In recessions, we typically see increases in unemployment. Figure 5 shows unemployment in the period of the Great Depression. This diagram is based on data from the National Bureau of Economic Research. We see employment rising from virtually zero to 25% of the work force in 1933, then rising again to 20% in the recession of 1938.
Figure 6 shows unemployment in the period after World War II into the 1990's, based on data from the Economic Report of the President. Over this longer period we see a quite different pattern, with unemployment never below three percent (this may reflect differences in measurement) but never above 10% either. We see unemployment rising in the recessions of 1948, 1958 and 1961, 1969, 1973, 1981, and 1990. The apparent upward trend from the mid-1940's to the mid-1980's may have been reversed in the 1990's.
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