business cycle model

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18 Terms

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business cycle model

a model showing the increases and decreases in a nation's real GDP over time; this model typically demonstrates an increase in real GDP over the long run, combined with short-run fluctuations in output.

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expansion

the phase of the business cycle during which output is increasing

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recession

the phase of the business cycle during which output is falling

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Depression

a deep and prolonged recession

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peak

the turning point in the business cycle between an expansion and a contraction; during a peak in the business cycle, output has stopped increasing and begins to decrease.

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trough

the turning point in the business cycle between a recession and an expansion; during this, output that had been falling during the recession stage of the business cycle bottoms out and begins to increase again

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recovery

when GDP begins to increase following a contraction and a trough in the business cycle; an economy is considered in recovery until real GDP returns to its long-run potential level.

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potential output

the level of output an economy can achieve when it is producing at full employment; when an economy is producing at its potential output, it experiences only its natural rate of unemployment, no more and no less.

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growth trend

the straight line in the business cycle model, which is usually upward sloping and shows the long-run pattern of change in real GDP over time

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positive output gap

the difference between actual output and potential output when an economy is producing more than full employment output; when there is a positive output gap, the rate of unemployment is less than the natural rate of unemployment and an economy is operating outside of its PPC.

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negative output gap

the difference between actual output and potential output when an economy is producing less than full employment output; when there is a negative output gap, the rate of unemployment is greater than the natural rate of unemployment and an economy is operating inside its PPC.

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Deficit

an amount of money that is smaller than is needed (e.g-when spending exceeds revenues)

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Surplus

an excess: a quantity that is larger than is needed

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Equilibrium

a state of balance, for example when supply is the same as demand equilibrium

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Monetary policy

government or central bank actions concerning the rate of growth of the money in circulation

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Fiscal policy

government actions concerning taxation and public expenditure

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Keynesianism

the economic theory that government monetary and fiscal policy should stimulate business activity and increase employment in a recession

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Money supply

the total amount of money available in an economy at a particular time