Running head: GREAT RECESSION 1
GREAT RECESSION 5
Great Recession
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Great Recession
There are times when a nation undergoes economic hardship for a long or short period of time. The recession is the term used by economists to define this period, it is a time when the nation?s economic GDP is low for more than two quarters consecutively (Beckworth, 2012). Recession often results in plunges in the stock market, unemployment, housing market, and a decrease in the quality of life of the citizens. The United States experienced a recession from December 2007 to June 2009 (Braude, 2013). It was the country?s greatest economic downfall for last 60 years earning the name ?The Great Recession?. During this period there
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The package also included a rise in loan limits for high-cost mortgages.
A monetary policy was also implemented to fight the Great Recessions, Traditionally the monetary policy could not be implemented since the Federal Reserve has a Zero Bound Problem. This meant that the interest rates were already set at 0 by the central bank and could not be lowered any further since a negative figure would lead to a non-investment (Hetzel, 2012). The Federal reserve instead developed a monetary policy by the name Quantitative Easing to try and reduce the effects of the recession. QE was implemented by the federal reserve by buying assets, for example, they bought cooperate bonds from banks for cash in order to add more supply of money in the economy. In a normal case, the federal government would purchase the bonds from individual to increase money but during a recession the no private bonds available for purchase. Therefore, the federal government is forced to buy other assets.
The demand-side policies did not succeed in fully eliminating the severe effects of the economic decline. But there were some aspects of the economy that showed growth and there was an improvement in employment. The use of monetary and fiscal policies is usually viewed as a ?leaky bucket? since the effects can be felt by the beneficiaries, some archive the intended outcome while some are lost in the
Max: Now that we have taken care of fiscal policy we must acknowledge the second half of the efforts to pull ourselves out of the recession. Monetary policy! Monetary policy is the action of the federal Bank of the United States of America to manipulate the economy using the three tools. The three tools are open market operations, discount rate, and reserve requirements. The most commonly used tool is OMO’s, the fed buys bonds from the federal government and then sell to the public. With the profit they make from the bonds sold to the public they buy more bonds. And then it continues in this cycle.
As the onslaught of the sub-prime mortgage crisis began in late 2007, the housing market plummeted sending the economy into what is now known as the Great Recession. The Federal Reserve, as well as the private and government sectors, quickly took notice. In November of 2008 the Federal Reserve undertook its first trimester of quantitative easing; which means the Fed began purchasing treasury securities to increase the money supply in the system, with the hopes that the increase in assets would encourage lending and investment, leading to a resurgence of the economy in terms of unemployment rates and GDP. As time progressed the Fed continued to implement quantitative easing into its third trimester due to a lack of sufficient results.
According to the financial definition, a recession is a significant decline in activity spread across the economy, lasting longer than a few months. It is visible in industrial production, employment, real income, and wholesale-retail trade. The technical indicator of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth as measured by a country's GDP. (Dictionary.com) A less official and more realistic definition of an economic recession is the social perception of the state of the economy at a given time. The collective beliefs of the public, mainly businesses and consumers, drive the social perception of whether things are seen as positive or negative. Unfortunately
Everybody in the United Stated was affected by the recession that began in December of 2007 and spanned all the way to June 2009. Even though the recession is over, many people are still being affected by it and have still not been able to recover from the great recession. “The recent recession features the largest decline in output, consumption, and investment, and the largest increase in unemployment, of any post-war recession”. Many people lost their jobs due to the recession and some of them are still having a hard time finding jobs and getting back on their feet. Businesses
A recession is full-proof sign of declined activity within the economic environment. Many economists generally define the attributes of a recession are two consecutive quarters with declining GDP. Many factors contribute to an economy's fall into a recession, but the major cause argued is inflation. As individuals or even businesses try to cut costs and spending this causes GDP to decline, unemployment rate can rise due to less spending which can be one of the combined factors when an economy falls into a recession. Inflation is the general rise in prices of goods and services over a period of time. Inflation can happen for reasons such as higher energy and production costs and that includes governmental debt.
The economic meaning of a recession is that the gross Domestic Product (GDP) has declined for two or more consecutive quarters. Unemployment rises, housing falls, stocks fall and the economy is in trouble. Whenever the government sees that the economy is entering a recession it is important for it to act. The U.S acted in two ways during the Great recession of 2008 through fiscal and monetary policies. Renaud Fillieule identifies that “ Monetary and credit expansions have been the main tools used by the U.S. government and central bank to try and recover economically from the Great Recession of 2008” (Fillieule r, Pg. 99 2016). These Keynesian policies are debatable among economist, none the less they were implemented and put the U.S on the road to recovery.
