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Late 1980s recession
*** Shopping-Tip: Late 1980s recession
The '''recession of the late nineteen-eighties''' was an
economic recession that hit much of the world beginning in
1987.
According to the widely-used definition of a recession, two quarters of negative growth, the late eighties recession only covered a brief period in
1987 (although not in the
United States), and another in
1990–
1991. By measures such as
unemployment and public perception the
North American economy was in recession continuously for years after 1987, with only brief periods of revival.
Image:Black Monday Dow Jones.png thumb|250px|[[Dow Jones Industrial Average|Dow Jones (
19 July 1987 through
19 January 1988)]]
On
Black Monday (1987) Black Monday of
October 1987 a stock collapse of unprecedented size lopped twenty-five percent off the
Dow Jones Industrial Average. The collapse, larger than that of
1929, was handled well by the
Economic system economy and the
stock market began to quickly recover. However the lumbering
savings and loans were beginning to collapse, putting the savings of millions of Americans in jeopardy.
The panic that followed led to a sharp recession that hit hardest those countries most closely linked to the United States, including
Canada,
Australia, and the
United Kingdom. The economies of
Europe and
Japan were hurt, but not as badly. The US economy continued to grow as a whole, although certain sectors of the market such as energy and real estate slumped.
The first burst of the recession was short-lived, as fervent pre-
elections election activity by the
government governments of the United States and Canada created what many economists at the time saw as an economic miracle a growing
consumer confidence and increased
consumer spending almost single handedly lifted the
North American economy out of recession.
It soon turned out that the quick recovery was illusory, and by
1990 economic malaise had returned. For the next several years high
unemployment, massive government
deficits, and slow
Gross Domestic Product GDP growth affected the United States until late
1992 and Canada until
1995. While Canada enjoyed a brief recovery in
1994 the recession is believed to have lasted longer there due to the gross fiscal mismanagement of the
Brian Mulroney Mulroney government, job losses due to the advent of free trade and the stress placed on the economy by the spectre of
Quebec separatism.
The rest of the world was less affected by the downturn,
Germany and
Japan both grew rapidly. Some pundits guessed that this would be a permanent state of affairs and that both the
Germany German and Japanese economies would grow to be larger than the American one.
Like all recessions, the one of the late
1980s and early
1990s had a deep impact on
society. Rates of
alcoholism and
drug abuse increased, as did rates of
depression (mood) depression.
While the
Progressive Conservative government of Brian Mulroney in Canada and the successful election campaign of
George H. W. Bush in the United States may have been aided by the brief recovery of
1988, neither leader could hold on to power though the last part of the recession, both being swept out by opponents running on pledges to restore the economy to health. Bush's
1992 re-election bid was particularly clogged by his
1990 decision to renege on his "
Read my lips: no new taxes" pledge during his first campaign in 1988; the tax increase itself may also have delayed the recovery.
In
Australia,
Paul Keating, the Australian Federal Treasurer during this recession, referred to it as the "recession we had to have." This quote became a cornerstone of the opposition
Liberal Party of Australia Liberal Party's campaign during the
Australian legislative election, 1993 1993 election, designed to underscore alleged mismanagement of the national economy by the incumbent
Australian Labor Party Labor Party. Unlike the opposition parties in North America, however, the Liberal Party failed to enter government.
Perhaps the most lasting result of the recession was its impact on
Eastern Europe and the
Soviet Union. More closely enmeshed in the world economy than ever before, teetering communist regimes may have been pushed "over the edge" by the recession of the late 1980s, ending the
Cold War and discrediting Soviet-style government and economics.
Category:recessions
*** Shopping-Tip: Late 1980s recession