In general, an economy’s expansion and growth cannot persist indefinitely. A complex, interwoven set of circumstances usually triggers a large drop in economic activity, including:
Shocks to the economy. A natural disaster or a terrorist attack are examples of unanticipated events that create broad economic disruption. The recent COVID-19 epidemic is the most recent example.
Consumer confidence is eroding. When customers are concerned about the state of the economy, they cut back on their spending and save what they can. Because consumer spending accounts for about 70% of GDP, the entire economy could suffer a significant slowdown.
Interest rates are extremely high. Consumers can’t afford to buy houses, vehicles, or other significant purchases because of high borrowing rates. Because the cost of financing is too high, businesses cut back on their spending and expansion ambitions. The economy is contracting.
Deflation. Deflation is the polar opposite of inflation, in which product and asset prices decline due to a significant drop in demand. Prices fall when demand falls, as sellers strive to entice buyers. People postpone purchases in order to wait for reduced prices, resulting in a vicious loop of slowing economic activity and rising unemployment.
Bubbles in the stock market. In an asset bubble, prices of items such as tech stocks during the dot-com era or real estate prior to the Great Recession skyrocket because buyers anticipate they will continue to grow indefinitely. But then the bubble breaks, people lose their phony assets, and dread sets in. As a result, individuals and businesses cut back on spending, resulting in a recession.
What are the primary causes of the recession?
Consumers who lose confidence stop buying and go into defensive mode. When a critical mass advances toward the exit, panic sets in. Businesses are posting fewer job openings, and the economy is adding fewer jobs. Retail sales are slowing down. As a result of manufacturers cutting back in response to lower orders, the unemployment rate rises. To restore confidence, the federal government and the central bank must intervene.
What are the two most serious issues that come with a recession?
Readers’ Question: Identify and explain economic elements that may be negatively impacted by the current economic downturn.
- Output is decreasing. There will be less production, resulting in reduced real GDP and average earnings. Wages tend to rise at a considerably slower pace, if at all.
- Unemployment. The most serious consequence of a recession is an increase in cyclical unemployment. Because businesses are producing less, they are employing fewer people, resulting in an increase in unemployment.
- Borrowing by the government is increasing. Government finances tend to deteriorate during a recession. Because of the greater unemployment rate, people pay fewer taxes and have to spend more on unemployment benefits. Markets may become concerned about the level of government borrowing as a result of this deterioration in government finances, leading to higher interest rates. This increase in bond yields may put pressure on governments to cut spending and raise taxes to reduce budget deficits. This could exacerbate the recession and make it more difficult to recover. This was especially problematic for many Eurozone economies during the recession of 2009. See also the Eurozone budgetary crisis.
- Depreciation of the currency.
- In a recession, currencies tend to depreciate because consumers predict reduced interest rates, so there is less demand for the currency. However, if there is a worldwide recession that affects all countries, this may not happen.
- Hysteresis. This is the claim that a rise in cyclical (temporary) unemployment can lead to a rise in structural (long-term) unemployment. During a recession, someone who has been unemployed for a year may become less employable (e.g. lose on the job training, e.t.c) See hysteresis for more information.
- Asset prices are declining. There is less demand for fixed assets such as housing during a recession. House price declines might exacerbate consumer spending declines and raise bank losses. A balance sheet recession (such as the one that occurred in 2009-10) is characterized by a drop in asset prices. Balance sheet recession is a term used to describe a period in which a company’s financial
- Rising unemployment has resulted in social difficulties, such as increasing rates of social isolation.
- Inequality has risen. A recession tends to exacerbate wealth disparities and poverty. Unemployment (and the reliance on unemployment benefits) is one of the most common causes of relative poverty.
- Protectionism is on the rise. Countries are frequently encouraged to respond to a global downturn with protectionist measures (e.g. raising import duties). This results in retaliation and a general fall in commerce, both of which have negative consequences.
Evaluation can recessions be beneficial?
- Some economists believe that a recession is required to address inflation. For example, the recessions of 1980 and 1991/92 in the United Kingdom.
- Recessions can encourage businesses to become more efficient, and the ‘creative destruction’ of a downturn can allow for the emergence of new businesses.
These factors, however, do not outweigh the recession’s significant personal and social costs.
US house prices
House prices decreased just before the recession began in 2006, and declining house prices contributed to the recession’s onset. However, as the recession began, property prices plummeted much worse.
Great Depression 1929-32
The Great Depression was a significantly more severe downturn, with output dropping by more than 26% in three years.
It resulted in a substantially greater rate of unemployment, which increased from 0% to 25% in just two years.
What is the primary driver of economic development?
In general, there are two basic causes of economic growth: increase in workforce size and increase in worker productivity (output per hour worked). Both can expand the economy’s overall size, but only substantial productivity growth can boost per capita GDP and income.
What triggered the Great Recession of 2008?
The Federal Reserve hiked the fed funds rate in 2004 at the same time that the interest rates on these new mortgages were adjusted. As supply outpaced demand, housing prices began to decrease in 2007. Homeowners who couldn’t afford the payments but couldn’t sell their home were imprisoned. When derivatives’ values plummeted, banks stopped lending to one another. As a result, the financial crisis erupted, resulting in the Great Recession.
What triggered the 2008 financial crisis?
Years of ultra-low interest rates and lax lending rules drove a home price bubble in the United States and internationally, sowing the seeds of the financial crisis. It began with with intentions, as it always does.
What triggered the Great Recession of 2000?
Reasons and causes: The dotcom bubble burst, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and a series of accounting scandals at major U.S. firms all contributed to the economy’s relatively slight decline.
