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Economy
The Recession That Didn't Happen
2023-06-24
[Intelligencer] The U.S. economy was supposed to be shrinking by now. Last fall, Bank of America predicted that America would be bleeding 175,000 jobs a month throughout the first quarter of this year. And the consensus outlook among investors, CEOs, and analysts was much the same: 2023 would be a year of recession, as rising interest rates choked off investment and consumer spending, forcing employers to slash payrolls.

But reports of the economy’s death have been greatly exaggerated. Last month, U.S. firms added 339,000 jobs. That’s a bigger monthly gain than the U.S. ever posted in 2019, a banner year for the American economy. Unemployment is still hovering around 3.5 percent, a half-century low. For the moment, labor market conditions are the opposite of recessionary.

And there’s little reason to think that this will change anytime soon.

When economic forecasters envision rising interest rates throwing the economy into recession, they typically picture the housing market cratering first. This is because housing is exceptionally sensitive to credit conditions. Home buyers generally take on mortgages to purchase their homes, and as mortgage rates soar, would-be buyers decide to stick with renting for a while longer. As demand cools, builders cut back on new developments, putting construction workers out of jobs. That in turn reduces the purchasing power of such workers, thereby slightly cooling demand for goods and services.

Indeed, when Forbes predicted in February that the U.S. economy was poised to rapidly weaken, it based this assessment on "a precipitous drop in housing permits."

But this week, new data revealed that both permits and housing starts rebounded sharply in May with the latter posting the biggest monthly gain since 2016. New home construction jumped 21.7 percent last month to a 1.63 million-unit annualized rate, while multifamily housing starts grew by 27 percent. Permits, a proxy for future construction, rose by 5.2 percent.
Posted by:Besoeker

#17   If you buy government statistics, I have a bridge to sell to you.

It will be interesting to see what the usual restatement of last month’s numbers looks like next month — whether, in fact, the ongoing recession as usually defined turns out to have been continuing, after all.
Posted by: trailing wife   2023-06-24 12:45  

#16  Fed Bank of Atlanta has a habit of doing that with CPI.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-06-24 12:28  

#15  they'll just redefine "Recession"

...and they'll quietly 'revise' quarterly GDP stats when they think no one's looking.
Posted by: Raj   2023-06-24 11:57  

#14  Local food assistance program has doubled its customers, if that's what they mean.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2023-06-24 11:50  

#13  Dittos to #4 & #6


Welcome to the New Speak dictionary and math.

Posted by: AlanC   2023-06-24 10:50  

#12  Kind of like Clinton taking credit for the good economy due to Reagan's tax cuts.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-06-24 10:40  

#11  Recessions only occur during Republican administrations. So the next downturn can occur in 2024 at the earliest.
Posted by: Airandee   2023-06-24 10:36  

#10  What #4 P2K said. Selective or creative statistics are at play here.
Posted by: JohnQC   2023-06-24 09:42  

#9  Hehe, indeed, Frank G, indeed.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-06-24 08:55  

#8  P.S. - Re: student debt. I admit when I saw these statistics that I was a bit surprised.

Breakdown of student loans by age group:

< 25 - 6.4%
35-49 - 38.7%
50+ - 24.5%


And all that will affect retail and consumer discretionary spending. The snowball will be getting bigger soon enough.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-06-24 08:54  

#7  /\ Number 6, spot on !
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-06-24 08:52  

#6  they'll just redefine "Recession"
Posted by: Frank G   2023-06-24 08:51  

#5  I am amazed that pundits out there talk as if we are not [yet] in a recession.

I'm not sure where they live or from which planet they hail, but it baffles me. Lending is drying up; housing and rental prices (in general, specific locations are different) are beginning to come down; and commercial real estate is an absolute mess.

And all of those people with student loans (payments begin in a few months), what did they do with the money not going to paying down the debt? Well, like good Americans, they spent it, much like they did with their stimulus checks (a Trump-Biden production there).

Credit card debt is through the roof.

And as I drive along one road here, every now and then I'll see yet another business shuttered for good.

No, no recession here. No, sir-ee.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-06-24 08:49  

#4  If you buy government statistics, I have a bridge to sell to you.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2023-06-24 08:43  

#3  When the federal government is deficit spending an additional $1.5 trillion/year, you have to screw up extra special to fall into a recession.
Posted by: Enver Slager8035   2023-06-24 08:05  

#2  ...If we somehow avoid a recession, no one will be happier than I - but the Fat Lady ain't sung just yet...

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2023-06-24 07:52  

#1  If our nation's economy can survive the current administration, just think what it might do when the SOB's are finally gone !
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-06-24 07:44  

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