Recession
How a Recession Is Defined
The popular shorthand is “two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth,” but that’s an oversimplification. The NBER — the official arbiter of U.S. business cycles — uses a broader definition: a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales.
This distinction matters. The NBER declared the 2001 recession official even though GDP only contracted in one quarter (not two consecutive). Conversely, GDP can technically shrink for two quarters without the NBER calling it a recession if other indicators remain strong — as happened in early 2022 when GDP dipped but the labor market stayed robust.
What Causes Recessions
No two recessions are identical, but they tend to fall into a few broad categories:
| Type | Mechanism | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Demand-driven | Consumer and business spending contracts, pulling the economy down | 1990–1991 recession |
| Supply shock | A sudden disruption to supply (energy, materials) raises costs and chokes output | 1973–1975 oil shock |
| Financial crisis | A collapse in credit markets freezes lending and investment | 2008 financial crisis |
| Policy-induced | The Fed raises rates aggressively to fight inflation, deliberately slowing the economy | 1981–1982 Volcker recession |
| Exogenous shock | An external event (pandemic, war) suddenly halts economic activity | 2020 COVID recession |
In practice, recessions often involve multiple causes reinforcing each other. The 2008 recession started as a housing and credit crisis but quickly became a demand-driven downturn as unemployment spiked and consumers pulled back.
Key Recession Indicators
Economists and analysts track a range of signals that have historically preceded or confirmed recessions. No single indicator is perfect, but when several flash red simultaneously, the probability of recession rises sharply.
| Indicator | What It Measures | Recession Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Inverted yield curve | Short-term Treasury yields exceeding long-term yields | Has preceded every U.S. recession since 1955 (with one false signal) |
| Rising unemployment claims | Weekly initial jobless claims | A sustained rise above trend signals labor market weakening |
| ISM Manufacturing PMI | Monthly survey of purchasing managers | Readings below 50 indicate contraction |
| Consumer confidence | Surveys of consumer spending intentions | Sharp declines often precede pullbacks in spending |
| Credit spreads | Difference between corporate and Treasury bond yields | Widening spreads signal growing default risk |
| Leading Economic Index (LEI) | Composite of 10 forward-looking indicators | Several consecutive monthly declines have preceded most recessions |
U.S. Recessions Since 1970
| Recession | Duration | Peak-to-Trough GDP Decline | Peak Unemployment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1973–1975 | 16 months | –3.2% | 9.0% |
| 1980 | 6 months | –2.2% | 7.8% |
| 1981–1982 | 16 months | –2.7% | 10.8% |
| 1990–1991 | 8 months | –1.4% | 7.8% |
| 2001 | 8 months | –0.3% | 6.3% |
| 2007–2009 | 18 months | –4.3% | 10.0% |
| 2020 | 2 months | –9.1% (annualized Q2) | 14.7% |
The 2020 recession was the shortest on record at just two months, but also the sharpest initial GDP decline. The 2007–2009 recession was the deepest since the Great Depression and the longest since the early 1980s.
How Recessions Affect the Stock Market
Markets and the economy are related but don’t move in lockstep. Two critical things to understand:
Markets lead the economy. The stock market typically peaks 6–9 months before a recession starts and bottoms 3–6 months before it ends. By the time a recession is officially declared, stocks have often already priced in much of the damage.
Not every recession produces a bear market. The 2001 recession accompanied a major bear market (the dot-com bust), but the 1990 recession produced a relatively mild stock decline. Severity depends on the nature of the recession and how leveraged the financial system is.
Sector performance during recessions varies. Consumer staples, healthcare, and utilities — so-called defensive sectors — tend to hold up better. Cyclical sectors like consumer discretionary, industrials, and financials usually bear the brunt of the decline.
Recession vs. Depression
A depression is a recession taken to an extreme — a severe, prolonged contraction lasting years with GDP declines exceeding 10% and unemployment above 20%. The U.S. has only experienced one true depression: the Great Depression of the 1930s, when GDP fell roughly 30% and unemployment reached 25%.
The informal quip captures the difference: “A recession is when your neighbor loses their job. A depression is when you lose yours.” In economic terms, the distinction comes down to depth, duration, and breadth of the decline.
How the Fed Responds to Recessions
The Federal Reserve has two primary tools for fighting recessions:
Monetary policy. The Fed cuts the federal funds rate to lower borrowing costs and stimulate spending and investment. In severe recessions, when rates hit zero, the Fed turns to quantitative easing — buying bonds to inject liquidity directly into the financial system.
Fiscal policy comes from Congress rather than the Fed, but the two often work in tandem. Stimulus checks, extended unemployment benefits, and infrastructure spending are common fiscal tools deployed during recessions.
The speed and size of the policy response matters enormously. The aggressive, coordinated response to the 2020 recession (near-zero rates plus trillions in fiscal stimulus) is widely credited with producing the fastest recovery in modern history.
Key Takeaways
- A recession is a broad-based economic decline lasting more than a few months, officially declared by the NBER.
- The “two quarters of negative GDP” rule is a simplification — the NBER uses a wider set of indicators.
- The inverted yield curve is the most reliable recession predictor, though timing is imprecise.
- Markets typically bottom before recessions end — selling after a recession is declared often means selling near the low.
- Recessions are a normal part of the business cycle, occurring roughly every 5–10 years in the U.S.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a typical recession last?
The average U.S. recession since World War II has lasted about 10 months. The shortest was the 2020 recession at 2 months; the longest post-WWII recession was the 2007–2009 downturn at 18 months.
Can the Fed prevent a recession?
The Fed can sometimes engineer a “soft landing” — slowing the economy enough to control inflation without triggering a recession. It succeeded in 1994–1995 but failed in 2007–2008. Prevention isn’t guaranteed, especially when the trigger is an external shock.
Should I move to cash before a recession?
Timing recessions is extremely difficult. The stock market often falls before a recession is declared and recovers before it ends. Moving to cash risks missing the recovery, which historically delivers some of the strongest returns. A better strategy is maintaining a well-diversified portfolio that can weather downturns.
What’s the difference between a recession and stagflation?
Stagflation is a recession combined with high inflation — the worst of both worlds. It occurred in the 1970s when oil shocks pushed prices higher while the economy contracted. Stagflation is particularly hard to fight because the tools that combat inflation (rate hikes) also deepen the recession.
Do all sectors suffer equally during a recession?
No. Defensive sectors (utilities, healthcare, consumer staples) tend to hold up better because demand for their products is relatively inelastic. Cyclical sectors (financials, discretionary, industrials) usually decline more. Bonds, especially Treasuries, often rally as investors seek safety.