Boom, Bust, Repeat: Understanding Economic Cycles - Deepstash
Boom, Bust, Repeat: Understanding Economic Cycles

Boom, Bust, Repeat: Understanding Economic Cycles

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The Economic Cycle

The Economic Cycle

  • Economies naturally move through repeating phases of growth and decline.
  • This pattern is called the economic or business cycle, and includes:
  1. Expansion - economic growth
  2. Peak - highest potential
  3. Contraction - slowdown
  4. Trough - least potential

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Why the Cycle matters

Why the Cycle matters

  • These cycles affect jobs, prices, incomes and investments.
  • Governments and central banks montor them to apply fiscal or monetary policies at the right time.
  • Understanding the cycle helps predict risks and plan long-term.

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Phase 1: Expansion

Phase 1: Expansion

Characteristics:

  • Rising GDP
  • Low unemployment
  • Increasing consumer confidence

Causes:

  • Low interest rates
  • Strong demand and investment

Aftermath:

  • Inflation may rise
  • Economy approaches its peak

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Phase 2: Peak

Phase 2: Peak

Characteristics:

  • Economy hits its highest output level
  • Inflation often high
  • Labor market tight

Causes:

  • Overheating economy, excessive demand

Aftermath:

  • Growth slows
  • Tipping point toward contraction

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Phase 3: Contraction

Phase 3: Contraction

Characteristics:

  • Falling GDP
  • Rising unemployment
  • Decreased spending and production

Causes

  • High interest rates
  • External shocks or loss of confidence

Aftermath:

  • Business closures
  • Pressure for policy intervention

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Phase 4: Trough

Phase 4: Trough

Characteristics:

  • Economy hits bottom
  • High unemployment
  • Low inflation or deflation

Causes:

  • Stabilazitaion policies take effect
  • Market forces reset

Aftermath:

  • Economy begins to recover
  • Sets stage for next expansion

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Recession vs. Depression

Recession vs. Depression

A recession is a short-term economic decline (often 2+ quaters of negative GDP).

  • Common symptoms: lower spending, job losses, reduced production.

A depression is far more severe and long-lasting.

  • The Great Depression (1930s) is the most famous example.

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Key Differences

Key Differences

Recession:

  • Duration: Months
  • Decline: moderate
  • Recovery: relatively fast
  • Rarity: happens regularly

Depression:

  • Duration: Years
  • Decline: extreme
  • Recovery: very slow, often painful
  • Rarity: Rare, historically significant

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Takeaway

Takeaway

Economies rise and fall — that’s normal.

But knowing the difference between a temporary recession and a deep depression helps us understand how serious a downturn really is — and what kind of response is needed.

Recessions are quite short and not that severe, while Depressions are long-term and often shaking the whole economy.

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HARRY S. TRUMAN

"A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A depression is when you lose yours."

HARRY S. TRUMAN

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IDEAS CURATED BY

zwokey

Economics and politics student from Germany. Interested in a broad field of topics and trying to easily break down topics from his studies to everyone.

CURATOR'S NOTE

In this post I want to bring you closer to the different phases of the economic/business cycle. I will try to keep things simple and easy so you guys can understand the concept and see it in current or past developments.

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