The Intelligence from The Economist

Growing pains: a recession in recessions

21 snips
Dec 23, 2025
Callum Williams, a senior economics writer at The Economist, discusses the surprising risks of a prolonged absence of recessions and how constant growth can lead to 'zombie' firms. Andrew Palmer, a work world commentator, evaluates the trustworthiness of online reviews and shares insights on distinguishing reliable sources. Lastly, John Fasman, a culture correspondent, takes listeners on a tour of Baphoni Poultry Farm, revealing the challenges of turkey farming and the hard labor behind holiday meals.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Hidden Costs Of Endless Growth

  • Long stretches without recessions create hidden costs like misallocation and financial risk.
  • Callum Williams explains that continuous growth can let zombie firms persist and inflate asset risk.
INSIGHT

Creative Destruction And Economic Fitness

  • Schumpeterian creative destruction argues recessions reallocate resources to more productive firms.
  • Williams points out that without reallocation, economies become 'flabby' with low-productivity roles like some social-media and crypto jobs.
INSIGHT

When Recessions Fail To Reallocate

  • Not every downturn yields productive reallocation; Japan's 1990s slump shows credit forbearance can hurt productivity.
  • Williams contrasts that with US COVID-era reallocations aided by fiscal support and quick adjustment.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app