The Bureau of Labor Statistics has been collecting annual household spending data since 1984, a time period that includes several recessions. Nothing compares with the Great Recession. During 28 years of household spending data collection, there have been year-over-year declines 12 times, which is a substantial proportion. Downturns in household spending are not exceptional. But three things are exceptional about the Great Recession spending decline.
- The Great Recession spending decline is four years old, the longest spending decline on record. No previous decline lasted more than two years.
- The Great Recession spending decline includes the largest single-year decline ever recorded (a -3.5 percent drop between 2009 and 2010, after adjusting for inflation). Previously, the largest single-year decline occurred between 1989 and 1990 (-3.2 percent).
- The Great Recession spending decline is getting increasingly worse, starting with a small 0.3 percent slip between 2006 and 2007, followed successively by declines of 2.1, then 2.5, then the record-setting 3.5 percent.
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