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Splash Screen. Section 1 Business Cycles and Fluctuations Business cycles and business fluctuations can interrupt economic growth.Business cyclesbusiness.

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Presentation on theme: "Splash Screen. Section 1 Business Cycles and Fluctuations Business cycles and business fluctuations can interrupt economic growth.Business cyclesbusiness."— Presentation transcript:

1 Splash Screen

2 Section 1 Business Cycles and Fluctuations Business cycles and business fluctuations can interrupt economic growth.Business cyclesbusiness fluctuations Economists predict where economy is headed so forecasting models and statistical tools are key to predicting these changes.

3 Section 1 Business Cycles: Characteristics and Causes (cont.) Phases of the business cycle –RecessionRecession Begins when the economy reaches a peakpeak Ends when the economy reaches a troughtrough Business Cycles

4 Figure 1

5 Section 1 Business Cycles: Characteristics and Causes (cont.) –ExpansionExpansion Begins after the declining real GDP bottoms out Continues until economy reaches a new peak

6 Section 1 Business Cycles: Characteristics and Causes (cont.) The economy would follow a steady growth path, trend line, if periods of recession and expansion did not occur.trend line Severe recessions can turn into a depression. depression

7 Section 1 Business Cycles: Characteristics and Causes (cont.) Causes of business cycles –Changes in capital expenditures –Innovation and imitation –Monetary policy decisions –External shocks

8 Section 1 Causes of the Great Depression –Enormous gap in the distribution of income –Easy credit –Global economic conditions Business Cycles in the United States (cont.)

9 The Great Depression

10 The Great Depression [continued]

11 Great Depression Stats

12 Ave. Unemployment Rate, 1925-1928 Ave. Unemployment Rate, 1929-1933 Ave. Unemployment Rate, 1929-1933 Percent Decrease in Prices, 1929-1932 Percent Decrease in Prices, 1929-1932 Global Depression, 1929-1932

13 Six Million “Rosie the Riveters” Six Million “Rosie the Riveters” World War II Production of these items brought us out of the Great Depression. 300,000 warplanes 300,000 warplanes 124,000 ships 124,000 ships 289,000 combat vehicles and tanks 289,000 combat vehicles and tanks 36 billion yards of cotton goods 36 billion yards of cotton goods 41 billion rounds of ammunition 41 billion rounds of ammunition 2.4 million military trucks 2.4 million military trucks 111,527 tank guns and howitzers 111,527 tank guns and howitzers $288 billion was spent on the war,$288 billion was spent on the war, $100 billion in the first six months.$100 billion in the first six months. Unemployment hit an all-time low of 1.2% and personal savings were 25.5%.

14 Section 1 Laws passed and government agencies were established to prevent another depression. –Social Security Act of 1935 –Minimum Wage –Unemployment programs Business Cycles in the United States (cont.)

15 Section 1 –Securities and Exchange Commission –Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Business Cycles in the United States (cont.) After World War II, business cycles had shorter recessions and longer periods of expansion.

16 Section 1 Methods used to predict business cycles –Statistical series Forecasting Business Cycles (cont.) Leading economic indicator Composite index of leading economic indicators (LEI)Composite index of leading economic indicators (LEI) The Index of Leading Economic Indicators

17 Figure 2

18 Section 2 Inflation Inflation—increase in the general level of pricesInflation Deflation—decline in the general level of pricesDeflation Both are harmful to the economy and should be avoided whenever possible.

19 Section 2 Measuring Prices and Inflation Several price indexes are used to measure inflation.

20 Section 2 Measuring Prices and Inflation (cont.) Measuring inflation –Price index for a range of items is constructedPrice index –Consumer price index (CPI)Consumer price index (CPI) Select a market basket and add up prices to determine valuemarket basket Base year is selected for comparison.Base year Constructing the Consumer Price Index

21 Figure 3

22 Section 2 Measuring Prices and Inflation (cont.) Dollar cost of market basket is converted to a price index. Percentage change of price index from one period to another is inflation. Measuring Prices and Inflation

23 Figure 4

24 Section 2 Measuring Prices and Inflation (cont.) Inflationary changes –Creeping inflationCreeping inflation –HyperinflationHyperinflation –StagflationStagflation

25 Section 2 Causes of Inflation Causes of inflation include strong demand, rising costs, and wage-price spirals, along with a growing supply of money.

