Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Australia has gone an incredible 23 years without a recession

A Qantas Airways (L) and an Emirates Airlines Airbus A380 fly in formation during a flyover at an altitude of around 450 m (1500 ft) above the Sydney Opera House March 31, 2013. The flyover was part of a promotion to mark the commencement of the five-year alliance between struggling national flag carrier Qantas Airways Ltd and Emirates Airline, and was being promoted as the first time that two commercial airline A380 planes have flown in formation. Australia's competition regulator granted conditional final approval on March 27 for the alliance, just days before the first Qantas flight is due to transit through Dubai. REUTERS/David Gray (AUSTRALIA - Tags: TRANSPORT BUSINESS TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

Much like a flight to Sydney, the Australian economy has remained aloft for an incredibly long time.


Today’s numbers for the second quarter showed that Australian GDP grew 0.5%, compared to the first quarter. That’s the slowest rate in over a year, but not too shabby if you consider that Australia is trying to navigate the giant risk to its export-driven business model represented by a slowing China. (China is Australia’s largest trading partner.)


And year-over-year the Australian economy is up 3.1%. In fact, the last time Australia’s economy shrank year-over-year was during the fourth quarter of 1991. (It hasn’t had two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction, the conventional definition of a recession, in 23 years.)



For the record, the Netherlands had an event better streak of economy growth, 27 years which lasted from the late 1980s until the financial crisis of 2008 pushed the global economy into the Great Recession.




Australia has gone an incredible 23 years without a recession

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