HACKER Q&A
📣 lewisjoe

Are we looking at a recession ahead?


Economics enthusiasts of HN: The Covid-19 crisis - when it settles down, what kind of economic impact can we expect? Especially in the tech sector?

1) In what scale can we expect the economic slowdown to be?

2) Will this be as bad as the 2008 recession?

3) What kind of economic climate can we expect for the next one year?

4) What will governemnts across the world do to overcome the crisis?


  👤 barry-cotter Accepted Answer ✓
It seems likely that it’ll be a V-shaped recession, sharp drop followed by sharp recovery, unless there’s a complete mess made of economic policy like when the Fed turned a normal economic contraction into the Great Depression. Lots of people getting temporarily sick and permanently dead doesn’t destroy much physical capital and the casualties are disproportionately borne by those least engaged in the workforce.

> The 1957 Asian Flu Pandemic killed around 70 to 100 thousand people in the United States (the 57 flu was not as infectious or deadly as COVID-19). In the last quarter of 1957 the growth rate (on an annualized basis) was -4% and in the first quarter of 1958, -10%, the largest such decline in post WWII history, bigger even than in the financial crisis. By the third and fourth quarters of 1958, however, the growth rate had surged back up to nearly 10% and for the year as a whole GDP declined by less than 1%–a bad recession, 3rd worst by depth in post WWII history, but not unprecedented.

https://marginalrevolution.com/?s=1957+flu


👤 jurassic
People with significant job experience might be okay overall, but if this is anything like 2008-2011 we're going to see a lot of people piling up at the career on-ramp. They call it the '08 global financial crisis, but unemployment did not peak until 2010 and for that entire period you had excess young jobseekers competing against laid off workers with more experience for the same positions. Unemployment was concentrated in the very young and very old, so the reported unemployment rate doesn't really tell the whole story. I recall most "entry level" openings wanting 3+ years experience.

Many people gave up, moved back home with Mom and Dad, and went off into very unexpected and disappointing career directions. Many hit the career snooze button by going to graduate school. I myself, a freshly minted MIT grad whose summer 2010 internship fell through at the last minute, found myself applying and being rejected from such emergency jobs as barista, pizza delivery person, target cashier, aquarium ticket salesperson, and SAT tutor. There was a period in the fall of 2010 where I became semi-homeless (sleeping in common areas at MIT and Harvard) and was stealing the bulk of my food from Harvard dining halls. I ended up going to graduate school and was extremely grateful to have a $25k/yr graduate stipend as income.

This looks to be worse. I am very very worried for today's college-age population, as well as any career changers who have invested in that but not completed the transition. My wife just went through a year of self-studied bootcamp type work and now I'm not sure when, if ever, she'll be able to get a job.


👤 martythemaniak
Mentally, I have priced this in as approximately the same as The Great Depression. Vastly different causes and very different ways to get out of it, and different long-term repercussions, but either way it'll be bad and much worse than 2008. One way I've started thinking about is to mentally push back everything I thought about the future by about 3-5 years. I wanted to install a solar roof on my house in 3-5 years, so now that's like 5-8 years. I was considering a CyberTruck, but now I'm just gonna keep driving my car, etc etc.

We're gonna have massive unemployment that'll dwarf 2008. Some industries will come back relatively quickly (dine-in, coffee, etc), but others will take years (travel, hospitality). Government support will leave everything with massive debt, which doesn't seem like a problem now (money is on sale!), but the scale of it will eventually cause austerity. I think this will leave many people in a more prepper / saver / hoarder mindset, which will further slow down the recovery.

We'll hopefully start to see a recovery towards the end of next year and mostly recover within two years of that.


👤 Infinitesimus
Disclaimer: Thoroughly unqualified to answer this question

That said, no one knows what's going to happen so allow me to toss in my speculations

Bearish:

1), 2) It'll be worse than 2008 because a lot of people cannot work, and we run a consumption-based economy. People spend less during economic uncertainty (falling rates is an attempt to minimize this effect).

3) Cascading effects could be very bad (think 2+ months out). Everything was green and good and many businesses took on cheap debt to finance operations. When people aren't buying your products/services businesses will resort to layoff to minimize costs and when that doesn't magically go away because we're still quarantined and spending less, they'll have to slowly liquidate assets or default on their loans.

