US Recession Watch: Hold onto your Hats!
Thursday, March 27, 2008
The latest Standard & Poor’s/Case-Schiller house price index shows the biggest year-on-year decline in real estate prices for 21 years. Hold onto your hats - US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has come out with some very bearish statements on where the US housing market will head before the worst is over.
read more...»
Page 1 of 1 pages
Most Popular Topic Tags on the Economics Blog
recession, demand, economics, unemployment, price, prices, inflation, investment, costs, profit, downturn, trade, supply, debt, confidence, euro, gdp, competition, employment, capacity, production, risk, china, oil, incentives, exports, housing, expectations, pay, manufacturing, sterling, food, profits, property, tutor2u, mortgage, globalisation, banks, revision, slowdown, borrowing, usa, retailers, emissions, airlines, deflation, innovation, dollar, supermarkets, entrepreneur, efficiency, monopsony, elasticity, aqa, welfare, consumption, economist, productivity, saving, keynes, wealth, opec, depression, moodle, depreciation, jobs, competitiveness, credit crunch, cars, google, stocks, infrastructure, economic cycle, environmental, strategy, tim harford, externalities, carbon, vle, subsidy, evaluation, eu, management, losses, protectionism, inequality, spare capacity, environment, poverty, monopoly, bank of england, construction, behavioural, macroeconomics, output gap, carbon trading, budget deficit, steel, wages, japan, oligopoly, commodities, currencies, imports, bbc, stagflation, contestable, cpi, agflation, farming, newsnight, choices, skills, regulation, survey, taxes, government failure, itunes, minimum wage, lse, climate change, paul mason, population, intervention, aviation, keynes society, fiscal stimulus, amazon, single market, pricing, dan ariely, cartel, eton college, pollution, interest rates, shareholder, london, rationality, market failure, redundancies, rpi, mpc, shipping, behavioural economics, germany, robert peston, india, reputation, rsa, facebook, income elasticity, stakeholders, current account, brazil, coffee, savings, microsoft, monetary policy, crowding out, barriers to entry, collapse, multiplier effect, nationalisation, suppliers, economies of scale, price discrimination, uk economy, development, quiz, currency, quantitative easing, apple, surplus, labour market, tesco, free, behaviour, tragedy of the commons, opportunity cost, open source, vat, smoking, ireland, poverty trap, merger, growth, edinburgh, ownership, discrimination, cost benefit analysis, global, supply chain, oecd, shareholders, scarcity, balance of payments, petrol, liquidity, duopoly, iphone, starbucks, trade deficit, happiness, scrappage, etonomics, human capital, subsidies, capital, immigration, eurozone, takeover, ecb, paradox of thrift, exploitation, advertising, taxation, wiki, iceland, utility, wants, labour force survey, cost of living, brand, blog, speculation, poland, foreign exchange, spain, indirect tax, robert frank, northern rock, roger bootle, ocr economics, heathrow, hbos, animal spirits, hotels, freight, federal reserve, kaletsky, price war, information failure, crude oil, transport, gini coefficient, sony, creative destruction, leverage, migrants, us economy, information, fishing, waste, tax, government borrowing, milk, budget, eu enlargement, obama, anchoring, aggregate demand, entrepreneurship society, peter day, recovery, needs, internet, forecast, european union, discounting, copper, deficit, real income, public sector, nissan, contestability, companies, david smith, fairness, blogging, standard of living, aqa economics, renewable, martin wolf, labour mobility, twitter, sentiment, imf, accelerator effect, geoff riley, collusion, fair trade, pubs, income tax, obesity, guardian, consumer welfare, res, disposable income, corus, national debt, devaluation, consumer surplus, vacancies, sub-prime, tariff, global economy, broadband, joint venture, startups, vehicles, yuan, immobility, income elasticity of demand, edexcel economics, tata, redundancy, accelerator, walmart, relative poverty, youth unemployment, coal, tickets, edmund conway, cash, pensions, diesel, base rate, russia, movies, liquidity trap, contestable market, marginal cost, external shocks, stephanie flanders, libor, fixed costs, comparative advantage, allocative efficiency, training, satisficing, hot money, rory cellan-jones, status races, congestion, price mechanism, healthcare, deleveraging, hyperinflation, economic efficiency, migration, veblen goods, credit, social entrepreneur, apprenticeships, automatic stabilisers, age structure, cyclical, king of shaves, monopoly power, financial times, evan davis, wheat, ucas, reserve currency, ryanair, positional goods, drugs, aldi, scotland, carbon tax, stimulus, deindustrialisation, ebea, chris coleridge, yahoo, organic growth, barclays, richard thaler, pay cuts, liberalisation, equity, royal mail, diseconomies of scale, will king, pension, demography, structural, gillette, logging, tax burden, bonds, savings ratio, job losses, ocr, nhs, biofuel, nelson thornes, house prices, cross elasticity, brics, redistribution, slump, markets, footfall, british airways, paul krugman, schumpeter, price capping, green revolution, income distribution, enterprise, the economist, eastern europe, logic of life, ft, contraction, general motors, natural monopoly, health, supply-side, research, o2, deforestation, enlargement, producer welfare, economic welfare, asda, landfill, social costs, economax, energy, long tail, jim o'neill, diane coyle, external shock, profit margin, podcast, share prices, tariffs, philip allan, hedge fund, students, fiscal drag, green shoots, ftse, elasticity of supply, buy to let, market power, disincentives, ben bernanke, trend growth, resources, retailing, declan curry, nokia, undercover economist, hysteresis, price fixing, chris anderson, bric economies, dynamic efficiency, zimbabwe, hamish mcrae, toyota, market structure, global business, john kay, fiscal policy, winners curse, compound interest, contestable markets, frictional, hedging, claimant count, repossession, royal economic society, sustainability, public good, law of unintended consequences, sustainable growth, cambridge, robert skidelsky, vertical integration, economics teacher inset, probability, business cycle, fairtrade, freemium, yields, national institute, nairu, costa, rentokil, price regulation, market, gender pay gap, radio, central bank,All tags
ECONOMICS TEACHER RESOURCE NEWSLETTER
Join over 4,000 other Economics Teachers in the UK and around the world who receive the tutor2u Economics Resource Email newsletter. Get special offers, first news of latest resources, teaching ideas, conferences and workshops.
Recent Threads on the Economics Teacher Discussion Forums:
Posts in: General Economics Teaching
Shifts in the Labour Market
Good hotel in London for school trip
Competitive Markets
Diminishing Returns
Complementary goods - HELP Please!
URgent Help Needed
Equilibrium concept
The price of life
Extended Project Qualification
Economics course structure











