Dude, Where's My Recession?
Out: Recession. In: Expansion. That's my quick take on today's first-quarter gross domestic product number, which showed that the economy grew 0.6 percent in the first quarter. Now that's not a robust number by any means, but it's not so bad given all the worry out there that the economy is headed off a cliff. Before you declare a recession, as many economic pundits have, shouldn't the economy, well, actually recess a bit—if only for a quarter?
Remember, the shorthand rule for declaring a recession is back-to-back quarters of negative growth. The semiofficial recession judge, the National Bureau of Economic Research, has a more complex formula, but I am not sure it has ever declared a recession when the economy never actually shrank. And consider this: The Intrade online betting market now says there is a meager 25 percent chance of a recession—using the negative-back-to-back-quarters definition—in 2008.
Plus, don't forget that there's a lag before all that monetary stimulus from the Fed kicks in. (It's not too late to do nothing today, Bernanke!) Who knows—those rebate checks might even help a bit, though we're probably not getting much bang for the nearly $200 billion we're spending.
As a movie buff, I keep looking for the right cinematic analogy for the American economy. Try this one: It's like the Terminator. Not the Schwarzenegger one—the other one, the Terminator from the second film. You could empty a shotgun—or in this case, an imploding housing market, credit crunch, and high oil prices—into that morphing metal dude, and before you know it, the thing's all healed and chasing you again.
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Reader Comments
I like the movie analogy
The "T2" economy: it's like the original T1 economy ("I'll be back") because it always comes back, but the T2 is able to absorb the hits better and fix itself quicker than the original.
Silly premise
cooked numbers along with double cooked numbers on unemployment.Been in RE. for 40 years , you ain't seen nothin yet.Takes a long time (you call it lag) for RE to crash, so stop the silly stock market thought patterns and get ready for many .6 quarters of cooked numbers.How can there be an expansion with RE equity declining every year , not gonna happen , it's going to be a bumpy ride...
NBER
Not only has the NBER never declared a recession without the economy shrinking, they have never declared a recession without two quarters of negative GDP. Not necessarily consecutively, as the rule of thumb goes, but there have always been at least two negative quarters connected to an NBER recession.
However, whether the NBER declares a recession or not, it's pretty clear that the economy sucks right now.
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