We've already seen a few corporate bonds downgraded and there will be more to come. Retail, Food, and Hospitality are going to have a very bad time lenders overexposed to those sectors will likely need a bailout and some consolidation.

4) Governments will keep printing money and will pass bills to provide hobbled safety nets for people all over the world. Many people will fight systems that attempt to provide financial safety nets the reduce the incentive to work so we'll end up with some crappy versions and a lot of QE. Federal reserves will buy some more corporate bonds because banks will be reluctant to touch them for a while. Long term effect of that is anyone's guess but expect some currency wonkiness

5) 2nd wave of this virus hits us shortly after we declare "everything is fine" and people freak out again

Bullish: We get very lucky and 1) Find a cure soon, and/or 2) It dies out after some herd immunity similar to SARS


👤 justanother
Despite all the rhetoric, no country manufactures like the USA, and the USA was said to have been in 'manufacturing recessing' well before The Current Mess started. Now the price of oil has tanked (ha ha), real estate markets are beginning to groan as open houses are empty and purchase-money mortgages are down 24% from year-ago quarter, and of course an enormous percentage of Americans are unemployed, lacking both work and healthcare. Yes, yes there already is a sudden and deep recession, the scale of which seems likely to exceed 2008 in both speed of onset and depth of bottom.

I don't see government responses as being much different from 2008, ie bail out the large institutions and markets and leave average people in debt, and solutions like that tend to make for very gradual recoveries, barring a sudden attack of common sense, the window for which is already closing. I would therefore submit that we may expect the economic climate to take a year or more before government officials are able to lie believably about seeing promise on the horizon.


👤 kylebenzle
Everybody knows, recession is coming if not here already. Doubling the money supply will only exacerbate the problem long term, leading to greater unemployment when the dollar needs to be reigned in again like in the 1970's to avoid runaway inflation.

The FED's balance sheet now hold almost every asset imaginabe, interest rates are 0% and they are out of tools.

1. Globally? China's growth rate was faked for at least a decade, so if that comes out that the 6.8% rate was fake, that instantly drags the World's second largest economy down. [1]

2. It is already BY FAR worse than the 2008 recession in every way. This is a health, economic and societal issue.

3. Inflation is ugly and usually avoided at all costs. The world is diving head first into the shallow end of the pool by printing unlimited money. Over the next year prices will sky rocket and many will starve. E.g. Egg prices are at record levels [2].

4. Stop printing money to help the short term. Build hospitals, NOW and Return to a sane monetary policy (will never happen).

[1] https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/new-study-shin...

[2] https://www.ams.usda.gov/mnreports/pybshellegg.pdf


👤 DataGata
A recession is technically two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth. If we're able to beat this thing by June, we might be able to beat a "technical" recession. Something like -10% GDPg/quarter followed by 1% GDPg/quarter. Not technically a recession!

1) We can expect unemployment in the teen %s. Some economists think we can get as high as 30%.

2) It will be worse

3) Consensus is a big V-shaped dip, assuming that the virus is contained, managed, tested and tracked.

4) Stimulus bills, debt relief-- things they've all, for the most part, already done.


👤 duxup
Nobody knows. I would say the main factors seem to be:

The COVID events are so sudden a way that doesn't seem to fit any real good pattern to look for in the past.

Even with that from my understanding since 2008 a lot of fundamental economic beliefs / predictions haven't really played out as folks would expect. Or at least the data available seems to not provide much in the way of ... understanding / predictability based on the past. (this is not my area of expertise)

Politically things seems fairly unpredictable even pre COVID ... toss in some economic / health crises and I don't know how anyone could feel they know anything.

It seems like it is the unknown layered on the unknown here. I'd be highly skeptical of anyone making anything other than a very general prediction.


👤 Hongwei
Yes

1) The immediate impact is the retail and entertainment sectors, which employ a large amount of the population. The loss of incomes and consumer confidence from those people will cascade. They'll buy less cars and appliances. Car companies will in turn buy less [everything else]; anecdotally one of the world's largest automakers has called a worldwide stop to new purchases - of anything. This cascade will affect a majority of the economy. What made the 2001 tech crash bad was that all the startups that had other startups as their customers saw their revenues evaporate. Think about the 1000 variants of MarTech tools today.

