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by Karl E. Case
September/October 1991
The economy of Massachusetts is in a deep recession.
What makes the downturn all the more painful is that
it comes on the heels of a period of unprecedented prosperity.
What happened? How could a state go from having the
lowest unemployment rate in the United States to having
the second highest in the space of less than four years?
Some claim that the current recession is a natural
and inevitable downturn after a prolonged expansion
and that the region soon will return to a reasonable
growth path. Others claim that the state is likely to
experience a prolonged period of decline. The thesis
of this article is that the dramatic real estate cycle,
which began with a housing price boom between 1984 and
1987, was an important element that not only contributed
to but also very significantly amplified the economic
fortunes and misfortunes of the Commonwealth and the
region.
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