Tuesday 26 January 2010

The Economic Climate (4): The Hot Climate

The Hot Economic Climate

Business is booming, and people are crowding into stores, buying new cars, new couches, new VCRs, new everythings.  Merchandise is flying off the shelves, stores hire more clerks to handle the rush, and factories are working overtime to make more products. 

When the economy reaches the high-heat phase, factories are making so many products that merchandise is piling up at every level: in the stores, in the warehouses, and in the factories themselves.  Store owners are keeping more goods on hand, so they won't be caught short.

Jobs are easy to find, for anybody who's halfway qualified, and the help-wanted ads in the newspapers go on for several pages.  There's no better time for teenagers and recent college grads to enter the workforce than in the middle of a hot economy.

It sounds like the perfect situation: 
  • Businesses of all kinds are ringing up big profits;
  • the unemployment lines are getting shorter; and
  • people feel prosperous, confident, and secure in their jobs. 
  • That's why they're buying everything in sight. 
But in the world of finance, a hot economy is regarded as a bad thing.  It upsets the professional investors on Wall Street.  If you pay attention to the business news, you'll see headlines that read:  "Economy Strong, Nation Prosperous, Stock Market Drops 100 Points."

The main worry is that a hot economy and too much properity will lead to inflation.

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