Rolling recession
A rolling recession, or rolling adjustment recession, occurs when the recession only affects certain sectors of the economy at a time. As one sector enters recovery, the slowdown will ‘roll’ into another part of the economy. On the whole, rolling recessions occur regardless of nationwide or statewide economic recession, and the effects may not be in the national economic measures (e.g., gross domestic product (GDP)).[1] The recession of 1960–61 in the United States is an example of a rolling-adjustment recession.[2]
See also
References
- v
- t
- e
- Aggregate demand/Supply
- Effective demand
- General glut
- Model
- Overproduction
- Paradox of thrift
- Price-and-wage stickiness
- Underconsumption
- Business cycle
- Deflation/Inflation
- Chronic
- Classical dichotomy
- Disinflation
- Money supply/demand
- Neutrality of money
- Price level
- Real and nominal values
- Velocity of money
- Economic expansion
- Interest rate
- Recession
- Shock
- Unemployment
(1000–1760)
- Great Slump (1430–1490)
- Slump of 1706
- Great Frost of 1709
(1760–1840)
- British credit crisis of 1772–1773
- 1772–1774; England
- Scotland
- Thirteen Colonies
- 1785–1788
- Copper Panic of 1789/Panic of 1792 (1789–1793)
- Panic of 1796–1797 (1796–1799)
- 1802–1804
- 1807–1810
- 1812
- Post-Napoleonic Depression (1815–1821)
- 1822–23
- Panic of 1825 (1825–1826)
- 1828–29
- 1833–34
- Panic of 1837 (1836–1838 and 1839–1843)
Civil War-era United States
(1840–1870)
- 1845–46
- Panic of 1847 (1847–1848)
- 1853–54
- Panic of 1857 (1857–1858)
- 1860–61
- Panic of 1866 (1865–1867)
- Black Friday (1869–1870)
2nd Industrial Revolution
(1870–1914)
- Long Depression
- 1873–1879; United Kingdom
- United States
- Depression of 1882–1885
- 1887–88
- Baring crisis (1890–1891)
- Panic of 1893 (1893–1897)
- 1899–1900
- Panic of 1901 (1902–1904)
- Panic of 1907 (1907–1908)
- Panic of 1910–1911 (1910–1912)
- Financial crisis of 1914 (1913–14)
(1918–1939)
- Post–World War I recession (1918–1919)
- Depression of 1920–1921
- Roaring Twenties
- 1923–1924
- 1926–1927
- Great Depression
- Recession of 1937–1938
(1945–1973)
- 1945
- Recession of 1949 (1948–1949)
- Recession of 1953 (1953–1954)
- Recession of 1958 (1957–1958)
- Recession of 1960–1961
- Recession of 1969–1970
(1973–1982)
Great Regression
(1982–2007)
(2007–present)