GDP per year

10 10 How long before a downturn is a Recession? The Department of Commerce usually considers a recession to be at least two consecutive quarters in which there is a decline in GDP

11 11 When is a downturn considered a Depression? The term depression is primarily an historical reference to the extreme deep and long recession of the early 1930’s

12 12 What is Economic Growth? An expansion in national output measured by the annual percentage increase in a nation’s real GDP

13 13 Why is Economic Growth one of our nation’s economic goals? It increases our standard of living - it creates a bigger “economic pie”

14 14 What are the three types of Economic Indicators? Leading Coincident Lagging

15 15 What is a Leading Indicator? Variables that change before real GDP changes

16 16 Leading Indicators Changes in business and consumer credit New orders for plant and equipment New consumer goods orders Unemployment claims Delayed deliveries New business formed Average workweek New building permits Changes in inventories Material prices Stock prices Money supply

17 17 What is a Coincident Indicator? Variables that change at the same time that real GDP changes

18 18 Coincident Indicators Nonagricultural payrolls Personal income Industrial Production Manufacturing and trade sales

19 19 What is a Lagging Indicator? Variables that change after real GDP changes

20 20 Lagging Indicators Unemployment rate Duration of unemployment rate Labor cost per unit of output Inventories to sales ratio Outstanding commercial loans Commercial credit to personal income ratio Prime interest rate

21 21 What causes Unemployment? When total spending falls, businesses will find it profitable to produce a lower volume of goods and avoid unsold inventory

22 22 Who is considered Unemployed? Anyone who is 16 years of age and above who is actively seeking employment

23 23 Who is considered Employed? Anyone who works at least one hour a week for pay or at least 15 hours per week as an unpaid worker in a family business

24 24 What is the Unemployment Rate? The percentage of people in the labor force who are without jobs and are actively seeking jobs

25 25 Unemployment rate unemployed civilian labor force X 100 =

26 26 How is the Unemployment Rate calculated? 56,000 households are surveyed each month

27 27 What is the Civilian Labor Force? People 16 years or older who are either employed or unemployed, excluding members of the armed forces and people in institutions

28 28 Total Population age 16 and over Not in Labor Force Not in Labor Force Armed forces Household workers Students Retirees Persons with disabilities Institutionalized Discourage workers Civilian labor force Employed Employees Self-employed Unemployed New entrants Re-entrants Lost last job Quit last job Laid off

29 29 Who is a Discouraged Worker? A person who wants to work, but who has given up searching for work. He or she believes there will be no job offers

30 30 What is Underemployment? People working at jobs below their level of skills

31 31 What are criticisms of the Unemployment Rate? Does not include discouraged workers Includes part-time workers Does not measure underemployment

32 32 20 15 10 5 1930405060 25 70809000 The U.S. Unemployment Rate

33 33 4.3% 4.5% 6.3% 8.3% 11.7% 12.4% JapanU.S.GermanyU.K.CanadaItalyFrance

34 34 What are the types of Unemployment? Seasonal Frictional Structural Cyclical

35 35 What is Seasonal Unemployment? Unemployment caused by recurring changes in hiring due to changes in weather conditions

36 36 What is Frictional Unemployment? Unemployment caused by the normal search time required by workers with marketable skills who are changing jobs, entering, or re-entering the labor force

37 37 What is Structural Unemployment? Unemployment caused by a mismatch of the skills of workers out of work and the skills required for existing job opportunities

38 38 What is Cyclical Unemployment? Unemployment caused by the lack of jobs during a recession

39 39 What is Full Employment? The situation in which an economy operates at an unemployment rate equal to the sum of the seasonal, frictional, and structural unemployment rates

40 40 What percent unemployment is considered Full Employment? The natural rate of unemployment changes over time, but today it is considered to be about 5%

41 41 What is the GDP Gap? The GDP gap is the difference between full- employment real GDP and actual real GDP

42 42 What is the Cost of Unemployment? The GDP gap

43 43 Demographic Groups Civilian Unemployment Rates 1998 Overall Male Female White Black Teenagers (16 - 19 years) White males Black males White females Black females Less than high school High school graduates College graduates 4.5% 4.4% 4.6% 3.9% 8.9% 14.6% 14.1% 30.1% 10.9% 25.3% 7.1% 4.0% 1.8%

44 44 Key Concepts

45 45 Key Concepts What is a Business Cycle? What are the phases of a Business Cycle? How long before a downturn is a Recession? What are the types of Economic Indicators? What causes Unemployment? Who is considered Unemployed? Who is considered Employed? What is the Unemployment Rate?

46 46 Key Concepts cont. What is the Civilian Labor Force? Who is a Discouraged Worker? What is Underemployment? What are the types of Unemployment? What is Full Employment? What percent unemployment is considered Full Employment?What percent unemployment is considered Full Employment? What is the Cost of Unemployment?

47 47 Summary

48 48 Business cycles are recurrent rises and falls in real GDP over a period of years. Business cycles vary greatly in duration and intensity. A cycle consists of four phases: peak, recession, trough and recovery.

49 49 The generally accepted theory today is that changes in the forces of demand and supply cause business cycles.

50 50 A recession is officially defined as at least two consecutive quarters of real GDP decline. A trough is the turning point in national output between recession and recovery. During a recovery, there is an upturn in the business cycle during which real GDP rises.

51 51 Hypothetical Business Cycle Peak Trough RecessionRecovery Growth trend line Real GDP per year

52 52 Economic growth is measured by the annual percentage change I real GDP in a nation. The long-term annual average growth rate in the United States is 3 percent.

53 53 Leading, coincident, and lagging indicators are economic variables that change before, at the same time as, and after changes in real GDP, respectively.