2) More 1930s than 2008 unless governments act in a hyper competent manner. Ray Dalio has been writing about how the next recession will not be solvable through QE: https://www.linkedin.com/in/raydalio/detail/recent-activity/...

3) No one knows

4) Currently: print money and worry about the consequences later. It's novel to see them "helicopter drop" cash directly to consumers. It's much more fair than just buying financial assets, which enriches investors first. (They're still doing lots of that, just not exclusively)


👤 Dumblydorr
I think the best way to prevent a great depression 2.0 is to build massive infrastructure projects. Green jobs, trains, highway updates, bridge repairs, electrification, grid modernization, IMO these are best to both kill unemployment and decarbonize for an efficient 21st century economy.

👤 gumby
Seems likely it will be far worse and more widespread than 2008, but perhaps will come back faster. Why faster? Because govt may have a policy to fund reconstruction. There are many policies that could make this better but to get into them invites flame wars. Certainly the US is much more poorly positioned for sustainable recovery so its relative importance to the world economy will decline (will probably remain the largest economy). China's relative strength may increase but it also has serious structural weaknesses so I don't think it will be by that much if any.

When you think of the tech sector, remember that big companies tend to weather downturns like this better than medium sized companies. Big companies they may lay off people, have reduced earnings, but they can survive. There's hysteresis in the system: perhaps fewer aircraft are bought, but engines are still needed for the ones in the pipeline. Only if that pipeline dries up and related lines of business can't carry it will such a company fail. Sure there are exceptions (Lehman, Enron, etc) but this isn't a bad rule of thumb. One relative advantage the US will have is that the average age of its population will drop over the next 3-8 years, which is a major driver of economic growth.

Very small companies can survive these events both due to some support from the the new bailout bill and because if you have one or two key customers (or a toehold in a viable sector, say games) it can be enough. tighten the belt a bit, focus on profitability, and you can survive and be positioned for growth when the time comes. A mouse needs much less to survive than a hippo.

Medium sized companies are the most at risk as they need that revenue and typically have a smaller margin for error.

As for the tech implications, it's hard to say. Today VCs are really happy with certain consumer companies (delivery, games, video) in their portfolio and feeling pain for their enterprise-focused portfolio companies. That can change as the market dynamic shifts: if we do see growth and you have an enterprise product that can drive top line growth you'll be in a pretty good position; once people are no longer locked up they'll be eager to spend their money on things they couldn't while locked up.

Looking for "where the puck will be": since there will be a log of "reboots" (people looking for new jobs, many empty storefronts and closed businesses): look for structural and secular shifts in how both the macroeconomy and macroeconomy shifts: the same businesses won't be back in all those empty storefronts. Many will remain empty for a long time, but not all. The things to look for are: when someone new starts a new business what will they need? Can you help them out? At the macro scale this has modulated (not completely changed) the attitude to remote work (for jobs where that is possible): what can you provide to take advantage of that? There will be a flood of office space on the market; will companies consider going away from "open plan" bullpens? They were common until the 60s and then came roaring back in the 00s. So times can change.

etc


👤 IdontRememberIt
The only key to understand the situation is the famous quote from Warren Buffett: "Only when the tide goes out do you discover who's been swimming naked."

2008: A "few broke homeowners" in the USA brought down over leveraged Wall Street. The financial system "contaminated" almost the whole planet.

2020: A few weeks ago, a lot of investors had to face margin calls. Petrol is worth nothing. Now the whole European and US economy are down. Almost everybody is over leveraged (private investor in reale estate, stocks, pension funds, etc). All the companies are loaded with "free" debts. With falling stock and maybe real estate values and the increase risk on company debts, when will the banks knock on the doors and start the margin calls on "smaller fishes"? If too many are naked, it may also "contaminate" the financial system...

People with a lot of cash (who have been punished for 2 decades) will finally have lots of opportunities (and a financial security pillow to survive).


👤 tjpaudio
Things are going to be bad until people can go back to work, that much is certain. Whether there is a speedy bounce back after things are back to normal, or if we experience economic stagnation, is anyones guess. The metric to watch is m2, the federal reserve's measure of the velocity of money. Basically, a healthy economy in our system is one where money changes hands quickly. Saving money is bad for the economy, which is why the federal reserve has the mandate of maintaining steady positive inflation. Unfortunately, this availability of this measure is lagged a month or two. It could be that when people go back to work, they go on a spending spree after being cooped up for months, or it could be that pandemic scares people into being more fiscally conservative.

