RECESSION: A phase of the business cycle characterized by a general period of declining economic activity. A recession is one of two basic business cycle phases. The other is expansion. The transition from recession to expansion is termed a trough and the transition from expansion to recession is termed a peak. The technical term for recession, which is generally used by economists and policy makers, is contraction.A business-cycle recession is a general downturn in economic activity, so named because the aggregate economy is "recessing" back to a previous lower level of production. A recession is the seemingly inevitable phase of the business cycle that sets in after the economy has been expanding for several years. A primary goal of macroeconomics is to explain why recessions occur and then to recommend what policies that can prevent them. Making if OfficialA recession is officially designated, by the official designators at the National Bureau of Economic Research, as at least six months of declining economic activity. Six months is used because anything less is likely to be just a temporary, inconsequential blip in the data. And because many indicators are reported quarterly (that is, every three months), two straight quarters of declining activity is a good indication of an economic slowdown.Although six months is the minimum time needed for a recession to be official, they typically last for about a year and often persist for up to eighteen months. The longest recession on record continued for 43 months from August 1929 to March 1933 during the first few years of the Great Depression. In fact, in the minds of many, the recession from 1929 to 1933 WAS the Great Depression. However, the Great Depression also contained a second, shorter recession of 13 months from May 1937 to June 1938. While recessions are frequently indicated by a decline of real gross domestic product of about 10 percent, they also show up in many aggregate measures of economic activity. The unemployment rate rises above the full employment level of 5 percent, generally reaching at least 6 percent, but also going as high as 10 percent. The inflation rate tends to be lower during a recession. Aggregate expenditures on gross domestic product, especially investment and to a lesser degree consumption, also decline. A Graphical Downturn
Click the [Recession] button to highlight the recession phase of this business cycle. The shaded segment of the real GDP line between points A and B is the recession. Clearly real GDP declines over this segment. A recession generally takes the economy from at or above the long-run trend to below the long-run trend. Because the long-run trend represents full employment, unemployment results when real GDP is below the long-run trend, or when actual real GDP is less than potential real GDP. Moreover, the farther real GDP dips below the long-run trend, then the greater is unemployment. The Good with the BadRecessions are generally considered obstacles along the path of rising prosperity and rising living standards. The perpetual problem of scarcity is better address when the economy expands. Recessions definitely have a number of "bads" that are best avoided. Here are a few worth noting:
However, as any optimist knows, there is a little good in all things, including recessions.
Expansionary PoliciesExpansionary policies are designed to counter business-cycle recessions. The two most common are expansionary fiscal policy and expansionary monetary policy.
Check Out These Related Terms... | business cycles | business cycle phases | expansion | contraction | peak | trough | recovery | potential real gross domestic product | long-run trend | Or For A Little Background... | full employment | macroeconomics | macroeconomic goals | mixed economy | economic analysis | production possibilities | And For Further Study... | business cycle indicators | investment business cycles | political business cycles | demand-driven business cycles | supply-driven business cycles | stabilization policies | unemployment | inflation | National Bureau of Economic Research | Bureau of Economic Analysis | circular flow | multiplier principle | aggregate market analysis | Keynesian economics | recessionary gap | fiscal policy | monetary policy | aggregate demand decrease, short-run aggregate market | Recommended Citation: RECESSION, AmosWEB Encyclonomic WEB*pedia, http://www.AmosWEB.com, AmosWEB LLC, 2000-2025. [Accessed: December 16, 2025]. |
