Are US Recessions Going Extinct? That’s So 2003

he US economy looks amazingly resilient on the surface. Notwithstanding the two-month Covid-19 recession of 2020, the US hasn’t experienced a downturn since the end of the financial crisis in the middle of 2009. Recently, the streak has elicited a wave of commentary, with smart analysts drawing different conclusions about what it all means for markets. My two cents? Even if the nature and frequency of recessions is changing a bit, it’s dangerous to assume that’s made equity investing any less risky.

The empirical evidence itself is hard to argue with. Looked at through rolling 20-year windows, the US economy spends very little time in recession these days1, whereas it used to be in downturns around 50% of the time in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

recessions are occurring

The first big drop-off occurred from the 1930s to the 1950s. We can logically link this to innovations including deposit and unemployment insurance, and the growing power and sophistication of the Federal Reserve. The frequency of recessions declined again from the 1980s to the early 2000s, potentially tied to further improvements in central bank credibility, including the 1951 Treasury-Fed accord and the 1977 creation of the “dual mandate.” (It was then that Congress formally charged the Fed with promoting “maximum employment” and “stable prices.”)

Since then, it’s less clear from the data whether the frequency of recessions has really continued to drop, suggesting that the newfound enthusiasm to relegate recessions to the past might not stand up to scrutiny.