by yesplease » Fri 09 Oct 2009, 17:13:19
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'A')ccording to your link, consumer debt actually grew rapidly.
January 1981: $353 billion (growth from previous year)
January 1982: $375 billion (6.2%)
January 1983: $392 billion (4.5%)
January 1984: $442 billion (12.8%)
January 1985: $524 billion (18.6%)
January 1986: $605 billion (15.5%)
If you don't think we should look at the debt service ratios due to large changes in the interest rate, then we should also adjust consumer debt for inflation, eg real consumer debt... Not just look at the unadjusted figures.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'U')nemployment kept on rising from 1980 to until the winter of 1982/1983.
From January of 1983 to January of 1984, unemployment dropped from 10.4% to 8%.
From January of 1984 to January of 1985, unemployment dropped from 8% to 7.3%.
Finally a drop from 7.3% to 6.7% in 1985.
If consumer debt of 350475.70 in 1980, at the start of the first recession, had significantly increased, it would end up much greater than 441922.64 (inflation adjusted amount from 1980) in 1984, but it was only 441991.13 in 1984 (I picked this interval because it's the start of the 1980 recession to one year after the early 1980s recession). From then on it exploded, probably due to the lower interest rates and both recessions in the rear-view, but during two bad recessions real c-debt stayed pretty much constant while UE declined from the peak of 10+% you mentioned.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'I')t looks like we didn't see a serious drop in unemployment until consumer debt started exploding from 1983 onwards. Or maybe the increasing employment prospects from 1983 onward made people more confident to load up on credit card debt.
Regardless, 1980-1983 saw a relatively small increase in consumer debt (and indeed a drop in real terms) but that was coupled with a wrenching increase in unemployment and a major economic recession.
1983-1990 was a solid economic expansion (lots of job creation) but came with a big increase in debt of all kinds. Consumer debt in nominal terms doubled during this period. In inflation adjusted terms, the increase was still well over 50%.