26 Cost-push Inflation Cost-push inflation is resulting from rising costs during periods of high unemployment. Cost-push inflation is a new phenomenon of modern industrial economies.

27 Demand –Pull Inflation Demand-pull inflation occurs when Demand rises more rapidly than the economy’s productive potential. Demand-pull inflation can arise from: –High supply of money –Excessive fiscal deficits

28 Section 2 Effects of inflation –Reduced purchasing power –Distorted spending patterns Consequences of Inflation

29 Section 2 –Encourages speculation –Distorted distribution of income Consequences of Inflation (cont.) Creditors are hurt more than debtors generally.Creditorsdebtors

30 Section 3 Measuring Unemployment (cont.) The civilian labor force or labor force is the sum of all persons aged 16 and above who are either employed or actively seeking employment.civilian labor forcelabor force Unemployed—individuals who are willing, able, and available to work and actively seeking employmentUnemployed

31 The Labor Force The labor-force participation rate is the percentage of the working-age population working or seeking employment. Since 1960, the labor-force participation rate has increased by 100%. The increase in the rate has come from the increased participation of women in the workforce. Participation rates for men have fallen from 86.4% in 1950 to 73.5% in 2004. Participation rates for women have increased from 33.9% in 1950 to 59.5% in 2004.

32 Section 3 Sources of Unemployment Unemployment is often caused by circumstances outside an individual’s control and is therefore very difficult to remedy.

33 Section 3 Sources of Unemployment (cont.) –Technological unemploymentTechnological unemployment –Cyclical unemploymentCyclical unemployment –Seasonal unemploymentSeasonal unemployment

34 Section 3 Sources of Unemployment (cont.) Kinds of unemployment –Frictional unemploymentFrictional unemployment –Structural unemploymentStructural unemployment Outsourcing

35 Types Of Unemployment Seasonal unemployment is unemployment due to seasonal changes in employment or labor supply. Examples include students employed during the summer at Mackinaw Island in northern Michigan, employment in the construction industry, and people employed at Cedar Point Amusement Park in Ohio.

36 Types of Unemployment Frictional unemployment is a brief period of unemployment experienced by people moving between jobs or into the labor market. People have the skills and knowledge necessary to get a job, and the jobs are available. Examples of frictionally unemployed people include new college graduates and people quitting a job and looking for something different or better.

37 Types of Unemployment Structural unemployment is unemployment caused by a mismatch between the skills or location of job seekers and the requirements or location of available jobs. Jobs may be available in other geographic areas or for individuals with specific skills and abilities. Examples include laid off steelworkers in the 1980s and defense contractors in the 1990s. Also teenagers and others with a lack of job skills are included.

38 Types of Unemployment Cyclical unemployment is unemployment caused by a lack of job vacancies; an inadequate level of aggregate demand. Cyclical unemployment commonly occurs during recessions. Companies cut back on workers due to reduced sales, fears of an economic recession, and insufficient consumer demand.

39 Concept 2: Unemployment Underemployment includes those individuals who are either working part-time and seeking full-time employment, or are employed at jobs below their capacity. Examples of underemployment include a college graduate with a Bachelor’s degree in business working as a cook at a fast food restaurant, and a teacher who is unable to find a full- time job working as a substitute teacher. Underemployed people are counted as being employed and not included in the unemployment rate.

40 Section 3 Measuring Unemployment (cont.) The unemployment rate is equal to the number of unemployed persons divided by the civilian labor force.unemployment rate The Unemployment Rate

41 Figure 6

42 Section 3 –Misery index or discomfort indexMisery indexdiscomfort index –Uncertainty leads to fewer consumer purchases. –Political instability –Crime, poverty, and family instability Measuring Consumer Discomfort

43 Figure 7

44 End of Custom Shows This slide is intentionally blank.


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