Economics
GDP, inflation, interest rates, central bank policy, and the data releases that drive trading decisions. Written for investors, not econ professors.
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New to Economics? Start Here
Five guides that take you from zero to informed. Read them in order.
Related Sections
Economics doesn’t exist in isolation. These sections provide the broader context.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common economics questions answered from an investor’s perspective.
Why should investors study economics?
Because markets don’t move in isolation. Interest rate decisions, inflation data, employment reports, and trade policy directly affect stock prices, bond yields, and currency values. You don’t need an economics degree — but understanding how GDP growth, Fed policy, and the business cycle interact gives you a real edge in anticipating market shifts instead of just reacting to them.
What’s the difference between monetary and fiscal policy?
Monetary policy is the Federal Reserve adjusting interest rates and the money supply to control inflation and support employment. Fiscal policy is Congress and the President deciding on government spending and taxes. Both move markets, but they work through different channels. The Fed acts faster — rate decisions happen 8 times per year. Fiscal policy takes months or years to implement. Our monetary policy guide and fiscal policy guide break down exactly how each works.
How do economic indicators affect the stock market?
Economic data releases create volatility because they change expectations about future Fed policy and corporate earnings. A stronger-than-expected jobs report might signal rate hikes ahead — bad for bonds, mixed for stocks. A surprise drop in CPI could mean rate cuts — good for both. The key is understanding what the market expects versus what gets reported. The surprise is what moves prices, not the number itself. Start with our economic indicators guide for the full breakdown.
What’s the Federal Reserve and why does it matter so much?
The Federal Reserve is the U.S. central bank. It sets the federal funds rate — the interest rate banks charge each other overnight — which ripples through the entire economy. When the Fed raises rates, borrowing gets more expensive, growth slows, and stock valuations typically compress. When it cuts, the opposite happens. Every FOMC meeting is a market-moving event. Our Federal Reserve guide explains the full structure and decision-making process.
Do I need to follow economics to be a good investor?
It depends on your strategy. If you buy and hold index funds for decades, you can largely ignore the economic cycle — time in the market matters more than timing. But if you trade individual stocks, invest in bonds, manage a concentrated portfolio, or allocate across asset classes, understanding macro trends gives you a significant advantage. At minimum, knowing what drives inflation, interest rates, and recessions helps you avoid panic-selling at the worst possible time.