Fed Declares Depression And Recovery On The Same Day

 | Dec 15, 2016 12:49AM ET

Last December, the Federal Reserve confirmed that it thought its monetary task was nearing completion but under conditions that’s its own data showed were nothing like recovery. In simple terms, they declared recovery and recession simultaneously on the exact same day. In orthodox economics, that isn’t actually impossible, though we have to define both terms. The factual basis for each element was first that the FOMC voted to raise the federal funds even though, second, one of the primary economic statistics in the mainstream catalog, industrial production, with a history predating even the 1920 Depression, turned negative for the first time this “cycle.”

A negative result for IP is relatively rare, typically observed only during past recessions. The data has been revised during the intervening year, now suggesting that the contraction and overall weakness actually began sooner than last December. For their next trick, in a repeat of last year, the FOMC again on the same day votes for another rate hike while the Federal Reserve staff reports its IP statistic that now leaves no doubt there is “something” drastically wrong with the US economy.

The depth of the sustained contraction is not the primary element of it; it is, rather, the length and that even after 15 months straight shows no signs of changing. That is what should be concerning for people beyond policymakers (they have their own rationale, which I’ll get to later), as 15 minus signs in a row is exceedingly rarer still.

The series for industrial production holds estimates all the way back to January 1919. In the almost 100 years of data, 1,175 monthly entries, contraction spanning unbroken across 15 months has happened only nine times, including the latest outburst. The NBER defines 17 completed business cycles during that century, meaning that nine officially declared recessions didn’t even produce that length of contraction for IP.