👤 Exmoor
1) Very hard to say. As others have commented, we have not seen anything of this nature before, where governments have essentially made it illegal for perhaps ~40% of the workforce to work with no end in sight. 2) One thing that keeps occurring to me over the last few weeks are the parallels to war. It seems like people are always obsessed with "fighting the last war" and when usually the current war is really nothing like the last war. The truth is, the current situation is not really comparable to 2008 due to its causes and in my mind the severity and length of recovery will highly depend on how long it continues.

At least in the US, governments seem to be stringing the country along with "just a little longer" promises, but as the virus continues to explode despite unprecedented restrictions it seems increasingly unlikely that we're going to see a return to normal any time in 2020. Businesses and individuals who could have easily survived a month of shutdown are going to be unable to survive for 6-9 months of shutdown and things are going to start getting very chaotic.

3) Weird. Some sectors of the economy are going redline as demand surges, but others are going to flatline.

4) They'll print money and pray that we can pull out of the dive. This is going to be much easier for some countries (US) than others (Euro zone). It will be very interesting to see how quickly politicians are willing to acknowledge that they're not facing a short-term issue, but rather a long term issue with a ton of uncertainty.


👤 mongol
These are all good questions. However distant it will be, and no matter the suffering the world will face, the Corona epidemic will pass at some point that those that survive will experience. I wonder what kind if celebrations we will see. Like when WW2 ended? Will it be a distinct event, or gradual? Will other side effects have become so grave so the actual epidemic has moved to the background? I hate this situation but it will surely be something to remember...

👤 chadmeister
A recession is already guaranteed as it by definition is 2 consecutive quarters of contractionary gdp. Q1 and Q2 will both see negative growth. The real question here is when it will bottom and how quick the bounce back will be. So far the means of production have not been affected in manner that will permanently reduce their productivity. However the longer this healthcare crisis goes on the more likely that is to change. Right now it looks very likely that we are able to get people back to work fairly soon, especially now that testing capacity is ramping up so that resources are more efficiently allocated to mitigate the spread and mortality rate of this disease. Note this does not require a cure, but rather a rate of infection that does not overwhelm our healthcare systems, which is near term very solvable.

👤 ceejayoz
https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2020-03-16/us-economi...

> Forget predictions that the U.S. economy will enter a recession this year due to the coronavirus pandemic — the UCLA Anderson Forecast says it has happened already.

> On Monday, the school revised a forecast it issued just last week that stopped short of predicting a recession. The revised version says the economy has already stopped growing and will remain in recession through the end of September.


👤 baccredited
Chamath Palihapitiya spent an hour answering all your questions. Worth a listen!

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/chamath-palihapitiya-i...


👤 chvid
Beyond what is obvious (airlines, restaurants, hotels, retail etc are not contributing to the economy at the moment) I don’t think there will be a broader recession.

The bailout packages may lead to higher interest rates due to government borrowing but inflation is probably in check due to low demand.


👤 jamesroos
It is not clear and this depends on the government's response and financial procedures

https://www.megdexchange.com/jump/next.php?r=3079247


👤 giovan-ni
1) In what scale can we expect the economic slowdown to be?

In the 2 digits. A working day weights between around .2% and .5% of annual GDP.

2) Will this be as bad as the 2008 recession?

No. Entirely different. Both supply and demand contraction are implied by the rational choice of social distancing.

In principle, there is no reason, other than mental habit, to think that a GDP loss would be a bad thing in itself.

The overall effect could be much worse depending on the death and sickness toll.

3) What kind of economic climate can we expect for the next one year?

Economic climate would improve with:

- a quick inexpensive testing solution, which would hopefully allow immune workers to resume activity - an effective therapy, which would allow working age population to resume social interaction and working - a vaccine (probably not a relevant condition for the coming year)

So the answer depends on any of these happening during the coming year.

4) What will governemnts across the world do to overcome the crisis?

Very difficult to predict, not even knowing who will be the President of the US.

Writing from a European perspective, I hope the current talks of a common unemployment insurance would spark a common fiscal policy in the aftermath, but I would not bet much on it.

