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- <text id=90TT3241>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: Is The Country In A Depression?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 112
- Is the Country in a Depression?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>When the economy slumps, so does the national psyche
- </p>
- <p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT--Reported by Kathleen Brady/New York
- </p>
- <p> As unemployment climbs, inflation rises and the economy
- lurches toward an expected slump, economists issue dire warnings
- about "recessionary psychology"--a pattern of cuts in consumer
- spending and investment that tends to feed the downward spiral
- and make any economic falloff even deeper. But there is another,
- more profound kind of recessionary psychology. It is measured
- by psychic indicators rather than economic ones. As people
- change their behavior in the face of layoffs, cutbacks or a
- sudden drop in net worth, more and more Americans find
- themselves clinically depressed.
- </p>
- <p> This year the symptoms are most apparent in those parts of
- the country--New England, the mid-Atlantic states, parts of
- the Midwest--that have suffered the greatest economic decline.
- In the suburbs of Detroit, where sagging auto sales have fanned
- recession fears, psychiatric referrals from a local counseling
- service are up nearly 20% over the past six months. Business is
- also booming at the Massachusetts Psychological Association
- referral service, where out-of-work lawyers and former bond
- salesmen seek help in coping with stress, anxiety disorders and
- panic attacks. Drugstores in the region report brisk sales in
- Tagamet (for ulcers), Prozac (depression) and Halcion
- (insomnia).
- </p>
- <p> During the Great Depression of the 1930s, people jumped out
- of windows, joined left-wing movements or sought escape through
- watching Fred Astaire movies. In the 1970s, they squabbled in
- gas lines and drifted into the low-level despondency that Jimmy
- Carter called "our national malaise." The current economic slump--not yet officially recognized as a recession--threatens to
- be particularly divisive because of the increasing disparity
- between haves and have-nots. "In the 1930s, everyone was in the
- same boat and knew other people were suffering too," observes
- Val Farmer, a clinical psychologist and syndicated columnist
- from South Dakota. "The current problems affect people so
- unevenly that they don't pull together."
- </p>
- <p> As always, some people drown their troubles in alcohol.
- Others turn to chocolate bars, ice-cream cones or platters of
- rich food. In the words of Columbia University psychiatrist Jack
- Gorman, "When things are lousy anyway, who cares about
- cholesterol?" Many individuals become violent and abusive,
- usually to those closest at hand. At the House of Ruth, a
- Washington shelter for battered women, deputy director Dan Byrne
- reports that the men who are doing the hitting are talking more
- and more about the economic pressures they feel.
- </p>
- <p> In the inner cities, the situation can quickly turn ugly,
- polarizing along racial lines, as when black customers organized
- an angry boycott of Korean greengrocers in New York City this
- year. The city's commission on human rights reported a 7%
- increase in the incidence of so-called bias crimes this year.
- That trend is reflected in the rise in racial assaults recorded
- by Klanwatch, which monitors such crimes across the U.S. for the
- Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery. "The national
- recession has created general unrest," says director Danny
- Welch, "especially among white males vying for jobs they didn't
- use to have to compete for."
- </p>
- <p> Psychologists say economic losses are no different from
- other kinds of losses. Homeowners have more than capital tied up
- in their homes; when their assets decline in a real estate
- slump, so does their sense of self-worth. People who have lost
- their jobs experience anger, denial and a need to grieve, just
- as they would if they had lost a loved one. This is especially
- true of the solid, stable employee who has worked in one place
- for many years. "That person has a mental contract," says Maury
- Elvekrog, a management psychologist in Birmingham, Mich. "Even
- though no one told him that he would be taken care of, that's
- what he expected."
- </p>
- <p> The emotional effects can spill over to all parts of a
- person's life. In times of crisis, says Columbia's Gorman,
- someone who tends toward pessimism will not worry about just the
- economy but will also fret about getting sick or wonder whether
- war will break out in the Middle East. Barbara McCuen at the
- University of Nebraska at Omaha warns that there may be
- psychological fallout for the family. "The tensions come out at
- home," she says. "A five-year-old may not understand why there
- won't be a big Christmas."
- </p>
- <p> Attitude more than actual events determines how individuals
- respond to a financial setback. Joseph Cassius, a clinical
- psychologist from Memphis, catalogs people's reactions according
- to their personality type. A person whose early family life was
- marked by chaotic dislocations such as divorce, he says, will
- see a recession as a catastrophic event that could destroy him.
- Individuals with dependent personalities who lose their jobs may
- feel abandoned and show their frustration by, for instance,
- voting against the party in power. Those who usually feel in
- control of every situation may be especially stunned by
- unexpected economic setbacks. "The perfectionist will think all
- his achievements have been to no avail," says Cassius. "The
- masochist, by contrast, will now be happy again."
- </p>
- <p> Some people are calling the current slump the yuppie
- recession because investment bankers were among the first to
- lose their jobs. Psychiatrists report that Wall Street patients
- feel guilty about the easy money they made in the booming 1980s
- and are convinced they are being punished for earlier good
- fortune. These people are busy lowering their financial sights,
- and as the downturn rolls across the U.S., the rest of the
- country may have to do the same. That is just what the
- economists fear. The trouble with recessionary psychology, they
- say, is that deflated expectations become self-fulfilling
- prophecies, for both the individual and the economy as a whole.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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