|
|
|
|
|
Index
|
|
Alphabetic list of all
topics.
|
|
|
Contents
|
|
An organized outline of
all topics.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Indicators
|
|
How the economy is
measured and forecasted.
|
|
|
Employment
|
|
The connection between
people holding jobs and the
overall economy.
|
|
|
Inflation
|
|
The continual rise in
prices in an economy and its
connection to the
economy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ECONOMIC TRENDS
|
|
|
|
BUSINESS CYCLES
|
|
One fundamental characteristic
of the economy is that it is
constantly experiencing alternating
periods of growth and decline,
though in the long run it has
always been in growth. This
alternating pattern of growth and
decline are business cycles.
Growth depends on several factors.
The most important ones include:
people investing in growth rather
than spending everything,
technological advances allowing
better ways to do things, and
people. There must be enough people
to allow for maximum productivity,
but not so much people that the
huge population interferes with
growth and causes inefficiency. The
people must also be motivated to
work. Economies over time can be
seen as a graph. The economy
experiences periods of
expansion, technically
defined as a period of growth
lasting more than two quarters (a
minor movement of the economy over
a short period of time is
insignificant), and periods of
recession, technically
defined as a period of decline that
lasts more than two quarters (1/4
of a year). A depression is
a severe recession.
Fig 1.5.1-business
cycles
There are two views of this
economic situation: Classical and
Keynesian. We will go into this
later, but in summary, Classical
economists say that the
fluctuations in an economy are
natural and after a recession, the
economy will rebound on its own.
Keynesian economists say that there
are fundamental problems behind the
economy that should be controlled
by the government. The Great
Depression was a tremendous period
of decline in the economy and it
was so severe that it fundamentally
rearranged how the economy is
managed. Previously, governments
had a policy of
laissez-faire, which meant
the government did not interfere in
business. After the depression,
however, government stepped up and
began to regulate the economy. The
government's stabilizing effect has
been able to prolong the duration
of economic expansions in the
postwar years and shorten the
length of economic depressions.
|
|
|
|
BUSINESS CYCLES-alternating
cycles of economic growth and
decline
EXPANSION-an upturn of the
economy lasting for more than two
quarters
RECESSION-a downturn of the
economy lasting for more than two
quarters
DEPRESSION-a period of
severe economic problems, a very deep
recession
FIG 1.5.1-an economy
experiences alternating periods of growth and
decline, though in the long term, the economy
is generally growing
|
|
|
INDICATORS
|
|
Economists have developed over
time several indicators of how well
the economy is doing. Leading
indicators show what might happen
in the future, including: the
workweek of manufacturing workers,
layoffs, new orders for goods, the
number of vendors that report
slower distribution from suppliers,
new businesses, contracts for
equipment and facilities, number of
permits issued for private real
estate development, change in
inventories (stores of products
waiting distribution to the
market), change in prices, change
in liquid assets (assets that can
be immediately changed for cash),
changes in money supply (amount of
money in the economy). Coincidental
indicators are indicators of the
state the economy is in at the
present, including: number of
employees outside of the
agriculture sector, personal income
from work (minus various
government-provided benefits, etc.)
industrial production, sales
volume.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EMPLOYMENT
|
|
Unemployment is used as a major
indicator of how well an economy is
doing, along with capacity
utilization rate, a measure of how
much we are using our production
potential compared to what is
possible. A 4 or 5 percent
unemployment rate and a 85 percent
capacity utilization rate are
roughly the target rates. These
target numbers are numbers we try
to reach, but not exceed. Exceeding
them, pushing the economy too fast,
would let the smallest mistake
trigger a catastrophic collapse of
the whole economy (which is like
what happened during the depression
of the 1930's).
In the problem of unemployment,
two type of unemployment exist:
cyclical and
structural. Cyclical
unemployment is caused by the
downturns and upturns of the
ever-shifting economy. When
economies go down, business
activity declines and people lose
jobs. When economies goes up,
people get hired. Structural
unemployment is caused by changes
in how the economy works. For
example, industrializatio initially
caused a massive loss of jobs,
because machines replaced people.
However, as industrial employment
declined, service employment
increased. The U.S. economy, for
example, is an economy fueled
primarily by workers that provide
services rather than maufacture
things.
The Industrial Revolution, by
moving people to fixed-wage jobs
(you never got 'fired' off of a
farm in the old days, because if
the year's production was bad, you
just reaped less crops), introduced
these economic situations. At
first, unemployment in industrial
societies meant having nothing and
to avoid starving to death, one had
to find another job. However, under
the new economic systems. In pure
capitalism, as earlier stated, the
government practiced laissez-faire
and did not intefere in economic
activities. However, most modern
economies are a melding of
capitalist and socialist ideas to
form welfare capitalism, a
system in which governments
significantly regulate the
otherwise free market.
