Sunday, July 19, 2020
What Would a Recession Mean for You
What Would a Recession Mean for You What Would a Recession Mean for You? What Would a Recession Mean for You?If you arent prepared for an economic recession, you could end up losing your job without any kind of financial safety net to catch you.Have you heard rumblings that a new recession is on its way? If so, itâs something youâll want to be ready for. And even a recession isnât just around the bend, youâll still want to be prepared when one inevitably shows up. Hereâs what you need to know about how recessions work, and what you need to do in order to weather the next one that arrives.What is a recession?âA recession refers to the continued contraction of a countrys economy over a prolonged period of time, usually six months or more.â said Joe Bailey, Operations Manager at My Trading Skills (@MyTradingSkills), a financial trading courses provider.âDuring a recession, consumption and demand for goods and services continue to gradually decline over a six month period. Unemployment, on the other hand, begins to rise as demand and consumpt ion fall. A fall in manufacturing, retail sales, and real GDP are also strong indicators that a country is in recession.ââRecessions are cyclical, so although there is never a set date that can be predicted, they are always just around the corner,â added financial analyst Dennis Shirshikov of FitSmallBusiness.com (@FitSmallBiz).While there are many factors in the economy that can lead to a recession, Shirshikov pointed to an access of available credit as one of the main triggers. As an economy gains steam, credit gets easier to access. But at a certain point, it gets a little too easy.âThis happens because times are good, so naturally, people get married, start businesses, buy houses, and spend a little more than they make. The money the one individual spends is the income of another individual, so income grows too. This leads to a sense of security that things are getting better and its ok to borrow and spend a little more,â said Shirshikov.âJust like no individual can borrow forever, the economy as a whole can have too much outstanding credit. First, a couple of people miss payments, then a couple declares bankruptcy, then a local business cant afford to stay open. Eventually, this cycle spreads and is known by economists as a cycle of deleveraging. In other words, the credit starts drying up, banks are less likely to lend, and people cant get access to more credit.âThe most recent recession in the U.S. economy was a big one: The Great Recession lasted from 2007 to 2009 and brought down the global economy along with it. That recession was caused by the subprime mortgage crisisâ"a massive overextension of credit, just like Shirshikov laid out.What would a new recession mean for you?Unless youâve pulled a Ron Swanson and youve got millions of dollars in various precious metals and gemstones buried in around your propertyâ"guarded by traps, no lessâ"than a recession is likely going to leave you worse off. And the more financially unstable yo u are, the more likely that a recession will wreak havoc on your life.âThe rising rates of unemployment are one of the major effects that recession has on the citizens,â explained Bailey. âHigh levels of unemployment mean more people are unable to meet their basic needs such as housing, food, clothes, and education. As a result, people lose their homes and their cars. Young graduates are unable to find jobs, and this completely throws off their careers. Businesses often experience a drop in profits, with many of them having to declare bankruptcy.âAnother recession would increase homelessness, a profound housing crisis with home foreclosures and high rates of unemployment,â said Chad Dion Lassiter, MSW, Executive Director of the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission. âMost recent college graduates would suffer as well under the pressure of attempting to balance looking for a job during a recession and paying back student loans.âAnd if youâre hoping that the effect s will be short-lasting, you probably wonât be so lucky. According to Ashvin Chheda, ChFC ®, CLU ®, President of Opes One Advisors in Addison, Texas, you could be feeling the aftershocks from a coming recession for a long time afterward.âThere could be mid to longer-term impacts on the average family,â said Chheda. For instance, early childhood education could be compromised, health care for families could be compromised, more specifically preventative care and/or vision/dental care. There could be housing implications (loss of home due to inability to pay the mortgage, downsizing of rental home/apartments are examples). There might be a longer-term delay or abandonment of college for older children. ââIn many cases, there is a measurable shortfall to funding for retirement; retirement funding is a function of saving! Similarly, there could be an early hardship drawdown of retirement assets that will have to be replenished later. In more severe cases, there are impacts to the standard of nutrition for families due to a much more constrained budget.ââIn essence,â he concluded, âthe standard of living for families will be compromised due to loss or reduction of wages.âFinally, Dion Lassiter highlighted the psychological effects that recessions can have on many people, problems that all-too-often go unacknowledged. The factors he listed included âhigh rates of anxiety, hypertension, depression, mood disorders and the potential for maladaptive ways of coping under economic distress.âIn summary: The effects of a recession can range from ânot greatâ to âcatastrophic.â It will depend on your individual situation: A reduction in retirement savings or going a year without a raise is one thing, losing a job or home is entirely another. But the more prepared you are, financially, the better youâll be able to weather this time of uncertainty.How can you prepare?Even if you donât think a recession is around the corner, you should still be planning for one to happen eventually. Economies canât grow forever, which means that recessions are inevitable.