Just as the world has experienced economic challenges in the past, so is it today. Before the Great Depression took place in the USA in 1929,USA had witnessed 19 recessions. And we have continued to encounter economic recessions to this day, the most recent one being that of 2008 which began in the USA but also had ripple effects on the entire global economy. These economic recessions have a negative impact on the well being of human kind. For example during the period of the "Great Depression" in the USA: 12 million people lost their employment, 85 thousand businesses collapsed and a multitude of households were unable to hold their homes.
For instance, at a personal level I have acknowledged that use of policies inappropriately by relevant stakeholders in the economy in attempts to correct the situation when it first went wrong worsened the situation. For instance, the contractionary monetary policy undertaken by the government to counteract the inflationary effect caused by the increased money supply was not effectuated accordingly and as a result, led to depression due to reduced investments and reduced productivity by industries. In addition, can be determined from the article while the government appeared to be putting measures in place to correct the situation, its action actually worsened the situation in some
How can monetary policy and fiscal policy greatly influence the US economy? Keynesian economics says, “A depressed economy is the result of inadequate spending .” According to Keynesian the government intervention can help a depressed economy through monetary policy and fiscal .The idea established by Keynes was that managing the economy is a government responsibility .
The Federal Reserve went into action in response to the 2008 recession by rapidly reducing interest rates with the hopes of encouraging economic growth. The federal funds target rate was decreased to between zero and .25 percent. The results of the rate changes caused what is called “zero bound”, this reduced the effectiveness of monetary policy with the near non-existence of interest rates.
The recent recession lasting from 2007 until 2009, and the effects of which are still highly visible in the U.S. economy, led the Federal Reserve to use new and largely untested methods for protecting the country from a total financial collapse. The new strategy, which blurs the lines between monetary and fiscal policy, had been attempted only once before, and is open to criticism from several difference angles. This report documents the history, purpose, and controversy surrounding quantitative easing as a strategy to mitigate the effects of the recent recession. After considering these factors, the conclusion is drawn that quantitative easing was a modestly successful policy, yet one which should not be employed again. Although
Since World War II, government policymakers have tried to promote high employment without causing inflation (National Archives, 2010). If the economy experiences a recession such as the one that plagued the UK, policymakers, two principal sets of tools to use are aggregate demand: monetary policy. These involve the control of interest rates or the money supply, and fiscal policy, the control of government spending and taxes (National Archives, 2010).
Therefore, the quantitative easing adopted from 2009 was trying to gradually resume sustainable economic growth. Quantitative easing has helped to avert what could have been a second great depression (Wall Street, 2011). The US economy has been clawing its way out of the recession in 2009 and recovery has been slow compared to previous economic cycles. Regular review of the pace of securities purchase by the Federal reserve and the overall size of asset-purchase program in light of incoming information and adjusting the program as need be will help foster maximum employment and price stability.
As the global economy stagnated, weak countries were targeted by bond vigilantes, making it difficult to finance and forcing up their financing costs. Nations were focused to implement austerity programs, cutting spending and increasing taxes to stabilise public finances and reduce debt, trapping them in recessions or low growth, which only aggravated the problem. With the basic strategy ineffective, the focus shifted to keeping interest rates near zero and creating inflation to increase nominal GDP. If the budget could be kept in check, then debt levels would not rise and perhaps begin to fall. ... The policies, especially QE, helped stabilise conditions by lowering borrowing costs and allowing high debt levels to be managed, but did not restore growth or create sufficient inflation. The predictable failures were reminiscent of
EFORE the financial crisis life was simple for central bankers. They had a clear mission: temper booms and busts to maintain low and stable inflation. And they had a seemingly effective means to achieve that: nudge a key short-term interest rate up to discourage borrowing (and thus check inflation), or down to foster looser credit (and thus spur growth and employment). Deft use of this technique had kept the world humming along so smoothly in the decades before the crash that economists had declared a “Great Moderation” in the economic cycle. As it turned out, however, the moderation was transitory—and the crash that ended it undermined not only the central bankers’ record but also the method they relied on to prop up growth. Monetary