The proposal that I find the most convincing for a here and now policy to pave the way to recovery is ‘helicopter money’ as articulated, for instance, by Jordi Galì:

https://voxeu.org/article/helicopter-money-time-now


👤 zcw100
You're looking at a recession right now. Everything else is pure speculation. Buckle up, you're going for a ride.

👤 hedora
It will be much worse than ‘08. It already is; it just hasn’t hit tech yet. (I’d guess that will take about a year — that’s how long it took for the dot com crash to spread to the rest of the economy.)

The question is whether it will be worse than the Great Depression, when there were two follow on crashes of similar magnitude. The stimulus is trying to prevent the last crash from growing into a second crash.

The main thing governments can do to overcome the economic crisis is to admit defeat and get it over with. Delaying gives time to build hospital space and improve treatment regimes, but, at best, that halves the death toll. (Unless we find a cure for the common cold this year.)

Putting it in perspective, getting COVID-19 roughly doubles your chance of dying this year, regardless of your age (except kids, which are much better off). If 100% of the population catches it tomorrow, it will reduce average life expectancy in the US by about a month (at most). If we rationally allocated the $10T’s the COVID-19 response is costing, we could end global warming and also increase life expectancies by way more than a month. Doing that would be political suicide.

Speaking of which, the lockdown does have one other benefit: it lets politicians time the collapse of the hospital system until after the next election. This seems to be exactly what the US is planning to do (the second peak of deaths is scheduled for late November / December). Also, making big sacrifices gives people an impression of strong leadership.

So far this strategy is working well for the politicians. Trump’s approval ratings are at an all time high, despite the fact that he repeatedly mismanaged the crisis. So are Cuomo’s, even though Newsom’s (California’s) handling of the crisis was much more decisive and successful so far.

It reminds me of the effect where you have an incompetent “firefighter” software developer that causes a string of crises, and then heroically “saves” the company over and over, gets promoted for it, and then promotes more fire fighters.


👤 cdiamand
Guesses:

1) This will be a function of how long the average person has to be out of work.

2) Honestly they seem like different beasts. An economic slowdown like this is more easily understood (imho) than the last one. This graph gives me great pause: https://www.visualcapitalist.com/worlds-money-markets-one-vi...

Look at the size of the derivatives!

3. I think this will be a function of how long we're inside. I don't think it will be good, but I'm an optimist and I think the world economy will roar back into life once we're through it. I'm already craving a few things, like going to a restaurant.

4.Print money and enact measures (some authoritarian). The big players might make some power moves.


👤 mygo
One thing to note is that even without this virus many economics still thought we would be heading into a recession this year. The underlying causes of that prediction would still exist (if not worsen) after we have hit the peak of this virus.

And the whole world needs to re-open. Our economy would still take a hit in the hypothetical event where our epidemic peaks without a vaccine or treatment (so if ~50% become infected with the live virus) yet China continues to deal with suppression efforts due to their order of magnitude larger population.


👤 generalpass
1) This is not something to be predicted in absolute fashion, because it is dependent on government action. I think the best guess can be on the immediate trend, which indicates deep depression and inflation graduating to hyperinflation, but it is important to revisit should government actions change. The scale will be record-breaking in the time frame of all civilizations that have ever existed.

2) It will be far worse.

3) Initially, it will be massive job losses, massive spending, and massive regulations. There will be an apparent bump whenever the lockdowns are relaxed. The bump will likely be smaller than expected, but any bump may initiate a strong market response. Since this is an election year, there will be no stop to the handing out of money to nearly every sector of the economy. This will be followed by increases in CPI, which will further accelerate.

4) Institutional investors and then governments around the world will begin to sell their USD reserves as CPI rate of increase goes up. When they see that there is no counter-response to selling of USD reserves, the rate of liquidation will increase, yet further increasing the rate of CPI increase, though this may be a few years out. The onset of hyperinflation in Wiemar Republic Germany was preceded by a few years of high inflation, but the actual hyper-inflationary period was less than one year and set in within a month or two. This isn't to suggest that conditions in the U.S. are identical or even similar to conditions in Germany, but to demonstrate that hyperinflation onset is far more rapid than most realize.