54 54 The unemployment rate is the ratio of the number of unemployed to the number in the labor force multiplied by 100. The nation’s labor force consists of people who are employed plus those who are out of work, but seeking employment.

55 55 Discouraged workers are a reason critics say the unemployment rate is understated. Discouraged workers are persons who want to work, but who have given up. Another criticism of the unemployment rate is that it overstates unemployment because respondents can falsely report they are seeking a job.

56 56 Seasonal unemployment is unemployment due to seasonal changes.

57 57 Frictional unemployment results when workers are seeking new jobs that exist. The problem is that imperfect information prevents matching the applicants with available jobs.

58 58 Structural unemployment is unemployment caused by factors in the economy, including lack of skills, changes in product demand, and technological change.

59 59 Cyclical unemployment is unemployment resulting from insufficient aggregate demand.

60 60 Full employment occurs when the unemployment rate is equal to the total of the seasonal, frictional, and structural unemployment rates. Currently, the full-employment rate of unemployment in the United States is considered to be close to 5 percent. At this rate of unemployment, the economy is producing at its maximum potential.

61 61 The GDP gap is the difference between full employment, or potential real GDP, and actual real GDP. Therefore, the GDP gap measures the loss of output due to cyclical unemployment.

62 62 Chapter 16 Quiz ©2000 South-Western College Publishing

63 63 1. The phases of a business cycle are a. upswing and downswing. b. full employment and unemployment. c. peak, recession, trough, and recovery. d. full employment, depression, expansion, and plateau. C. These are the four phases of changes in real GDP which mirrors changes in employment and other key measures of the macro economy.

64 64 2. The phase of a business cycle during which real GDP reaches its minimum level is the a. recession. b. depression. c. recovery. d. trough. D. Recession is the phase during which real GDP fall and recovery is the phase during which real GDP rises. Depression is an historical reference to the deep and long recession of the early 1930’s.

65 65 3. Which of the following is not a variable in the index of leading indicators? a. New consumer goods orders. b. Delayed deliveries. c. New businesses formed. d. Prime rate. D. The prime rate is a lagging indicator.

66 66 4. Which of the following is a coincident indicator? a. Personal income. b. Industrial production. c. Manufacturing and trade sales. d. All of the above. D. All of these will change at the same time that real GDP changes.

67 67 5. The labor force consists of all persons a. 21 years of age and older. b. 21 years of age and older who are working. c. 16 years of age and older. d. 16 years of age and older who are working or actively seeking work. D. The labor force also includes the armed forces, but excludes the category called “persons not in labor force.”

68 68 6. People who are not working will be counted as employed if they are a. on vacation. b. absent from their job because of bad weather. c. absent from their job because of a labor dispute. d. all of the above. D. A person who works at least 1 hour per week for pay or at least 15 hours per week as an unpaid worker in a family business is counted as employed regardless of the special situations listed in a, b, and c.

69 69 7. The number of people officially unemployed is not the same as the number of people who can’t find a job because a. people who have jobs continue to look for better ones. b. the armed forces are included. c. discouraged workers are not counted. d. of all of the above. C. A person can quit looking for a job because he is discouraged after trying to find one, but wants to work if he could find a job, yet this person is not considered unemployed because he is not actively seeking employment.

70 70 8. Frictional unemployment applies to a. workers with skills not required for existing jobs. b. short periods of unemployment needed to match jobs and job seekers. c. people who spend long periods of time out of work. d. unemployment related to the ups and downs of the business cycle. B. Frictional unemployment includes people changing jobs, initially entering the labor force, or re-entering the labor force.

71 71 9. Structural unemployment is caused by a. shifts in the economy that make certain job skills obsolete. b. temporary layoffs in industries such as construction. c. the impact of the business cycle on job opportunities. d. short-term changes in the economy. A. Structural unemployment is long-term unemployment because the skills of unemployed workers do not match the skills required for existing jobs.

72 72 10. Unemployment that is due to a recession is a. involuntary unemployment. b. frictional unemployment. c. structural unemployment. d. cyclical unemployment. D. Only cyclical unemployment is attributable directly to the business cycle.

73 73 11. Seasonal, frictional and structural unemployment is equal to a. frictional unemployment. b. structural unemployment. c. cyclical unemployment. d. full employment. D. Full employment does not mean zero unemployment. Even in the best times, there is always seasonal, frictional, and structural unemployment.

74 74 12. Which of the following statements is true? a. The four phases of the business cycle, in order, are peak, recovery, trough, and recession. b. When unemployment is rising, then real GDP is rising. c. The economic problem typically associated with a recovery is rising unemployment. d. Full employment exists in an economy when the unemployment rate equals the sum of seasonal, frictional, and structural unemployment rates. D. There will always be some people looking for work.

75 75 13. Which of the following groups typically has the highest unemployment rate? a. White men and women. b. African-American men and women as a group. c. Teenagers. d. Persons who completed high school. B. In 1998 the unemployment rate of black males was 30.1% and black males was 25.3%.

76 76 Demographic Groups Civilian Unemployment Rates 1998 Overall Male Female White Black Teenagers (16 - 19 years) White males Black males White females Black females Less than high school High school graduates College graduates 4.5% 4.4% 4.6% 3.9% 8.9% 14.6% 14.1% 30.1% 10.9% 25.3% 7.1% 4.0% 1.8%

77 77 14. Which of the following is true? a. The GDP gap is the difference between full employment real GDP and actual real GDP. b. We desire economic growth because it increases the nation’s real GDP. c. Economic growth is measured by the annual percentage increase in a nation’s real GDP. d. Discouraged workers are a reason critics say the unemployment rate is understated. e. All of the above are true. E. All of the above are true.

78 78 Internet Exercises Click on the picture of the book, choose updates by chapter for the latest internet exercises

79 79 END


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