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Please help!!!

how is a decline in GDP usually interpreted?

User Catdotgif
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2 Answers

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By definition GDP is the net worth of produce in a country in a financial year therefore if it declines we can infer that the country's produce evidently decreased which can indicate that either some of the country's resources were affected or that there's an increase in the lack of demand by consumers of a specific industry.

So what we usually infer when the GDP decreases is that the unemployment rates could increase, that the market won't be as optimistic, etc.

User Giannis Faropoulos
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A decline in a country's Gross Domestic Product is interpreted as a reduction in the capacity of the domestic industry to manufacture and/or market goods and products or their ability to sell their production stocks, which in turn is a sign of income losses for many major manufacturing and producing companies in the country. A prediction in the the short term is that many workers and employees' will be laid off, and both these and the people still holding a job will cut down on their usual expenses and this will further worsen the decline in the GDP as consumers will spend less and large stocks of goods and products will remain unsold worsening the financial health of more and more companies. Overall, the domestic economy will get into a recession cycle.

User Ben Lorantfy
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