When the economy experiences a sharp economic downturn, credit spreads widen and project financing costs for firms rise as funding sources begin to dry up. The economy experiences a lengthy recovery, with unemployment rates slow to return to "full employment" levels. We develop a model that displays these features. It relies on an interaction between labor search frictions and firm-level moral hazard that is accentuated during recessions. The model is capable of addressing the "Shimer puzzle," with labor market variables exhibiting significantly more volatility on average as a result of the heightened moral hazard concerns during these episodes that significantly deepen and prolong periods of high unemployment, as vacancy postings fall dramatically and the job-finding rate declines. Our mechanism is also found to induce internal shock propagation causing the peak response of output, unemployment, and wages to occur with a several quarter delay relative to a model without such frictions. Many other labor market variables also show slower recovery-their return to preshock level occurs at a slower pace for a number of periods after the peak response.