Money-Credit-Debt Cycle
(Redirected from Financial Cycle)
A Money-Credit-Debt Cycle is a macroeconomic cycle that describes the systematic expansion and contraction of money supply, credit availability, and debt levels within an economic system.
- AKA: Credit Cycle, Debt Cycle, Financial Cycle.
- Context:
- It can typically involve Credit Expansion during economic growth periods, where banks and financial institutions increase money-credit-debt lending activity.
- It can typically lead to Asset Price Inflation through money-credit-debt liquidity injections into money-credit-debt markets.
- It can typically culminate in Debt Saturation Point where money-credit-debt borrowers reach maximum money-credit-debt servicing capacity.
- It can typically trigger Deleveraging Process when money-credit-debt repayment exceeds new money-credit-debt creation.
- It can typically influence Central Bank Policy through money-credit-debt cycle phase-based interest rate adjustments.
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- It can often amplify Economic Boom through money-credit-debt positive feedback loops in financial systems.
- It can often precipitate Economic Bust through money-credit-debt contraction mechanisms when debt levels become unsustainable.
- It can often interact with Business Cycle through money-credit-debt transmission channels in the real economy.
- It can often affect Monetary Policy Effectiveness through money-credit-debt cycle position constraints.
- It can often influence Wealth Distribution Patterns via money-credit-debt asset ownership concentration.
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- It can range from being a Short-Term Money-Credit-Debt Cycle to being a Long-Term Money-Credit-Debt Cycle, depending on its time horizon.
- It can range from being a Simple Money-Credit-Debt Cycle to being a Complex Money-Credit-Debt Cycle, depending on its financial system development level.
- It can range from being a Regulated Money-Credit-Debt Cycle to being an Unregulated Money-Credit-Debt Cycle, depending on its government intervention degree.
- It can range from being a Local Money-Credit-Debt Cycle to being a Global Money-Credit-Debt Cycle, depending on its geographic scope.
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- It can produce Price Volatility in money-credit-debt financial markets during transition phases.
- It can drive Investment Behavior through money-credit-debt cycle expectations among market participants.
- It can shape Banking System Stability through money-credit-debt risk accumulation patterns.
- It can influence Fiscal Policy Decisions through money-credit-debt servicing requirements.
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- Examples:
- Money-Credit-Debt Cycle Phases, such as:
- Expansion Money-Credit-Debt Cycle Phases, such as:
- Contraction Money-Credit-Debt Cycle Phases, such as:
- Money-Credit-Debt Cycle Durations, such as:
- Short-Term Money-Credit-Debt Cycles, such as:
- Long-Term Money-Credit-Debt Cycles, such as:
- Money-Credit-Debt Cycle Theorists, such as:
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- Money-Credit-Debt Cycle Phases, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Business Cycle, which focuses on real economic output fluctuations rather than money-credit-debt dynamics specifically.
- Monetary Cycle, which emphasizes money supply changes without necessarily incorporating credit extension and debt accumulation dynamics.
- Financial Market Cycle, which concentrates on asset price movements rather than the underlying money-credit-debt creation and destruction processes.
- Kondratieff Wave, which represents a much longer economic cycle spanning 45-60 years based on technological innovation rather than primarily money-credit-debt mechanisms.
- See: Deleveraging, Financial Crisis, Debt Bubble, Fractional Reserve Banking, Debt Deflation, Balance Sheet Recession.