Governments try to maintain
their economies at full employment,
meaning that anyone who wanted a
job could have one. Full employment
does not mean that everyone had a
job. There are a few people who
voluntarily quit their jobs and
there are people who are not
eligible to hold jobs (prison
inmates, etc.). The target level of
full employment has been constantly
shifting, but the idea remains the
same. This type of voluntary
unemployment is called
frictional unemployment.
Unemployment is another area of
debate between Classical and
Keynesian economists. Classical
economists generally believe that
unemployment is the individual's
problem, and those who are
unemployed are not trying hard
enough. Thus, all unemployment is
frictional unemployment. Keynesian
economists believe that society
should always be able to offer
individuals jobs. Because of these
discrepancies, the real
unemployment numbers may not be
totally accurate. Some people are
working, just not officially
registered anywhere, some are going
off work for a while because they
feel like it. The unemployment
figures may also not be completely
representative because they break
down when the statistics are shown
for various demographic groups:
gender, race, age, etc.
|
|
|
|
CYCLICAL
UNEMPLOYMENT-unemployment caused by changes in
economic activity
STRUCTURAL
UNEMPLOYMENT-unemployment caused by fundamental
changes in the economy
WELFARE CAPITALISM-free
market with significant government regulation
of the economy
FRICTIONAL
UNEMPLOYMENT-unemployment caused by people who
voluntarily leave their jobs
|
|
|
INFLATION
|
|
Inflation is another
important indicator of the economy.
Inflation is the continuing rise in
the overall price level of an
economy. Inflation, in large part,
guides government policy. Long-term
inflation can be a major problem.
Inflation is almost always
existent, the price level is
constantly rising, but in a
sustained economy, the inflation
rate is stable. There are multiple
indices for measuring inflation and
none are completely up-to-date and
accurate, they give an accurate
enough picture of inflation. These
indices allow us to adjust our
production numbers. (Say we produce
1 trillion monetary units worth of
stuff the first year and produce
1.5 trillion the next, since the
price level has risen and our
production really hasn't, we may
only have really produced 1.2
trillion relative to the first
year.) It is important to
distinguish between the real
figures and nominal figures.
Inflation is the rise in price
level and people set the prices, so
the inflation is caused by people
thinking that raising prices will
get them more of the output. There
are two types of inflation.
Demand-pull inflation is
caused by great demand and a
scarcity of supply. When there is
scarcity, based on the laws of
supply and demand, prices go up.
People are willing to pay more for
a needed product or needed labor.
Thus, prices go up and workers'
wages go up; people are willing to
charge more for everything.
Demand-pull inflationary markets
are at full employment. The second
type is cost-push inflation.
Unlike in demand-pull inflationary
economies, cost-push economies may
not have surplus demand. However,
certain groups have the ability to
force their own prices up,
therefore forcing those who buy
their products to raise their own
prices. Both of these forces
combine to form inflationary
pressures on an economy. One is
often supplemented by the other.
People also raise their prices to
keep up with the inflation they
project will occur. However, the
inflation is unexpected sometimes
and people struggle to catch up by
setting their prices higher.
Inflation has the effect of
moving wealth from those who don't
raise their prices to those who do.
If workers increase their demands
for payment, they get more money,
so they can pay for the increased
prices of the companies. However,
if someone could not raise their
prices, they lose wealth. Inflation
can make it hard for people to
judge prices, as it's hard for them
to constantly readjust themselves
to shifting price levels. When
inflation goes out of control and
expectations of inflation rise,
inflation can potentially wreck an
economy. Hyperinflation is
inflation of 100% or more. Large
inflation causes people to spend
their money quickly and not save it
for future investment (because that
money wouldn't be able to buy much
soon). This kind of severe
inflation can destroy confidence in
the economy in general.
Inflation and unemployment are
interrelated to each other. When a
country encourages rapid growth and
unemployment goes down, this could
trigger massive inflation as a
result of excess demand and
cost-pull as explained above. But
if a country wants to cut down on
inflation, the cost is often the
increase in unemployment and lack
of growth.
|
|
|
|
INFLATION-the constant
increase in price level in an
economy
DEMAND-PULL
INFLATION-inflation caused by shortages of
products and labor in full employment
economy
COST-PUSH
INFLATION-inflation caused by the forced rise
in prices in below full employment
economy
HYPERINFLATION-inflation at
a rate of 100% or higher
|
|
<< BACK ||
NEXT >>
|
|
|
|
|