Nine Years Of Economic Prosperity And More?

 | Aug 17, 2018 07:35AM ET

Nine years. Is it short or long? It depends on what we are talking about. In the geological time scale, it’s a blink of an eye. But in the business cycle time scale, nine years is a really long time. The current economic expansion has recently turned 9 years old, as the Great Recession ended in June 2009, according to the NBER. With 109 months of economic prosperity (as of July 2018), the current cycle is now the second longest in the U.S. history (and data traces back to the 1850s), overshadowed only by the expansion which occurred between March 1991 and March 2001.

Now, the question arises: how long can our joy last? Some people believe that because the current cycle is so old, we are on the verge of recession. We don’t agree with that. Why? We agree with Janet Yellen in one thing: expansions don’t die of old age. They end due to some external negative shocks or to aggressive Fed’s tightening. In other words, economic booms turn into busts when the central banks turn off the money tap and they hike interest rates too abruptly.

Another important point is that the current expansion is not only one of the longest, but it is also one of the slowest recovery in the U.S. history, as one can see in the chart below. The painted trend line clearly shows that the pace of economic growth has systematically declined over the years. Actually, almost every successive recovery cycle in the past three decades has been weaker than the previous one. And the current expansion has been so far the most sluggish in the post-war era.

Chart 1: U.S. real GDP growth from Q1 1948 to Q1 2018 (and its trend – red line).