Why Isn't The U.S. Officially In A Recession?

 | Aug 02, 2022 06:38PM ET

The US has technically entered a recession in the second quarter of 2022 as the economy contracted 0.9% year over year, following a 1.6% decline in the first quarter. However, the official body tasked with making a call on whether the economy is in a recession has yet to declare that the US is in an economic downturn.h2 A Slowdown In Private Spending/h2

In the April-June period, GDP shrank for the second quarter straight. The US Department of Commerce attributed to the drag in private inventory and residential fixed investments, reduced federal government spending, and a drop in non-residential fixed investment.

General merchandise stores and motor vehicle dealers in the US eased their inventory build-up in the recent quarter, leading to a drop in private inventory investment. At the same time, the government’s move to cut down on its non-defense spending resulted in lower federal government spending.

These factors offset the increase in exports and personal consumption spending in the second quarter. While the second consecutive drop in GDP reached the widely accepted definition of a recession, the US, according to a body that gets to say when the country is already in one, has yet to make a call.

h2 Who Makes The Call?/h2

The National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonprofit organization founded in 1920, serves as the “official” arbiter of whether the US, the world’s largest economy, is in a recession or not. The NBER’s Business Cycle Dating Committee consists of eight members who are among the country’s top economists working at leading academic institutions.

The committee keeps track of the dates of peaks and troughs that frame economic recessions and expansions. Its decision is based on a wider set of indicators, including income, spending, and employment.

The Joe Biden said,

“It’s no surprise that the economy is slowing down.”

The economy came off of last year’s historic growth, regaining all the private sector jobs lost during the COVID-10 pandemic.

“But even as we face historic global challenges, we are on the right path, and we will come through this transition stronger and more secure,”

Biden said in a statement last week following the release of the quarterly GDP report.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell also remains optimistic about the economy, telling reporters at a recent press conference,

“I do not think the US is currently in a recession because too many areas of the economy are performing too well.”

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