Great Commodities Depression
Encyclopedia : G : GR : GRE : Great Commodities Depression
The Great Commodities Depression is the steep, general recession in commodity prices between 1980 and 2000, both in real and nominal terms. The term was first coined by Robert Solow.
For example, soft commodities such as corn were $3.69 per bushel in November, 1980; wheat $5.07 per bushel in November, 1980; while hard commodities such as copper were $3,168.96 per tonne in February, 1980; and gold $850.00 per troy ounce in January, 1980.
After nearly twenty years, corn was $1.45 in August, 2000; wheat $1.94 in August, 2000; copper $1,319 in November, 2001; and gold $255.95 in April, 2001.
A long term recession such as this is also known as a secular bear market.
See also
- Market trends
- Second Great Depression (hypothetical)
External link
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
