America needs to put recession-fighting on autopilot

How the government could help ward off crises before they happen

A graph and a switch.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Theerakit/iStock, Roman Bykhalets/iStock, kornkun/iStock)

Last Friday's disappointing jobs report left just about everyone nervously glancing around to see if a recession is looming. But whether a downturn hits in the next few months or the next few years, one thing is certain: America is grossly unprepared. More than that, our policymakers are ignoring one of the most sensible and straightforward ways to prevent recessions — and to make sure that, when they do happen, they're as shallow and brief as possible.

I'm talking about automatic stabilizers. These are spending programs that run on autopilot, reacting to conditions like income levels and employment levels as they change, expanding whenever the economy slumps, and thus stimulating us back to health. SNAP (a.k.a. food stamps), unemployment insurance, and Medicaid all fit the bill: When a household's income falls below a certain level, they automatically become eligible for SNAP and Medicaid. Government spending goes out the door to cover them, no new law from Congress needed. Same thing for unemployment insurance when a person loses their job. If we want to recession-proof our economy, we should be expanding these programs or creating new ones so that safety-net spending ramps up whenever the economy slows down, without Congress passing a new law every time.

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Jeff Spross

Jeff Spross was the economics and business correspondent at TheWeek.com. He was previously a reporter at ThinkProgress.