As a side note, many people are not aware of the concept of Cantillon effects (including most of the popular Austrians and monetarists), which economists use to describe how money flows through an economy. In effect, newly created money does not instantly flow throughout the economy, and in many cases may only flow in very narrow sectors. For example, the bulk of money created over the last decade remained in non-consumer sectors and thus minimally impacted CPI. Further, even within something such as CPI, things may fall precipitously in price, such as airline tickets and gasoline, while other things experience dramatic increases, such as eggs and bread.

I observe there to be a handwavey treatment of anyone discussing inflation. I find across popular personalities, social media, and various forum comments that inflation is some relic of the past, but the only evidence provided is the lack of CPI increase in recent years, which cannot be held up as relevant given the current government activity is very different as it includes creation of money likely to flow directly into the consumer sectors while there is a forced reduction in production (i.e., yet more dollars chasing yet fewer products). Also, I'm not that great on the technical explanations, but I know that the way the QE was performed it created a very high demand for dollars, sending the USD very high. But the velocity of M2 was also very high, and that is largely what has been fueling the apparent boom, but I admit I'm a poor source for these more technical aspects.


👤 bluedays
Yes.

👤 sleepysysadmin
Recession was here long before the virus. Recession is by definition 2 quarters of negative gdp growth.

https://tradingeconomics.com/saudi-arabia/gdp-growth

Saudi arabia has been in recession all of 2019. Russia has nothing to do with why they arent cutting production.

https://tradingeconomics.com/mexico/gdp-growth

Mexico as well. All of 2019.

https://tradingeconomics.com/japan/gdp-growth

Japan technically hasn't joined the recession game but there's no chance they don't announce recession in May.

https://tradingeconomics.com/france/gdp-growth

France announces recession May 1st. Their martial law and banning of basic human rights will have to end.

Now comes the big question; how much debt is the world governments putting on? Canada's private debt to GDP: https://tradingeconomics.com/canada/private-debt-to-gdp 266% debt is insanity.

https://tradingeconomics.com/canada/households-debt-to-incom...

Debt to income >100% means you cant pay your bills. Canada is above 170%. Canada cant take on any new debt. Bank of Canada has been writing papers on how the debt level is so tremendously high that we could never take an economic slowdown. That's certainly here due to the virus.

So the better question is not that it's a recession. Recession was already happening; it's certainty. The better question is if it's a depression.

US unemployment numbers are out. It's peak great depression numbers; though this is solely due to virus. Mind you also, this great depression number is France's status quo numbers.

There's also an analysis to be done, one of the unique things about depressions vs recessions is social tensions. Right before depressions, there's always an unusual amount of social tensions. Which if you're reading this site or just watching what's going on with world politics. That's certainly unusual. This may be a depression. Which yes, this will be worse than 2008 if that's the case.

The bigger issue with these problems. How much quantitative easing is happening? How much money is being printed to stem the crash. Unprecedented amounts of money is coming to the markets. The fed is buying so many bonds right now that they are artificially keeping the crash from happening. The bond market is about to explode. The fed cant keep this up. They haven't paid back the $4 trillion from the financial crisis.

https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/bst_recenttren...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_debt_of_the_United_St...

Eventually they money tree dies OR you have to print so much money to balance the books that your people become tremendously poorer. Japan is already at 250% debt to gdp. USA is around 100%. China has done this multiple times over the last 10 years. Greece was around 200% when they stopped reporting their debt a couple years ago. Good for them, they are down to around 15% unemployment in Greece. Disaster.

The house of cards aka debt will come calling soon. Everyone exclaims 'china owns all the debt' that's the wrong way to think about it. The debt is owned by Pensioners or more specifically pension funds. Boomers are retiring over the next 10 years. The worker shortage of 2030 just got much less severe because the coronavirus is killing off boomers; but the inflation is coming. That money will be spread around and be spent by the unemployed. This will cause inflation to go along with this recession/depression.

What will the governments do?

There will be 2 things primarily. Bankruptcy and decreasing of managerialism. This is because we are a post-communism and post-capitalism world now. The new world order is the tech revolution. Google's freemium model has unlocked and/or broken the world. Bastions of capitalism/communism will go to war with tech revolution. France will probably lead the fight and lose horribly because of it. USA will start this battle years from now.

Want to know what the future looks like? Google https://rework.withgoogle.com/


👤 blacksqr
You best start believing in recessions.

You're in one.