Recession on track to be longest in postwar period
If the current recession lasts into April - as it almost surely will - this one will go on record as the longest in the postwar era. The 1981-82 and 1973-75 recessions each lasted 16 months.
It wasn't the Great Depression of the 1930s. It was the 1981-82 recession, widely considered America's worst since the depression.
That painful time during Ronald Reagan's presidency is a grim marker of how bad things can get. Yet the current recession could slice deeper into the U.S. economy.
If it lasts into April _ as it almost surely will _ this one will go on record as the longest in the postwar era. The 1981-82 and 1973-75 recessions each lasted 16 months.
Unemployment has not reached 1982 levels and the gross domestic product has not fallen quite as far. But the hurt from this recession is spread more widely and uncertainty about the country's economic health is worse today than it was in 1982.
Back then, if someone asked if the nation was about to experience something as bad as the Great Depression, the answer was, ``Quite clearly, `No,''' said Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Reagan White House.
``You don't have that certainty today,'' he said. ``It's not only that the downturn is sharp and widespread, but a lot of people worry that it's going to be a long-lasting, substantial downturn.''
For months, headlines have compared this recession with the one that began in July 1981 and ended in November 1982.
_In January, reports showed 207,000 manufacturing jobs vanished in the largest one-month drop since October 1982.
_Major automakers' U.S. sales extended their deep slump in February, putting the industry on track for its worst sales month in more than 27 years.
_Struggling homebuilders have just completed the worst year for new home sales since 1982.
_There are 12.5 million people out of work today, topping the number of jobless in 1982.
``I think most people think it is worse than 1982,'' said John Steele Gordon, a financial historian. ``I don't think many people think it will be 1932 again. Let us pray. But it's probably going to be the worst postwar recession, certainly.''
The 1982 downturn was driven primarily by the desire to rid the economy of inflation. To battle a decade-long bout of high inflation, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, now an economic adviser to President Barack Obama, pushed interest rates up to levels not seen since the 1861-65 Civil War. The approach tamed inflation, but not without suffering.
Hardest hit was the industrial Midwest; the Pacific Northwest, where the logging industry lagged from construction declines; and some states in the South, where the recession hit late.
Frustrated workers fled to the Sunbelt states in the southwest to find work. In Michigan, which led the U.S. in jobless workers, newspapers offered idled auto workers free ``job wanted'' ads in the classified section. Mortgages carried double-digit interest rates. When the 1982 recession ended, the national jobless rate had hit 10.8 percent.
Just like today, that recession led to political finger-pointing. When the government reported a 10.1 percent jobless rate for September 1982, organized labor rallied across the street from the White House. A few protesters chained themselves to an entrance at the Labor Department. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce called it a national tragedy and blamed Democrats. Democrats called it a national tragedy and blamed Reagan.
Even months after the recession officially ended, Reagan was greeted in Pittsburgh by signs that said: ``We want jobs, Mr. Hoover'' and ``Reagan says his economic program is working _ are you?'' President Herbert Hoover's term in 1929-33 is forever linked in history with the Great Depression.
Those not as badly hurt have fuzzy memories of the 1981-82 recession.
Not Jim O'Connor of Pekin, Illinois, who was president of United Auto Workers Local 974 when Caterpillar Tractor Co. was laying off workers in Peoria in the 1980s.
Maybe time has soothed the sting O'Connor felt, but he contends the economic problems facing workers today are worse than during the recession he survived nearly three decades ago.
``The days of walking out of one factory and walking into another one down the street are over,'' O'Connor said. He retired from Caterpillar in 2001 but thinks he might find a part-time job to help pay his health insurance.
Like Reagan did then, Obama is dishing up hope. Trouble is, people can't visualize any reward they might get from making it through this recession, said William Niskanen, an economic adviser to Reagan.
There's little hope of any gain from the pain. Falling housing and stock prices have undermined household wealth. People are worried about losing their jobs, their homes and their retirement savings all at a time when health care is weighing down income.
``In the 1980s, it was clear to people that the inflation rate was going to come way down and it did,'' Niskanen said. ``There was a sense that we were going through a tough time for a while as a price of getting inflation down and that things would come back up. Today, they can't see any gain from what's going on.''
It's not only blue-collar workers who are feeling the greatest anguish. Americans who are trapped in houses worth less than their mortgages are suffering. So, too, are people whose personal wealth is tied to the stock market. Personal wealth is dwindling in the U.S., and the effects of the financial meltdown have been felt around the world.
He said he sees fear in the eyes of his clients. ``I've had people come up and hug me after a presentation, which is unusual,'' he said. ``I haven't told them anything about how it's going to be better, but they just feel better having a better understanding of what's happening.
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