We have fully recovered from the recession. Wait, we recovered after 18 months.
I remember it well. The republican president at the time sent me money I did not ask for or need.
The economy "CRASHED" so lets send out 168 billion in cash to the people!
Why are you telling us of this 'doom and gloom' as if what happened in 2008 is affecting us today with your "spreading chaos" Chicken Little proclamation?
I worked in the financial sector during the Financial Crisis in 2007-2008. It was much worse than you think
The government had to resort to TARP/QE and other measures to restore stability to the system. Some countries, like Iceland, saw their entire banking system fail. Millions of jobs were lost, and trillions of dollars in damage was done to the world economy.
People screamed about bank bailouts, but the alternative was a depression. It demonstrated the consequences of leverage, securitization, bad monetary policy, and bad government policy. Interest rates were artificially low, there was reckless lending, speculation, securitization, and the government policy was to put everyone into a home, whether or not they could afford it (both Clinton and Bush followed this expansion in home-ownership policy)
Now the second "crash" we are talking about was 2020. We aren't out of that crisis yet --trillions of dollars in damage was done to the world economy a second time, this time through other means (lockdowns, trade restrictions, business restriction, reckless spending and lending, artificially-low interest rates, etc.). It will take decades to recover from the following:
1. Multiple generations of Americans permanently priced out of the housing market. The housing market is so distorted it could take 10 years to correct.
2. A hurricane of inflation over a 2-3 year period which was the worst in US history, with home prices going up by over 45%, rents soaring, food prices skyrocketing, used cars selling for 50-100% more than 6 months earlier, gas prices going up 30-50%, etc. real wages declining over a 3 year period, etc. This was a consequence of out-of-control government spending, bad Fed policy, etc.
3. A collapse in commercial real-estate which continues to unfold.
4. Accelerated deglobalization
we could easily see another wave of inflation like we did in the late 1970s, leading to more rate hikes, layoffs, and other problems. I don't see any way that we avoid recession in 2024