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Panic of 1819
First Major financial crisis in the United States. The financial disaster and depression formed resentment against banking and business enterprises. Its the recession because business started to go for the worse and banks lost business. -
Panic of 1837
a U.S recession with bank failures. This event happened with a major recession that lasted until the mid 1840's. Profit, prices, and wages went down while unemployment went up. It was a recession during this. -
Panic of 1873
Was a financial crisis that lasted from 1873 to 1879. Some places went into depression (not the great one) -
Panic of 1884
Was a recession during 1882-1885. Gold reserves in Europe have depleted. United States halted investments all over. -
Panic of 1893
Similar to panic of 1873 and with similar causes. its the depression stage -
Panic of 1896
Was an acute depression as banking started failing. -
Panic of 1907
The New York Stock Exchange fells almost 50%. This spread out through the Nation were many banks and businesses declared bankruptcy -
Panic of 1910
It was a slight Economic Depression. -
panic of 1920
Was a sharp deflationary recession. At the end of this it was the era of prosperity -
Panic of 1929
Known as black tuesday, stock market crashed. The crash foretold a ten year great depression. -
Panic of 1973
A period of economic stagnation. It differs from the previous recession. -
1980 recession
describes the severe global economic recession affecting much of the developed world in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The United States and Japan exited the recession relatively early, but high unemployment would continue to affect other OECD nations through to at least 1985 -
panic of 1997
The October 27, 1997, mini-crash is the name of a global stock market crash that was caused by an economic crisis in Asia or Tom Yum Goong crisis. Is a recession -
panic of 2008
The financial panic of 2008, and the economic uncertainty created by various Government actions taken or feared subsequently, have resulted in the worst recession since the Great Depression. It is far worse than the shrinkage caused by the US savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s. -
Panic of 1930
A financial crisis that led to a money supply to decline. Banks had a series of failure all over the US. The event caused the Great Contraction and eventually the Great Depression.