U.S. Real GDP Growth Rate by Year, Compared to Inflation and Unemployment (2024)

  • US Economy

What Really Influenced U.S. Growth Through History

ByKimberly Amadeo

Updated on March 7, 2022

Reviewed by

Erika Rasure

U.S. Real GDP Growth Rate by Year, Compared to Inflation and Unemployment (1)

Reviewed byErika Rasure

Erika Rasure is globally-recognized as a leading consumer economics subject matter expert, researcher, and educator. She is a financial therapist and transformational coach, with a special interest in helping women learn how to invest.

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Fact checked by

Daniel Rathburn

U.S. Real GDP Growth Rate by Year, Compared to Inflation and Unemployment (2)

Fact checked byDaniel Rathburn

Daniel Rathburn is an associate editor at The Balance. He has over three years of experience working in print and digital media as a fact-checker and editor. Daniel holds a bachelor's degree in English and political science from Michigan State University.

In This Article

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In This Article

  • Comparing GDP Growth by Year
  • Is Fast GDP Growth Good for the Economy?
  • GDP Growth Throughout History
  • GDP, Inflation, and Unemployment by Year
  • Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

U.S. Real GDP Growth Rate by Year, Compared to Inflation and Unemployment (3)

The U.S.GDP growth rateis the percentage change in gross domestic productfrom one year to the next. The growth rate history is the bestindicatorof a nation'seconomic growthover time. It’s used to determine the effectiveness of economic policies. Voters may even use it to decide on the performance of a president or members of Congress.

Comparing GDP Growth by Year

When comparing growth by year, it's also helpful to look at the unemployment rate by yearandinflation rate by year. That tells you where you are in thebusiness cycle. Negative growth signals thecontractionphase. Arecessionand high unemployment are likely to follow. High growth must occur before unemployment recedes. That begins theexpansionphase.

For example, there was lots of expansion between 2010 and 2020. The Fed raised interest rates and the stock market hit new highs. However, then the U.S. hit a recession in February 2020. This led to high unemployment rates and a large contraction with negative GDP. As the U.S. recovered, inflation began to rise. These three factors of economic health are all intertwined.

Is Fast GDP Growth Good for the Economy?

Faster growth isn't always better growth. It must be sustainable. Economists often agree thattheideal GDP growth rateis between 2% and 3%. Growth needs to be at 3% to maintain anatural rate of unemployment. But you don't want growth to be too fast. That will create abubble, which then leads to a recession when it bursts.

GDP Growth Throughout History

The biggest annual drop in GDP growth in U.S. history occurred in 1932. The economy contracted -12.9% during the worst year of the Great Depression. The worst deflation occurred that same year. Prices fell 10.3%. And by 1933, the unemployment rate was the highest in history at 24.9%.

Note

Record GDP growth or contraction, unemployment rates, and inflation usually occur during recessions or the contraction phase of the business cycle.

The worst inflation in modern times was right after World War II. Prices rose 18.1% in 1946. That happened during the expansion phase of the business cycle.

GDP Growth, Inflation, and Unemployment by Year

The table below shows how GDP, inflation, and unemployment rates have changed each year since 1929. GDP is the annual rate and inflation is for December of that year and is the year-over-year rate. The unemployment rate is as of December that year. Unemployment rates for the years 1929 through 1947 were calculated from a different BLS source as current BLS data only goes back to 1948. You'll also find notes for events that happened each year, or which phase of the business cycle the economy was in at that year.

