Economic Trends in Terms of Output and Essay

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Economic Trends

In terms of output and growth, Canada's real GDP was 2.96% higher than it was a year ago, but the growth trend is slowing down from a growth rate high of 3.81% in Q3 2010. Japan's economy has contracted in Q2 2011 by 0.76%. It's rate has been volatile, growing rapidly over the past year only to contract again. The UK's growth rate is 1.63%, and that country has had fairly stable, if sluggish, real GDP growth. The current GDP growth rate in the United States is 2.33%. Real GDP growth is on a downward trend in the U.S. But has maintained healthy levels since Q4 2009.

All four countries were affected by the recession. Each experienced real GDP declines during the 2008-2009 period. Japan was the hardest hit. Yet each nation recovered in 2010, only to see the rate of economic growth slow again in 2011.

Canada showed weakness during the recession years of 2008 and 2009 with respect to output per worker. The productivity rate has improved since the beginning of 2010 but in this calendar year has begun to decline again, in step with the country's GDP growth declines. Japan's labor productivity (output per worker) has been as volatile as its GDP growth. The country suffered a very steep decline in productivity during the 2008-2009 period, but had very high productivity growth in 2010. The pace of productivity growth has slowed significantly in 2011 in Japan. In the United Kingdom, output per worker dropped sharply in 2009 only to rebound in 2010. It is currently declining again. In the United States, output per worker declined in 2008-2009, albeit less than in the UK and Japan. Productivity increased in 2010 but the rate of productivity growth has slowed in 2011.

Labour productivity slumped during the recession in all four countries.
As was the case with real GDP growth, productivity dropped the most in Japan. That country's alarming decline in productivity was in part offset by improvements in productivity in 2010. Each country, however, saw improvement in 2010 only to see the rate of productivity improvement decline in 2011.

3. Canada has not reported in 2011 Q2 CPI figure yet, but the country has seen an escalation in inflation over the course of the past four quarters. From flatlining inflation in 2009 Q2 and deflation in 2009 Q3, Canada's inflation rate is back around the Bank of Canada's target range (BoC, 2011). Japan has suffered from deflation since the outset of the economic crisis. The current CPI growth rate of 0% and last quarter's rate of 0.1% are improvements over the deflation that has occurred in the years previous, although these rates are very low. In the United Kingdom, the CPI growth rate is high at 4.11%. It has been over 3% since Q1 2010. This rate is likely more inflationary than Britain would prefer. CPI growth in the U.S. is 3.33%, and this represents an increase over the relatively low rates recorded since the country exited deflation in Q4 2009. The Fed measures its upper limit on the target inflation range based on core CPI, not headline, but even that has exceeded the Fed's upper target limit (Tella, 2011).

Three of these four countries struggle with inflation issues. Japan is having trouble getting any inflationary traction, while the U.S. And UK have seen larger than expected spikes in the headline CPI rates. Only Canada has been able to maintain a stable inflation rate in its central bank's target range over the course of the study period.

4. Since unemployment in.....

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