Interested in Your Own Personally Branded Magazine? Click Here!

Want to customize this content for your business?

Learn More

Categories

  • Home
  • Decor
  • Real Estate
  • Life & Culture
  • Food & Recipes
  • Holiday & Entertaining

  • Printables
  • Videos


General

  • About the Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Copyright
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Careers


Editorial

  • Editorial Calendar
  • Issue Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Pitch an Idea

American Lifestyle Magazine Logo
  • Home
  • Decor
  • Real Estate
  • Life & Culture
  • Food & Recipes
  • Holiday & Entertaining
  • Search
  • Follow
  • 0 Heart
  • |
  • Food & Recipes Categories
    • All Recipes (794)
    • Appetizers (147)
    • Breakfast (66)
    • Cooking Tips (38)
    • Desserts (241)
    • Dinner (255)
    • Drinks (59)
    • Gluten Free (9)
    • Healthy (77)
    • Lunch (19)
    • Quick & Easy (67)
    • Vegan (39)
    • Vegetarian (61)
Dinner | Apr 27, 2026

Pasta with Hamptons Summer Vegetables

  • Holiday & Entertaining Categories
    • Celebrate (5)
    • Christmas (111)
    • Easter (17)
    • Entertaining (57)
    • Fall (67)
    • Father’s Day (5)
    • Halloween (34)
    • Hanukkah (26)
    • July 4th (31)
    • Mother’s Day (7)
    • New Year’s (24)
    • Spring (32)
    • St. Patrick's Day (14)
    • Summer (54)
    • Thanksgiving (55)
    • Valentine’s Day (8)
    • Winter (84)
Outdoors & Gardening | May 4, 2026

Grill Prep Made Easy

  • Decor Categories
    • Crafts & DIY Projects (288)
    • Curb Appeal (5)
    • Decorate (96)
    • Interior Design (118)
Interior Design | Apr 21, 2026

A Soothing Office-Space Redesign

Decor | Mar 16, 2026

Revamping Second-Story Sanctuaries

Home | Mar 9, 2026

Wallpaper 101

  • Real Estate Categories
    • Buying & Selling (172)
    • Home Trends (16)
    • Staging (19)
    • Your First House (30)
Moving truck
Buying & Selling | Mar 25, 2025

The Proper Way to Unpack

Historic home
Buying & Selling | Aug 15, 2024

Living in History

Flower
Buying & Selling | Jul 31, 2024

Four Ways to Increase Your Home’s Value

  • Life & Culture Categories
    • Editorial (358)
    • Family & Pets (233)
    • Finances (33)
    • Health (170)
    • Travel (327)
Travel | Apr 13, 2026

A Century of Amusements

Life & Culture | Mar 23, 2026

Vintage Games with a Modern Twist

Life & Culture | Mar 16, 2026

Picturesque Pella

  • Home Categories
    • Cleaning (47)
    • Organizing (56)
    • Home Improvement (95)
    • Outdoors & Gardening (80)
Outdoors & Gardening | May 4, 2026

Grill Prep Made Easy

Outdoors & Gardening | Apr 16, 2026

Refresh Your Recreational Space for Spring

Home | Mar 9, 2026

Wallpaper 101

Follow us on social media today!

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn

The Difference Between a Recession and a Housing Crash

Buying & Selling | By Christy Murdock Edgar | 0 Likes
SHARE
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn More

For many homeowners, the word “recession” is practically synonymous with the 2008 mortgage meltdown. It brings to mind neighborhoods filled with “For Sale signs” and a massive foreclosure crisis. However, this is an artificial association based on recent history. If we take the long view, recessions are generally no more likely to create significant housing downturns than any other movement in the economy.

searching stocks on computer

What is a recession?

In general, an economic recession is defined as a period of economic decline with a fall in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in two consecutive quarters. This is as contrasted with a depression, which is a recession that goes on for years and can involve an extreme, double-digit GDP decline.

newspaper with coronavirus headline

Historical trends: recession vs. housing cecline

Economic downturns can, of course, result in market factors that stress the housing market, from increased unemployment to decreased demand as families decide to stay put and ride out the financial decline. However, historically there is little positive correlation between recessions and a decline in housing prices.

Looking back over the last forty years, there have been five separate recessions: 1980, 1981-82, 1990-91, 2001, and 2007-09. They have generally occurred at times of major political upheaval and at a fairly predictable pace.

