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Economics: The Business Cycle, Unemployment & Inflation $7.49
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Economics: The Business Cycle, Unemployment & Inflation

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Full lesson including notes, simple definitions, examples, and graphs. Ch 8: Topics: Business Cycle Stages of Business Cycle Labor Force Unemployment Types of Unemployment Costs of Unemployment Inflation Costs of Inflation Types of Inflation

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  • June 13, 2021
  • 4
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Mr. g
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Economics 8: The Business Cycle & Inflation

Business cycles: fluctuations in real GDP and employment market economies experience over
time
Stages of business cycle:
 Recession: When real GDP falls for two
consecutive quarters
 Expansion: Occurs when output is rising
 Peak: The point of a business cycle at which
expansion ends and a recession begins
 Trough: The point of a business cycle when a
recession ends and an expansion begins
 Depression: severe recession

Labor force: consist of noninstitutionalized persons
aged 16 or above who are working or seeking work
Persons are unemployed if they are not working for pay but are seeking work
Unemployment defined:

Unemployment rate rises during recessions and
falls during expansions
Discouraged workers: unemployed workers who become
discouraged (declines unemployment rate)
Labor force participation rate increases during expansions
and decreases during recessions
Underemployed workers (part-time) are considered employed, understating the
problem of unemployment. Unemployment may be overstated by underground
economy.
Types of unemployment:
 Seasonal: workers in industries with seasonal variations in demand for labor (primary
school teachers)
 Frictional: workers looking for their first job, or who quit their jobs to find a better job
(search unemployment)
 Structural: workers lose jobs due to technological changes or changes in the demand for
final output
 Cyclical: people who lose their jobs because economy enters a recession

Costs of unemployment  experienced by society as increases in suicide rates, alcohol abuse,
crime

 GDP gap: major cost
 Psychological costs for unemployed workers and families
 Before women had higher unemployment rates than men

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