YearAnnual GDP GrowthInflation (December, YOY)Unemployment Rate (December)Business Cycle and Notable Events
1929N/A0.6%3.2%August peak and October market crash
1930-8.5%-6.4%8.7%Contraction
1931-6.4%-9.3%15.9%Contraction
1932-12.9%-10.3%23.6%Contraction
1933-1.2%0.8%24.9%New Deal and March trough
193410.8%1.5%21.7%Expansion
19358.9%3.0%20.1%Expansion
193612.9%1.4%16.9%Expansion
19375.1%2.9%14.3%May peak
1938-3.3%-2.8%19.0%June trough
19398.0%0%17.2%Expansion and Dust Bowl ended
19408.8%0.7%14.6%Expansion
194117.7%9.9%9.9%Expansion and WWII
194218.9%9.0%4.7%Expansion
194317.0%3.0%1.9%Expansion
19448.0%2.3%1.2%Bretton Woods
1945-1.0%2.2%1.9%February peak, recession, October trough
1946-11.6%18.1%3.9%Expansion and Fed cuts
1947-1.1%8.8%3.6%Marshall Plan and Cold War
19484.1%3.0%4.0%November peak
1949-0.6%-2.1%6.6%October trough and NATO
19508.7%5.9%4.3%Expansion and Korean War
19518.0%6.0%3.1%Expansion
19524.1%0.8%2.7%Expansion
19534.7%0.7%4.5%Korean War ended and July peak
1954-0.6%-0.7%5.0%May trough, Dow at 1929 level
19557.1%0.4%4.2%Expansion
19562.1%3.0%4.2%Expansion
19572.1%2.9%5.2%August peak
1958-0.7%1.8%6.2%April trough
19596.9%1.7%5.3%Fed raised rates
19602.6%1.4%6.6%April peak and Fed cut
19612.6%0.7%6.0%JFK spending and February trough
19626.1%1.3%5.5%Cuban Missile Crisis
19634.4%1.6%5.5%LBJ spending, Fed raised rates
19645.8%1.0%5.0%Fed raised rate
19656.5%1.9%4.0%Vietnam War, Fed raised rates
19666.6%3.5%3.8%Expansion, Fed raised rates
19672.7%3.0%3.8%Expansion
19684.9%4.7%3.4%Fed raised rates
19693.1%6.2%3.5%Nixon, Fed raised rates, December peak
19700.2%5.6%6.1%November trough, Fed cut rates
19713.3%3.3%6.0%Expansion and wage-price controls
19725.3%3.4%5.2%Expansion
19735.6%8.7%4.9%Vietnam War and gold standard ended, November peak.
1974-0.5%12.3%7.2%Stagflation, Watergate, Fed raised rates
1975-0.2%6.9%8.2%March trough, Fed cut rates
19765.4%4.9%7.8%Expansion, Fed cut rates
19774.6%6.7%6.4%Carter took office
19785.5%9.0%6.0%Fed raised rates
19793.2%13.3%6.0%Fed raised then lowered rate
1980-0.3%12.5%7.2%Januart peak, Fed raised rates, July trough
19812.5%8.9%8.5%Reagan, Expansion peaked in July
1982-1.8%3.8%10.8%November trough, Fed cut rates
19834.6%3.8%8.3%Reagan spent on defense
19847.2%3.9%7.3%Expansion
19854.2%3.8%7.0%Expansion
19863.5%1.1%6.6%Tax cuts
19873.5%4.4%5.7%Black Monday
19884.2%4.4%5.3%Expansion, Fed raised rates
19893.7%4.6%5.4%S&L Crisis
19901.9%6.1%6.3%July peak
1991-0.1%3.1%7.3%March trough
19923.5%2.9%7.4%Expansion, Fed cut rates
19932.8%2.7%6.5%Expansion
19944.0%2.7%5.5%Expansion
19952.7%2.5%5.6%Fed raised rates
19963.8%3.3%5.4%Fed cut rate
19974.4%1.7%4.7%Fed raised rates
19984.5%1.6%4.4%LTCM crisis
19994.8%2.7%4.0%Expansion
20004.1%3.4%3.9%Expansion
20011.0%1.6%5.7%March peak, 9/11, and November trough
20021.7%2.4%6.0%Expansion
20032.8%1.9%5.7%JGTRRA
20043.9%3.3%5.4%Expansion
20053.5%3.4%4.9%Expansion
20062.8%2.5%4.4%Expansion
20072.0%4.1%5.0%December peak
20080.1%0.1%7.3%Contraction and Financial Crisis
2009-2.6%2.7%9.9%June trough
20102.7%1.5%9.3%Obamacare and Dodd-Frank
20111.5%3.0%8.5%Expansion
20122.3%1.7%7.9%Expansion
20131.8%1.5%6.7%Expansion
20142.3%0.8%5.6%Expansion
20152.7%0.7%5.0%Strong dollar, low oil prices, Fed raised rates steadily
20161.7%2.1%4.7%Presidential race
20172.3%2.1%4.1%Weakening dollar boosted growth
20182.9%1.9%3.9%Trump tax plan boosted growth
20192.3%2.3%3.6%Goldilocks economy
2020-3.4%1.4%6.7%February peak before recession
20215.7%7.0%3.9%Recovery, resettling after new strains of coronavirus

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Why is GDP a good measure of economic growth?

In general, a steadily growing GDP is a good indicator of the health of a country's economy. When GDP is growing, companies are producing more, which allows them to hire more people. These additional jobs keep more money flowing through the economy, thus improving the overall economic outlook. Likewise, a GDP that's growing too quickly or too slowly—or even contracting—can indicate other economic problems.

Why does inflation increase with GDP growth?

The relationship between GDP growth and inflation is one that has long vexed economists. There isn't a consensus about how much growth the economy can handle before it results in inflation, but most economists agree that, at some point, growth can accelerate too quickly, resulting in runaway inflation. That's why the Federal Reserve uses interest rates to slow down growth when it gets too aggressive.

How does unemployment affect GDP?

Although there are exceptions, economists generally accept Okun's Law, which states that a quickly rising GDP will lead to a drop in unemployment, a major decline in GDP will result in an increase in unemployment, and a relatively stable GDP will result in little change to the unemployment rate.

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Sources

The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.

  1. S&P Global. "Dow Jones Industrial Average."

  2. National Bureau of Economic Research. "Business Cycle Dating Committee Announcement July 19, 2021."

  3. Bureau of Economic Analysis. “National Income and Product Accounts Tables: Table 1.1.1 GDP Growth.” Select "Modify," select "Annual," select "1930 A" as "First Year."

  4. Bureau of Labor Statistics. “Consumer Price Index Database, All Urban Consumers.” Select “U.S. City Average, All items,”Retrieve Data, Select “More Formatting Options,” Select “12-Month Percent Change."

  5. Stanford University. "The Facts of Economic Growth," Page 3.

  6. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Top Picks," Select “Unemployment Rate,” Retrieve Data, ”Select 1929-2020,” Select “Go.”

  7. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Labor Force, Employment, and Unemployment, 1929-39: Estimating Methods." Page 2, Table 1.

  8. International Monetary Fund. "Gross Domestic Product: An Economy’s All."

  9. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. "Why Does the Fed Care About Inflation?"

  10. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. "GDP Growth, the Unemployment Rate, and Okun’s Law."

Part Of

Understanding GDP

  • What Is Gross Domestic Product (GDP)?1 of 9
  • Components of GDP Explained2 of 9
  • U.S. GDP by Year, Compared to Recessions and Events3 of 9
  • Real GDP, How to Calculate It, Comparison to Nominal4 of 9
  • What Is GDP Per Capita?5 of 9
  • Real GDP Per Capita, How to Calculate It, and Data Since 19476 of 9
  • What Is the U.S. GDP Growth Rate?7 of 9
  • What Is Economic Growth?8 of 9
  • U.S. Real GDP Growth Rate by Year Compared to Inflation and Unemployment9 of 9
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