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Home»Business & Economy»Why Global Recession Could Be The Worst Economic Downturn In Recent History
Business & Economy

Why Global Recession Could Be The Worst Economic Downturn In Recent History

Emirates InsightBy Emirates InsightNovember 6, 2022Updated:April 10, 2025No Comments
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The global financial system is about to enter into recession. According to a lot of experts, the 2023 recession could be the worst in recent history. There are a number of reasons why this could be the case.

The global economy has been on a slow decline for the past few years. The coronavirus pandemic epidemic, which has had a disastrous impact on businesses all around the world, has made matters worse.

Additionally, the world is currently experiencing a great deal of political unrest. The global economy is becoming even more unstable and unstable as a result of this.

The Russo-Ukrainian War, Rising Inflation, and Extremely High Interest Rates all contribute to a 98.1% probability of a Global Recession in 2023, according to the NDR (Ned Davis Research). “History repeats itself,” it declares. The recessions that resulted in a decade-long slump in the 1920s, a year-long recession in the 1970s due to the oil crisis, and the Great Recession in 2008 are not comparable to the one that is likely to occur in the near future. The upcoming recession will be unlike any other recession in history. But if it’s the one, it won’t be like anything else that has ever happened.
What Is Global Recession?
A financial phenomena known as the “global recession” is characterised by a long-term, slow deterioration in the global economy. Every recession has always been caused by a butterfly effect. And the recession that we have previously seen is the result of the accumulation of many minor setbacks.
Two factors are the primary contributors to the global recession: high unemployment and low GDP (except for the current situation). GDP denotes the inflationary correction of economic data so that it can be more correctly compared to other quarters of economic activity.

The 2008 Great Recession

In the first few years of the twenty-first century, the entire world experienced a financial catastrophe, which will never be forgotten. When Americans’ participation in the housing bubble peaked in the first half of 2000, all investors experienced financial hardship. Unemployment, rising commodity prices, the stock market crisis, and the IMF’s billion-dollar injection to stabilise the economy all followed suit. Even so, people who directly experience the horrors carry them out.
Will there be a global recession in this year?
The impending global recession has a few major causes.
  • Pandemic COVID Lockdown
    The pandemic lockdown is most responsible for the impending recession. Many people lost their jobs during the COVID period, but they also created millions of entirely new job sectors.
However, several production facilities shut down and cut staff during the lockdown. As a result, after the lockdown, there is an obvious imbalance between supply and demand.
In order to combat the high inflation that resulted from this (which was fueled by the Russo-Ukrainian war), international banks are raising interest rates. However, there is a slim possibility that this approach will work.
  • Russia – Ukraine War
    Commodity costs are and will continue to drive up inflation, erode incomes, and decrease demand. Russia and Ukraine are two of the biggest producers of commodities, contributing 30% of all world exports of wheat.
  • Asset values will be impacted by investor apprehension and business confidence, which will tighten financial conditions and may increase capital outflows from emerging countries.
  • Low unemployment and low GDP are two very unsustainable conditions for the planet. Either businesses will stop hiring and leave the labour force, or inflation and interest rates will bring about a repeat of the financial crisis’s past. It is only a matter of time before Pandora’s box opens and what it will contain.
In conclusion, the upcoming global recession in 2023 may be the worst in recent history. To survive this recession, it is important to create multiple sources of income, cut your avoidable expenses, and save and invest as much as you can.
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