Looking at housing prices during the same time periods, you see the following changes:

  • 1980: -2.6%
  • 1981-82: -5.8%
  • 1990-91: -6.7%
  • 2001: +4.4%
  • 2007-09: -16.7%

While small declines in housing prices generally occur during a recession, with the exception of 2001, in most cases the declines are so small that they can be easily explained as part of the normal pattern of market fluctuations that are occurring all of the time.

Breaking these numbers down even further by month, the 1990-91 recession, which includes the largest drop in home prices until 2007-09, occurred during a nine month period from July to March, traditionally the slowest time of year in most markets.

In contrast to the perceived association between recession and home prices, the 2001 recession saw home prices jump by 4.4% during the same period, even with the simultaneous upheaval experienced in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

white house with for sale sign

How was 2008 different?

For a variety of reasons, the recession of 2007-2009 was fundamentally different, primarily because it was centered in real estate-related markets. Because the underlying causes of the downturn were based in the housing sector, home prices were disproportionately affected.

Here are a few of the factors that gave the 2008 recession such an outsized impact on home prices:

  • Pricing bubbles in many major markets: Because home prices in a number of markets were artificially high, the market correction, when it came, was larger than normal. While different markets experienced different degrees of change, in some cases post-Recession prices were a more realistic measure of actual value.
  • Lack of equity in many homes: Most of those overpriced homes had hefty mortgages that had been approved with little or no money down. That means that when the economy started going downhill, homeowners were unable to draw on existing equity to cushion the blow.
  • Sub-prime lending requirements: In addition, many of those loans had been granted to less-qualified applicants who were more at risk for job loss and financial reversals. As the economy worsened, its effects were seen in an escalating cascade of foreclosures among these homeowners.
  • Under-capitalized lenders: Because banks had been handing out so much money and going all-in on risky investments, many lacked the funds necessary to weather the economic storm that was unleashed. As homeowners stopped paying mortgages and banks began having to process foreclosures, the credit market dried up, making it hard for even qualified borrowers to obtain a mortgage—and for the housing market to recover.

Regulations introduced since 2008 have gone a long way to ensuring that banks are properly capitalized, and government entities like the Federal Reserve, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac have been proactive this time in ensuring that if and when a recession manifests itself, the tools are in place to cushion the blow to the housing market and provide for a quick recovery.

19805 Views

This article is tagged in:

EconomyHome BuyingReal EstateRecession

Related Posts

Historic home
Real Estate | Aug 15, 2024

Living in History

Fountain in backyard
Decor | Jun 24, 2024

Tips for a Facade Upgrade

Couple packing moving boxes with dog
Real Estate | Apr 26, 2024

Essential Moving Tips

Real Estate | May 15, 2023

America’s Best Cities

Real Estate | Sep 23, 2022

How to Shop for a Home Loan

Popular Posts

Life & Culture | Feb 17, 2020

Trash vs. Recycle: Do You Know When to Trash it?

spring-cleaning-countdown
Home | Mar 23, 2021

Spring-Cleaning Countdown

Make Your Own Seed Paper
Decor | Mar 17, 2016

Make Your Own Seed Paper

Real Estate | Dec 14, 2017

House Selling Checklist

home office with white furniture
Life & Culture | Mar 30, 2020

Here’s How to Work From Home Effectively


You may also like:

Health | Feb 17, 2020

Trash vs. Recycle: Do You Know When to Trash it?

spring-cleaning-countdown
Cleaning | Mar 23, 2021

Spring-Cleaning Countdown

Make Your Own Seed Paper
Crafts & DIY Projects | Mar 17, 2016

Make Your Own Seed Paper

Buying & Selling | Dec 14, 2017

House Selling Checklist

home office with white furniture
Health | Mar 30, 2020

Here’s How to Work From Home Effectively

for sale sign
Buying & Selling | Jan 18, 2021

10 Questions Everyone Selling a Home Should Be Asking

decorating-basics
Interior Design | Jun 9, 2020

These Tips Are Your North Star For Home Decorating

Share on Social Media

Our mission is to deliver entertainment that inspires and motivates our readers, encouraging them to follow their passions as they explore new horizons.

© 2026 American Lifestyle Magazine

General
  • About the Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Copyright
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Careers
Editorial
  • Editorial Calendar
  • Issue Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Pitch an Idea
Categories
  • Home
  • Decor
  • Real Estate
  • Life & Culture
  • Food & Recipes
  • Holiday & Entertaining
Follow Us
Facebook Pinterest Instagram Youtube

Customize this content for your business!

Learn More

,