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Tracking Real GDP over Time

September 8, 2025 | by Bloom Code Studio

Learning Objectives

By the end of this section, you will be able to:

  • Explain recessions, depressions, peaks, and troughs
  • Evaluate the importance of tracking real GDP over time

When news reports indicate that “the economy grew 1.2% in the first quarter,” the reports are referring to the percentage change in real GDP. By convention, governments report GDP growth at an annualized rate: Whatever the calculated growth in real GDP was for the quarter, we multiply it by four when it is reported as if the economy were growing at that rate for a full year.

This graph illustrates the change in real GDP over time. The y-axis measures real GDP in billions of 2012 dollars, in 2,000 dollar increments, from 0 to 20,000 dollars (20,000 billion is 20 trillion dollars). The x-axis shows years, from 1930 to 2020. In 1930, real GDP is roughly 1,000 billion dollars, or 1 trillion dollars. It rises over time to above 18,000 billion dollars, or 18 trillion dollars, in 2020.

Figure 6.10 U.S. GDP, 1930–2020 Real GDP in the United States in 2020 (in 2012 dollars) was about $18.4 trillion. After adjusting to remove the effects of inflation, this represents a roughly 20-fold increase in the economy’s production of goods and services since 1930. (Source: bea.gov)

Figure 6.10 shows the pattern of U.S. real GDP since 1930. Short term declines have regularly interrupted the generally upward long-term path of GDP. We call a significant decline in real GDP a recession. We call an especially lengthy and deep recession a depression. The severe drop in GDP that occurred during the 1930s Great Depression is clearly visible in the figure, as is the 2008–2009 Great Recession and the recession induced by COVID-19 in 2020.

Real GDP is important because it is highly correlated with other measures of economic activity, like employment and unemployment. When real GDP rises, so does employment.

The most significant human problem associated with recessions (and their larger, uglier cousins, depressions) is that a slowdown in production means that firms need to lay off or fire some of their workers. Losing a job imposes painful financial and personal costs on workers, and often on their extended families as well. In addition, even those who keep their jobs are likely to find that wage raises are scanty at best—or their employers may ask them to take pay cuts.

Table 6.7 lists the pattern of recessions and expansions in the U.S. economy since 1900. We call the highest point of the economy, before the recession begins, the peak. Conversely, the lowest point of a recession, before a recovery begins, is the trough. Thus, a recession lasts from peak to trough, and an economic upswing runs from trough to peak. We call the economy’s movement from peak to trough and trough to peak the business cycle. It is intriguing to notice that the three longest trough-to-peak expansions of the twentieth century have happened since 1960. The most recent recession was caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. It started in February 2020 and ended formally in May 2020. This was the most severe recession since the 1930s Great Depression, but also the shortest. The previous recession, called the Great Recession, was also very severe and lasted about 18 months. The expansion starting in June 2009, the trough from the Great Recession, was the longest on record—ending 128 months with the pandemic-induced recession.

TroughPeakMonths of ContractionMonths of Expansion
December 1900September 19021821
August 1904May 19072333
June 1908January 19101319
January 1912January 19132412
December 1914August 19182344
March 1919January 1920710
July 1921May 19231822
July 1924October 19261427
November 1927August 19292321
March 1933May 19374350
June 1938February 19451380
October 1945November 1948837
October 1949July 19531145
May 1954August 19571039
April 1958April 1960824
February 1961December 196910106
November 1970November 19731136
March 1975January 19801658
July 1980July 1981612
November 1982July 19901692
March 1991March 20018120
November 2001December 2007873
January 2009February 20202128
April 2020TBDTBDTBD

Table 6.7 U.S. Business Cycles since 1900 (Source: http://www.nber.org/cycles/main.html)

A private think tank, the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), tracks business cycles for the U.S. economy. However, the effects of a severe recession often linger after the official ending date assigned by the NBER.

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