Pain in Spain - on the brink of depression
In our introductory AS macroeconomics we have discussed the differences between a cyclical recession and a depression. Much depends on the scale of the contraction in real national output from peak to trough of the cycle. This article from the Telegraph looks at a dire outlook for the Spanish economy which - not long ago - was one of the fastest growing countries in the European Union with a rising relative per capita income.
Quoting a report from Madrid research group RR de Acuña & Asociados, the peak to trough loss of GDP is likely to be more than 11%. “The group said Spain’s unemployment will peak at around 25pc, comparable to the worst chapter of the Great Depression......The construction sector will shrink from 18pc of GDP at the peak of the boom to around 5pc, making it unlikely that there will be any significant recovery before 2012. Even then growth will be “slow, weak, and fragile”.
A huge rise in the Spanish government’s budget deficit has left them little wriggle room for a fresh fiscal stimulus.
Spain and Ireland are frequently quoted as two EU countries whose property bubbles have been well and truly smashed with huge macroeconomic consequences. The slump in property represents a very large internal demand-side shock for a country heavily dependent on construction and also tourism for value-added measures of GDP.
Japan’s Worst Ever Post-War Slump
The depth of the Japanese economic recession is quite staggering. Annualised growth of real national output is now -15% with exports and manufacturing output down by more than 25% over the last year alone. Real GDP has shrunk back to the level it was at in 2003.
Defining our Times
For example, the National Bureau of Economic Research in America defines it as “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”. On this basis the US economy has been in recession since the end of 2007.
While for the economist Christopher Dow, recession worthy of the name was one featuring a “clear absolute fall in GDP between one calendar year and the next”, usually but not always followed by a second fall.
David Smith goes on to examine difference interpretations of what constitutes a ‘depression’ and how we will know whether we are in one or not, drawing some comparisons with recessions and depressions from the past – which might make useful reading for those students starting to think about their entry for the RES Young Economist of the Year competition.
Charts used in this blog
US_Charts_0209.ppt
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