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Chapter 9. GDP and the Business Cycle. Growth and Fluctuations in GDP. Changes in GDP have been far from steady. Real GDP has sometimes grown more rapidly than the long-term trend. Real GDP has sometimes declined. Fluctuations in GDP are not perfectly even. Called the business cycle.
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Chapter 9 GDP and the Business Cycle
Growth and Fluctuations in GDP • Changes in GDP have been far from steady. • Real GDP has sometimes grown more rapidly than the long-term trend. • Real GDP has sometimes declined. • Fluctuations in GDP are not perfectly even. • Called the business cycle
Business Cycles • The fluctuations in economic activity that cause GDP to rise above and fall below its long term trend are called business cycles. • Business cycles are comprised of: • An expansionary phase • A peak • A contractionary phase (or recession) • A trough
Dating Business Cycles • The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is responsible for determining when recessions begin and end. • The NBER defines a recession as a period of significant decline in total output, income, employment and trade, usually lasting from six months to a year. • When real GDP has declined for two consecutive quarters
Table 9.3 Business Cycles in the Twentieth-Century United States
Business Cycles and the Overall Movement of the Economy (cont’d)
Business Cycles and the Overall Movement of the Economy (cont’d)
Business Cycles and the Overall Movement of the Economy (cont’d)
Potential GDP • Potential GDP is the level of GDP that corresponds to the full employment of resources. • Occurs when there is no cyclical unemployment
Potential and Real GDP How can we produce more than the potential???
Strategy and Policy • It can be hard to hit a moving target. • Policy makers try to keep the economy as close to potential GDP as they can. • If real GDP falls below potential GDP, unemployment rises. • If real GDP rises above potential GDP, inflation increases.
Chapter 9 homework • Questions 8 and 19