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2.2 ECONOMIC CONDITIONS CHANGE THE BUSINESS CYCLE INFLATION AND DEFLATION INTEREST RATES 1. Check stocks 2. Get ready for a powerpoint on the business cycle 3. We did it! THE BUSINESS CYCLE • All economies have good times and bad. • This movement of the economy from good to bad to good is called a business cycle. • Recurring ups and downs of GDP • Business cycle has four phases: • • • • Prosperity Recession Depression Recovery PROSPERITY • Peak of the business cycle • Unemployment is low • Businesses produce G&S in record numbers • Wages are good • GDP is increasing • Demand for G&S is high • Does not go on forever, eventually activity slows down RECESSION • The economy slows down • Demand decreases • Businesses lower production • Unemployment rises • GDP slows for two or more quarters • May not be serious but often signals trouble • Can cause the ripple effect DEPRESSION • When a recession deepens and spreads throughout the entire economy • Long period of high unemployment • Weak consumer sales • Business failures • GDP falls rapidly • USA has not had a depression in 70 years • During the Great Depression between 1930-1940, unemployment was 25% RECOVERY • Economic downturns do not last forever, • Unemployment begins to decrease • Demand for G&S increases • GDP begins to rise • Because people gain employment, they regain confidence about their future and begin buying again • As it continues, the nation moves to prosperity INFLATION AND DEFLATION • Inflation is the increase in the general level of prices • Buying power decreases • It takes more $ to buy the same things • Most harmful to people on fixed incomes • Causes of Inflation • When demand for G&S is higher than supply • When $ is spent for goods that are in short supply DEFLATION • Opposite of inflation • Decrease in the general level of prices • Usually occurs during recessions and depressions • Prices are lower, but people have less money • During the Great Depression prices lowered 25% MEASURING INFLATION • Mild inflation can stimulate the economy (2-3%) • Wages rise more slowly than the prices of products • Producers make higher profits, expand production and hire more workers • New workers increase spending and the total demand increases • The Consumer Price Index (CPI) compares prices in one year with prices in some earlier base year INTEREST RATES • Cost of money • Higher interest rates mean higher business costs • People with poor credit ratings pay a higher interest rate TYPES OF INTEREST RATES • PRIME RATE – Rate banks make available to their best business customers (large corporations) • DISCOUNT RATE – Rate banks are charged to borrow money from the Federal Reserve banks • T-BILL RATE – Yield on short-term (13wk)U.S. government debt obligations • TREASURY BOND RATE – Yield on long-term (up to 30 years) U.S. government debt obligations • MORTGAGE RATE – Rate individuals pay to borrow for a purchase of a new home • CORPORATE BOND RATE – The cost of borrowing for U.S. corporations • CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT RATE – Rate for time deposits at savings institutions • In conclusion: • The supply and demand for money is the major influence on the level of interest rates • As amounts saved increase, interest rate decline • When amounts borrowed increase, interest rates increase