An economic recession is a slowdown in economic activities such as employment, distribution, production, real income and real GDP. The 2008-2009 economic recession was the longest in duration and deepest in contraction since the great depression of 1929-1932, Roberts M. (2009). Its causes were mainly preventable through a series of legislations and so it can be avoided in the future. The effects went across the globe causing losses to both the producers and the consumers.
According to Simpson D. (2009), the recession was the direct and unavoidable result of the credit boom that preceded it. First, the credit boom was partly a result of low interest rates that lasted too long facilitated by governments and theis central banks. This resulted in the build-up of a credit bubble. Secondly, the governments failed in the role in regulating the credit market. This encouraged the borrowing of those who were least able to repay, resulting in an increase in demand of properties. Once demand had risen, property prices went up attracting more investors into the market. Then the desire for profit was overtaken by the fear of loss as the market was flooded with properties with no definite market. At this point, the credit bubble had burst. There were investors who had properties that were now worth less than their buying value. At this point, the lenders discontinued their lending based on the security of assets as they were uncertain. The recession had begun! The governments had to do something to ease the situation. Instead of using its funds on development, the governments had to help bail out some of the companies that were struggling, Simpson S. (2010).
To the investor and the producer, the effects were enormous. The investor was looking at losses from properties that were not moving anymore. On the other hand, the producers had other problems of their own. First, there was the money that had been lent to the consumers. With the recession now in place, it meant that now there were going to be many defaulters. The defaulters meant losses on the part of the banks and other lending institutions. The property market on the other hand went down. The property prices were getting lower every day making the business uncertain. When losses got too high, companies started to cut costs in terms of less advertising, closing down some of their branches and, some, even suing for bankruptcy. Another way they tried to cut costs was by cutting down on labour. This meant that some people were losing their jobs thereby really affecting the cash flow.
The consumers were also suffering in a big way. First, some of them had lost their jobs and so they were really working with a survival budget. According to Simpson S. (2010), birth rates went low as people delayed having children in the face of the economic troubles. Divorces also went up due to financial conflicts. All these troubles then weighed on the children as parents could not afford them a decent living and so the children would soon be suffering from stunted growth and poor performance in schools. Consumers also stopped investing their money and instead opted to save their money since the economic situation was uncertain. Consumers also reduced their budget to save what little they had for a later date or until the situation eased.
In conclusion, the recession was the
ugliest economic situation seen in a long time. It was caused by situations
that could have been avoided using proper legislations by the government. In
future, governments should do proper legislations that will prevent another
recession from taking place. The recession is now over and just about time
business went back to normal. People should trust the current economic
situation and use the available opportunities to improve on themselves. The
producers on the other hand should move on with business, only more cautiously
this time and ensure that development moves back on track.
References
Simpson S. (2010, November 12). 5 longterm consequences of the recession. Retrieved from http://www.forbes.com/sites/greatspeculations/2010/11/12/5-long-term-consequencies-0f-the-recession/
Simpson, D (2009) The Recession: Causes and Cures, UK: ASI (Research) Ltd
Bessler, D. A., Leatham, D. A. & Zhang, J. (2006). Does consumer debt cause economic recession? Evidence using directed acyclic graphs. Applied Economics Letters, 13(7), 401-407
Roberts, M. (2009). The Great Recession: Profit cycles, economic crisis: A Marxist view
Pettinger, T. R. (2013, May 16). The great recession 2008-13. Retrieved from http://www.economicshelp.org/blog/7501/economics/the-great-recession/
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