Global Recessions

Year
2020
Type(s)
Author(s)
M. Ayhan Kose, Naotaka Sugawara, and Marco E. Terrones
Source
World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 9172, World Bank, Washington, DC. March 2020
Url
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/185391583249079464/Global-Recessions

The world economy has experienced four global recessions over the past seven decades: in 1975, 1982, 1991, and 2009. During each of these episodes, annual real per capita global gross domestic product contracted, and this contraction was accompanied by weakening of other key indicators of global economic activity. The global recessions were highly synchronized internationally, with severe economic and financial disruptions in many countries around the world. The 2009 global recession, set off by the global financial crisis, was by far the deepest and most synchronized of the four recessions. As the epicenter of the crisis, advanced economies felt the brunt of the recession. The subsequent expansion has been the weakest in the post-war period in advanced economies, as many of them have struggled to overcome the legacies of the crisis. In contrast, most emerging market and developing economies weathered the 2009 global recession relatively well and delivered a stronger recovery than after previous global recessions.

What Happens During Global Recessions? (In A Decade after the Global Recession: Lessons and Challenges for Emerging and Developing Economies, edited by M. Ayhan Kose and Franziska Ohnsorge, pp. 55-114. Washington, DC: World Bank. 2019.)

Also released as:

CAMA Working Paper 10/2020, Australian National University, Canberra
CEPR Discussion Paper 14397, Centre for Economic Policy Research, London
Koç University-TUSIAD Economic Research Forum Working Paper 2002, Koç University, Istanbul
MPRA Paper 98608, Munich University Library, Munich
PEA Working Paper 162, Peruvian Economic Association, Lima

Free download of CEPR Discussion Paper