âWhile economic recessions are few and far between, they do occur periodically and are part of economic cycles,â said Chheda. âPersonal planning to mitigate the effects of a recession are important and every family should have a plan!First things first, you want to be prepared for the emergenciesâ"not just from a recession, but from unexpected expenses like medical bills and car repairs. And if you want to be prepared for emergencies, the best way to do that is with ⦠an emergency fund!âSet up an emergency fund,â urged Bailey, âand build it up to a point where it can be able to cover ones basic expenses for more than three months.â You can find more information in our blog post about how to start building an emergency fund.But your preparations shouldnât stop there. Bailey also recommended that you pay down your debts, âas this will help you gradu ally reduce your monthly expenses.ââBesides savings and debt reduction,â added Shirshikov, âyou should work to have an extra source of income. Whether its a side job, a hobby, or an independent role like real estate, having an option if something happens never hurts.âFinally, if you see your friends and neighbors taking on debt for new houses and parties, remember all of that needs to be repaid,â he added. âSo move against the trend.While most solutions involve planning for the worst, you should also look at ways that you can prepare for the best. In other words, the more valuable you are as an employeeâ"both in terms of work ethic and skill-setâ"the less likely you are to feel the brunt of recession-aided layoffs.âThere are other things that people should do to mitigate the impact of a recession which in many ways is tied to their ability to hold on to their employment,â said Chheda. âInvesting in ones own education; career growth is important. Companies gener ally try to avoid laying-off their top talent, and if they do, those same individuals will find it easier to get re-hired.ââWe cannot predict when a recession will occur,â concluded Bailey, âbut everyday people can prepare adequately for one by building up a healthy emergency fund, finding more sources of income other than their main jobs, and paying down their current debts as much as possible before a recession begins to bite.âIs a new recession on the way?Recently, there has been a fair amount of ink and pixels spilled by national news organizations over the possibility of a recession in the near future. And these fears come with an extra level of worry: While the economy overall has recovered somewhat following the Great Recession, many of those gains havenât extended to lower- and middle-class households.âAnother recession would be more than devastating for our economy specifically for the middle and lower classesâ"not to mention the permanent underclass that exp eriences deep povertyâ"that would only further increase the rates of despair, hopelessness and a profound sense of nihilism,â said Dion Lassiter.âMany of the before mentioned are still trying to recover from the last recession that devastated them and rendered many of them the faces in the bottom of the well where capitalism increases opportunities for the oligarchs and the plutocrats and renders them non-persons and non-entities against the backdrop of the great wells of democracy,â he added.There are many different factors that could contribute to a recession, including interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and the Trump administrationâs ongoing trade war with China. One indicator of recession, an economic phenomena known as an inverted yield curve (which we wonât explain here), has already come to pass.But as we said earlier in the piece: Even a recession doesnât happen this year or next year or the year after that, one will happen eventually. And when it does , youâll want to be ready. Otherwise, you could end up relying on short-term no credit check loans like payday loans, cash advances, and title loans to make ends meet.To learn more about managing your finances long-term, check out these related posts and articles from OppLoans:Building Your Financial Life: Budgeting for BeginnersSave More Money with These 40 Expert TipsFrom Budget to Baller: 6 Tips to Grow Your MoneySo Youâve Maxed out Your Credit Cards ⦠Now What?Do you have a personal finance question youd like us to answer? Let us know! You can find us on Facebook and Twitter. | InstagramContributorsJoe Bailey is the Operations Manager at My Trading Skills (@MyTradingSkills), a financial trading courses provider. His experience includes web development, UX and conversion rate optimization for both B2B and B2C.As President of Opes One Advisors, Ashvin Chheda, ChFC, CLU, works closely with clients and focuses on customizing financial advice and strategies for each clientâs unique needs. In addition, he holds the investment related Series 7, 63, and 66 licenses, the Registered Principal Series 24 license, and the Group 1 Life, Health and Disability insurance license. He is a Registered Representative Investment Advisor of Park Avenue Securities, Financial Representative of Guardian.Chad Dion Lassiter began serving as the Executive Director of Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission on May 24, 2018. He is nationally recognized in the fields of American race relations and violence prevention among African-American males. Prior to accepting his post at PHRC, Chad D. Lassiter was a Visiting Scholar at West Chester University in the Undergraduate School of Social Work and Lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was the 2008 recipient of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Involvement Award. He is a former research fellow at the W.E.B. DuBois Collective Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate Sc hool of Education, where he worked on two national research projects, P.L.A.A.Y. (Preventing Long Term Anger and Aggression in Youth) and H.I.P.P. (Health Information Providers and Promoters). Mr. Lassiter received his Masterâs Degree from the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Social Work, where he was the A. Phillip Randolph Award winner in 2001.Dennis Shirshikov is a Financial Analyst with FitSmallBusiness.com (@FitSmallBiz). Dennis earned an MS with an emphasis in Financial Risk Modeling and spend most of his career working with startups. When not helping small businesses and teaching Economics to college students at CUNY Queens College.
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