Australia in the first recession in almost 30 years


Riding a bicycle from Sydney Harbor Bridge and Sydney Opera House, he wears a face mask as a preventative measure against coronavirus.Image copyright pyrite
Getty Images

Australia The Australian economy has plunged into its first recession in almost a year, due to the economic downturn caused by the coronavirus.

Gross domestic product (GDP) fell 7% in the April-June quarter compared to the previous three months.

This is the largest decline since records began in 1959 and a 0.3% decline in the following quarter.

An economy is considered to be in recession if two consecutive quarters of negative growth are observed.

Australia was the only major economy to survive the recession during the 2008 global financial crisis – mainly due to demand for China’s natural resources.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media Citation“Unprecedented” bushfires make the sky orange

Earlier this year, the economy suffered a slowdown in economic growth due to the extreme season of extreme shrubs and the early stages of coronavirus outbreaks.

Despite measures taken by the government and the central bank to support the economy, there has been a recent shutdown of industries across the country.

This is the worst economic growth in 61 years due to a sharp contraction in household spending on goods and services.

2020 will go down as a year to remember and a year everyone is trying to forget! It was the year that Australia technically lost its popular nickname ‘The Lucky Country’ and fell into recession for the first time in almost three decades.

Statistics from the Australian Bureau of Statistics show that the economy has shrunk by 1% in the last three months as a result of the coronavirus epidemic.

For young people who have recently joined the working group, this is something they have never experienced before. Coal Australia has seen its economy grow steadily over the decades with strong coal, iron ore and growing natural gas exports to China. Tourism has also been a major driver of growth.

But this year, the country was hit hard. twice. When bushfires devastated an area of ​​more than 12 million hectares, tourism began and thousands of small businesses lost a month’s essential seasonal income. Then the coronavirus became a global epidemic. Australia Australia closed its borders and imposed strict social distance rules.

As a result, about 1 million people lost their jobs. I remember seeing long queues outside the social and economic support offices in March, people were probably amazed to find themselves in this situation for the first time in their lives.

China also has increasingly strained relations with China, Australia’s largest trading partner. April Australia strongly and publicly endorsed a global investigation into the origin of the coronavirus in April, angering the Chinese government. Since then, there has been political turmoil between Canberra and Beijing and the Australian Australian economy has felt the pinch.

Scott Morrison’s government has already spent more than 200 200 billion (bn 110bn; US $ 147bn) on economic stimulus. The next few years will face many tough realities.

Australia Australia last fell into recession in the mid-1990s and lasted until the late 1991.

But the coronavirus epidemic has hit the Australian economy hard, although the figure is slightly better than the %% fall that the Reserve Bank of Australia had previously predicted.

Despite a sharp decline in economic activity, dow Australia is performing better than other advanced economies that have experienced the most recessions.

The world’s largest U.S. economy shrank .5 percent between April and June, while the UK’s contraction pushed it into recession by 30.4 percent.

The French economy is down 13.8% and Japan is down 7.6%.