The economic recession isn’t due to a lack of money in the market, but because the poor have no money. Essentially, the money isn’t circulating; it’s all been stuck in the banking system, turning into deposits and low-risk assets. No matter how much money the rich have, their consumption is still limited.
On the other hand, the poor want to spend but have no money, which gradually leads to excess production capacity in the market. This causes companies to start competing in a race to the bottom, driving profits to dangerously low levels, which sets off a vicious cycle. As company profits decrease, they scale back and lay off employees, making the poor even poorer, and savings become too risky to touch.
This happens as a result of a country's weak financial system. The main reason why weak countries cannot use their resources properly is the dollar crisis and lack of proper planning. The country's factories cannot run properly due to the lack of domestic and foreign raw materials. Despite the sufficient manpower in most of the production-oriented factories of poor countries, profitable projects are not implemented due to corruption. Most of the factory owners smuggle the country's resources abroad and the number of poor people increases.
The main reason why the poor do not have money is that the rich community of the country helps the poor become poorer. Banks provide loans at high interest rates, so when they launch a production-oriented project the amount of expenditure increases compared to the income and if they fail to repay the loan on time, the amount of debt increases in the form of compound interest. All these are the results of a country's weak financial system.