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Inflation, Interest Rates and Jobs: How Today’s Economy Compares to Recessions of the Past

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  • Anunciado em: 15 de setembro de 2022 4:57 pm
  • Expira: Este anúncio Expirou

Descrição

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What’s happening
There’s still debate about whether the US economy is officially headed into a recession, but the economic downturn is causing widespread stress.
Why it matters
Periods of financial volatility and market decline can drive people to panic and make costly mistakes with their money.

What’s next
Examining what’s happening now — and comparing it with the past — can help investors and consumers decide what to do next.

Facing the aftershocks of a rough economy in the first half of 2022, with , rising , soaring and a , leading indicators of a have moderated slightly in the past month. That could mean the economic downturn won’t be as long or brutal as expected. Still, the majority of Americans are  and anxiety over jobs. The country has experienced two consecutive quarters of economic slowdown — the barometer for measuring a recession — even though the National Bureau of Economic Research hasn’t made the “official” recession call.  At a time like this, we should consider what happens in a recession, look at the data to determine whether we’re in one and try to maintain some historical perspective. It’s also worth pointing out that down periods are temporary and that, over time, both the stock market and the US economy bounce back. 

I don’t mean to minimize the gravity and hardship of the times. But it can be useful to review how the economy has behaved in the past to avoid irrational or impulsive money moves. For this, we can largely blame recency bias, our inclination to view our latest experiences as the most valid. It’s what led many to flee the stock market in 2008 when the , thereby locking in losses and missing out on the subsequent bull market. “It’s our human tendency to project the immediate past into the future indefinitely,” said Daniel Crosby, chief behavioral officer at Orion Advisor Solutions and author of . “It’s a time-saving shortcut that works most of the time in most contexts but can be woefully misapplied in markets that tend to be cyclical,” Crosby told me via email. 

Before you make a knee-jerk reaction to your portfolio, give up on a or lose it over job insecurity, consider these chart-based analyses from the last three decades. We hope this data-driven overview will offer a broader context and some impetus for making the most of your money today. What do we know about inflation? Historical  rate by year
Macrotrends.net
Current conditions: The US is experiencing the  in decades, driven by global supply chain disruptions, the injection of federal stimulus dollars and a surge in consumer spending. In real dollars, the  over the past year is adding about $400 more per month to household budgets. The context: Policymakers consider 2% per year to be a “normal” inflation target. The country’s still experiencing over four times that figure. The 9.1% annual rate in July was the largest jump in inflation since 1980 when the inflation rate hit 13.5% following the prior decade’s oil crisis and high government spending on defense, social services, health care, education and pensions. Back then, the Federal Reserve increased rates to stabilize prices and, by the mid-1980s, inflation .The upside: As overall inflation rates rise, the silver lining might be increased rates of return on personal savings. are starting to offer , while  — federally backed accounts that more or less track inflation — are attracting savers, too. What’s happening with mortgage rates?  fixed-rate mortgage averages in the US Current conditions: As the Federal Reserve continues its to cool spending and try to tame inflation, the rate on a  has grown significantly. In June, the average rate jumped annually by nearly 3 percentage points to almost 6%. In real dollars, that means that after a 20% down payment on a new home (let’s use the average sale price of ), a buyer would roughly need an extra $7,300 a year to afford the mortgage. Since then, rates have cooled a bit, even dipping back down below 5%. What happens next with rates depends on where inflation goes from here.The context: Three years ago, homebuyers faced similar borrowing costs and, at the time, rates were characterized as “historically low.” And if we think borrowing money is expensive today, let’s not forget the early 1980s when the Federal Reserve jacked up rates to never-before-seen levels due to hyperinflation. The average rate on a in 1981 topped 16%. The upside: For homebuyers, a potential benefit to rising rates is downward pressure on home prices, which could cause the housing market to cool slightly. As the cost to borrow  with mortgages becoming more expensive, homes could experience and prices would slow in pace. In fact, nearly one in five sellers dropped their asking price during late April through late May, acco

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