Akademik

Goldilocks economy
(GOHL.dee.lawks i.KAWN.uh.mee)
n.
An economy that is not so overheated that it causes inflation, and not so cool that it causes a recession.
Example Citation:
America's "not too hot, not too cold" Goldilocks economy is getting too hot. The result will be 8% interest rates by next summer if the overheated, tech-craze-driven stock market does not crash first.
— John Makin, "US interest rates head for 8%," Sunday Times (London), December 12, 1999
Earliest Citation:
The ''Goldilocks'' scenario, as Mr. Berner of Salomon Brothers calls it, would have the G.N.P. slowing in 1989 to an annual growth rate of 2 to 2.5 percent, then maintaining this level into the 1990's. This rate of expansion is considered by many to be the maximum that the nation can sustain without inflation.
But sustaining a steady growth rate of 2 to 2.5 percent requires just the right level of domestic consumption and overseas demand for American exports. Stephen S. Roach, senior economist at Morgan Stanley & Company, thinks they can be balanced for a while, giving the economy ''solid momentum continuing into next year.''
But the consensus view of most economists is that a Goldilocks economy cannot survive beyond 1990.
— Louis Uchitelle, "Manaing risks," The New York Times, November 13, 1988
Related Words:
cappuccino economy
experience economy
Goldilocks effect
Goldilocks planet
growth recession
job-loss recovery
LUV recovery
melt-up
nanny bubble
plutonomy
profitless prosperity
slowflation
virtuous cycle
wealth effect
X-shaped recovery
Category:
Economics

New words. 2013.