A Guide To Economic Recessions
A Guide To Economic Recessions
A Guide To Economic Recessions
Table of Contents
Recessions are painful. People lose jobs, can't pay bills, and some lose their homes.
There's less money for luxuries like vacations or nights out on the town, and less
money for essentials such as food and medical care. In this article, we explore what
economic recessions are, what the signs are that one is coming, and what you can do
to best ride it out.
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A recession is a serious decline in economic activity that lasts longer than a few
months. It is measured by drops in these five economic indicators:
二分析:
Q1 GDP :
结论:这也意味着如果只看内需,一季度美国经济增长仍然保持了一定的正向动能,所以当时美国经
济似乎没有衰退的风险,甚至逆差显著扩大也是内需太强所致。(Domestic strong needs)
三 因素:Inflation
四 控制: Inflation
4.2 怎么控制:
五 滞胀:Stagflation
5.1Stagnant
5.2inflation
5.3Recession
六 衰退:Recession
6.1 技术性
6.2 全面性
6.3 衰退程度:下滑指标覆盖三个维度——深度、扩散和持续时间
Study:
1)Recession 标准
2)Study :
3)Study :
1. 国家立场
2. Recession 持续度
3. Recession 原因
4. Recession 判读 standard
US 衰退
1. US dollar (影响)rate (强势 appreciation=contraction monetary policy 紧缩性货币政策=
interest ↑ =exchange rate ↑)
Inflation ---Interest↑(FOMC 央行 0.75% --1% )0% --2% ---AD ↓ (GDP ↓ =C↓ + I ↓+E↓
(美元贵了,出口贵了))= recession 大
原因:
2022 Q1
GDP ↓ -1.6%
1. Export - import = -3.23% (贸易逆差 deficit )
2. C ↑= +2.09 % (国内需求 strong)
3. I ↑ =+0.1% (国内投资 ok)
结论: 2022 年 Q1 来考虑,美国国内经济增长还有动力,并不能证明,是衰退。
因此,并不是 real GDP 是 negative 就一定衰退,需要看 GDP 结构
AD ↓ ---Interest ↓ ---depreciation
1. Recession 了吗?
2. 传统:Real GDP 2 Quarters 是 negative = 衰退
3. 标准:
3.1 Real GDP = 2% - 8.6% =-5.4%
3.2 Real Income = C ↑= +2.09 % (国内需求 strong)
3.3 Employment 就业率 C ↑= +2.09 % (非农指标:↑)
3.4 industrial production :I ↑ =+0.1% (国内投资 ok)
3.5 wholesale-retail sales:零售业(Walmart):C ↑= +2.09 %
4 个指标不符合 Recession 衰退
GDP, or gross domestic product, is the monetary measure of the market value of all
the final goods and services produced by a country within a specific period. "Real"
GDP means that the effects of inflation on that figure have been removed.
GDP is usually calculated annually, but it can be calculated quarterly as well. During
some quarters, GDP is negative while, in other quarters, it is positive. Because of
these fluctuations in quarterly GDP, NBER keeps a close eye on the other four
components of a recession: income, employment, manufacturing, and retail sales, all
of which are reported monthly.
. A drop in real income: Real income is income that is adjusted for inflation, and with
Social Security and welfare payments removed; when real income falls, consumers cut
back on purchases, lowering demand.
. Lower employment: A fall in employment numbers and an increase in requests for
unemployment insurance assistance.
. A drop in manufacturing: As measured by the Industrial Production Report which is
issued by the Federal Reserve.
. Lower wholesale-retail sales: These figures are adjusted for inflation and they reflect
companies' responses to consumer demand.
. A drop in monthly GDP estimates: NBER looks at monthly estimates of GDP which are
provided by Macroeconomic Advisers.
What isn't reflective of a recession is the behavior of the stock market. This is
because stock prices are based on the anticipated earnings of public companies, and
they reflect either investors' exuberance or pessimism. During a recession, the stock
market may enter what is known as a bear market, which occurs when the market
declines by 20% or more over a period of at least two months. Large declines in the
stock market can contribute somewhat to a recession because investors lose
confidence in the economy.
5 Recession Stages
A recession is an integral part of the economic cycle, which is also known as
the business cycle. It is comprised of these stages:
Recession: growth slows, the rate of employment falls, but prices stagnate, meaning
they stay the same
Trough: the economy hits its lowest point
Recovery: growth begins again
Expansion: the economy grows rapidly, interest rates are low and production goes up,
however, inflationary pressures are building
Peak: when growth hits its maximum rate, imbalances in the economy occur that will be
corrected by a recession
The stock market experienced what is now known as the 2020 stock market crash.
To combat this recession, the Federal Reserve lowered the fed funds rate to 0% and
Congress issued $3.8 trillion in aid. In response to these measures, in Q3 2020, the
economy grew by 33.1%.
In 2008, GDP shrank in Q1, Q3, and Q4, dropping 8.4% in Q4. In 2009, GDP dropped
in Q1 and, in October 2009, the unemployment rate reached 10%. In Q3 2009, GDP
became positive and NBER declared the recession over.
During the 12 quarters, four each in 1980, 1981, and 1982, GDP was negative in six,
with the worst being Q2 1980 when it fell by 8.0%. In November and December
1982, unemployment reached 10.8% and it remained over 10% for 10 months. This
recession was exacerbated by the Iranian oil embargo which reduced U.S. oil
supplies, driving up prices.
President Nixon also took the U.S. off of the gold standard which caused the price of
gold to skyrocket while the dollar's value fell, leading to inflation. In Q3 1973, GDP
fell by 2.1%, in Q1 1974, it fell by 3.4% and this was followed by falls in Q3 1973
of 3.7%, 1.5% in Q4, and 4.8% in Q1 1975.
Between 1929 and 1938, two recessions battered the U.S. economy. During the first
downturn, between August 1929 and March 1933, GDP was down by 12.9% and
unemployment peaked at 24.7%. Unemployment remained in the double digits until
1939.
Several factors created the Great Depression. In the Spring of 1928, the Federal
Reserve raised interest rates, then the stock market crashed in 1929, wiping out
people's life savings. This was compounded by a 10-year-long drought in the
country's breadbasket, the Midwest, which devastated farmers and created the
infamous Dust Bowl.
According to that definition, since World War II there have only been four global
recessions: in 1975, 1982, 1991, and 2009. All lasted only a year, but 2008's Great
Recession was by far the worst due to the number of countries affected and the
decline in real-world GDP per capita.
During recessions, one area of the stock market that generally remains stable is
consumer staples. These include: food, beverages, household goods, alcohol, and
tobacco, which are products that consumers tend to buy regardless of their financial
situation and they are the last products that consumers eliminate from their
shopping lists.
Bottom Line
Even though recessions are a part of the economic cycle, living through them isn't
always easy. Knowing the signs of a coming recession can help both investors and
non-investors alike take steps to avoid the worst effects of a recession such as paying
down debt and avoiding speculative investments.
This article was written by
Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the
companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72
hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not
receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company
whose stock is mentioned in this article.
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