During a recession, who benefits?
Question from the audience: Identify and explain economic variables that may be positively affected by the economic slowdown.
A recession is a time in which the economy grows at a negative rate. It’s a time of rising unemployment, lower salaries, and increased government debt. It usually results in financial costs.
- Companies that provide low-cost entertainment. Bookmakers and publicans are thought to do well during a recession because individuals want to ‘drink their sorrows away’ with little bets and becoming intoxicated. (However, research suggest that life expectancy increases during recessions, contradicting this old wives tale.) Demand for online-streaming and online entertainment is projected to increase during the 2020 Coronavirus recession.
- Companies that are suffering with bankruptcies and income loss. Pawnbrokers and companies that sell pay day loans, for example people in need of money turn to loan sharks.
- Companies that sell substandard goods. (items whose demand increases as income decreases) e.g. value goods, second-hand retailers, etc. Some businesses, such as supermarkets, will be unaffected by the recession. People will reduce their spending on luxuries, but not on food.
- Longer-term efficiency gains Some economists suggest that a recession can help the economy become more productive in the long run. A recession is a shock, and inefficient businesses may go out of business, but it also allows for the emergence of new businesses. It’s what Joseph Schumpeter dubbed “creative destruction” the idea that when some enterprises fail, new inventive businesses can emerge and develop.
- It’s worth noting that in a downturn, solid, efficient businesses can be put out of business due to cash difficulties and a temporary decline in revenue. It is not true that all businesses that close down are inefficient. Furthermore, the loss of enterprises entails the loss of experience and knowledge.
- Falling asset values can make purchasing a home more affordable. For first-time purchasers, this is a good option. It has the potential to aid in the reduction of wealth disparities.
- It is possible that one’s life expectancy will increase. According to studies from the Great Depression, life expectancy increased in areas where unemployment increased. This may seem counterintuitive, but the idea is that unemployed people will spend less money on alcohol and drugs, resulting in improved health. They may do fewer car trips and hence have a lower risk of being involved in fatal car accidents. NPR
The rate of inflation tends to reduce during a recession. Because unemployment rises, wage inflation is moderated. Firms also respond to decreased demand by lowering prices.
Those on fixed incomes or who have cash savings may profit from the decrease in inflation. It may also aid in the reduction of long-term inflationary pressures. For example, the 1980/81 recession helped to bring inflation down from 1970s highs.
After the Lawson boom and double-digit inflation, the 1991 Recession struck.
Efficiency increase?
It has been suggested that a recession encourages businesses to become more efficient or go out of business. A recession might hasten the ‘creative destruction’ process. Where inefficient businesses fail, efficient businesses thrive.
Covid Recession 2020
The Covid-19 epidemic was to blame for the terrible recession of 2020. Some industries were particularly heavily damaged by the recession (leisure, travel, tourism, bingo halls). However, several businesses benefited greatly from the Covid-recession. We shifted to online delivery when consumers stopped going to the high street and shopping malls. Online behemoths like Amazon saw a big boost in sales. For example, Amazon’s market capitalisation increased by $570 billion in the first seven months of 2020, owing to strong sales growth (Forbes).
Profitability hasn’t kept pace with Amazon’s surge in sales. Because necessities like toilet paper have a low profit margin, profit growth has been restrained. Amazon has taken the uncommon step of reducing demand at times. They also experienced additional costs as a result of Covid, such as paying for overtime and dealing with Covid outbreaks in their warehouses. However, due to increased demand for online streaming, Amazon saw fast development in its cloud computing networks. These are the more profitable areas of the business.
Apple, Google, and Facebook all had significant revenue and profit growth during an era when companies with a strong online presence benefited.
The current recession is unique in that there are more huge winners and losers than ever before. It all depends on how the virus’s dynamics effect the firm as well as aggregate demand.
During a recession, which industries suffer the most?
The retail, restaurant, and hotel industries aren’t the only ones that suffer during a recession. During periods like these, industries like automotive, oil and gas, sports, real estate, and many more face significant decreases. Although the recession brought on by the coronavirus epidemic is unusual, many of these businesses have had difficulties in the past.
However, as we already stated, not all is doom and gloom. Certain industries have done a good job of riding the wave and adapting.
Who is the most affected by a recession?
The groups who lost the most jobs during the Great Recession were the same ones that lost jobs throughout the 1980s recessions.
Hoynes, Miller, and Schaller use demographic survey and national time-series data to conclude that the Great Recession has harmed males more than women in terms of job losses. However, their research reveals that men have faced more cyclical labor market outcomes in earlier recessions and recoveries. This is partly due to the fact that men are more likely to work in industries that are very cyclical, such as construction and manufacturing. Women are more likely to work in industries that are less cyclical, such as services and government administration. While the pattern of labor market effects across subgroups in the 2007-9 recession appears to be comparable to that of the two early 1980s recessions, it did have a little bigger impact on women’s employment, while the effects on women were smaller in this recession than in previous recessions. The effects of the recent recession were felt most acutely by the youngest and oldest workers. Hoynes, Miller, and Schaller also discover that, in comparison to the 1980s recovery, the current recovery is affecting males more than women, owing to a decrease in the cyclicality of women’s employment during this period.
The researchers find that the general image of demographic patterns of responsiveness to the business cycle through time is one of stability. Which groups suffered the most job losses during the Great Recession? The same groups that suffered losses during the 1980s recessions, and who continue to have poor labor market outcomes even in good times. As a result, the authors conclude that the Great Recession’s labor market consequences were distinct in size and length from those of past business cycles, but not in type.