Examples of recession in the following topics:
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- However, large corporations and wealthy businesspeople were minimally affected by the recession, and were the first to recover.
- This "lost decade" of no wage and income growth began well before the Great Recession battered wages and incomes.
- In the historically weak expansion following the 2001 recession, hourly wages and compensation failed to grow for either high school or college-educated workers and, consequently, the median income of working-age families had not regained pre-2001 levels by the time the Great Recession hit in December 2007.
- Although economic indicators are stronger today than they were two or three years ago, protracted high unemployment in the wake of the Great Recession has left millions of Americans with lower incomes and in economic distress.
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- No one wants to work for a company that's going to give them a pink slip through no fault of their own, but is job security something that can be expected in the long-term – particularly during a recession?
- This strategy enabled it to expand operations in the midst of the recession by opening four stores and adding 70 employees to its roster.
- In 2009, despite a worldwide recession, the company filled 173 jobs, a 22% increase in job growth that year.
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- In its Franchise Business Economic Outlook for 2012, the IFA stated, "after three years of restrained growth, due to the recession and its lingering effects, franchise businesses show signs of recovery in the year ahead. " The IFA went on to state that "franchise business growth has been restrained over the past three years due to underlying factors, such as the weak rebound in consumer spending, that have been a drag on the economy as a whole.
- And if that is the case, then the growth rate that was experienced in the years leading up to the Great Recession cannot be the benchmark for growth in the next decade.
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- Economic recession, a burgeoning global population and seismic shifts as the economic and political axis moves from West to East all add to that pressure.
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- (Lund, Robert, and Hauser, William, ‘The Remanufacturing Industry: Anatomy of a Giant') Evidence has shown that most remanufacturing firms also do well during times of recession and that no end to the industry's growth is in sight.
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- These include the saturation of the domestic market, which leads firms either to seek other less competitive markets or to take on the competitor in its home markets; the emergence of new markets, particularly in the developing world; government incentives to export; tax incentives offered by foreign governments to establish manufacturing plants in their countries in order to create jobs; the availability of cheaper or more skilled labor; and an attempt to minimize the risks of a recession in the home country and spread risk.
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- These fluctuations occur around a long-term growth trend, and they typically involve shifts over time between periods of relatively rapid economic growth (an expansion or boom) and periods of relative stagnation or decline (a contraction or recession).
- A recession is six consecutive months of decrease.
- A "severe recession" is called a depression.
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- A high degree of specialization and its complementary division of labor can make whole classes of workers economically vulnerable in times of recession or as the industries they work in evolve, requiring different skills as the modes of production change.
- A high degree of specialization and it's complimentary division of labour can make whole classes of workers economically vulnerable in times of recession or as the industries they work in evolve, requiring different skills as the modes of production.
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- By adjusting monetary policy in favor of low interest rates and a large monetary base, the Fed is taking expansionary actions designed to help the United States recover from the recession.
- To counter a recession, the Fed uses expansionary policy to increase the money supply and reduce interest rates.
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- It has been a particularly popular option in 2009 for employers trying to reduce staff costs without having to make redundancies during the recession.