Explainer-How do you define a recession? Let us count the ways
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[June 18, 2022] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Whether the United States, the world's largest economy, will
slip into a recession is a growing concern for chief executives, the
Federal Reserve, and the administration of President Joe Biden.
But defining what a recession is, and predicting when it will happen, is
not straight-forward.
WHAT IS A RECESSION?
A recession is often defined as two consecutive quarters where the
economy shrinks instead of grows, but with plenty of caveats.
The COVID-19 pandemic recession only lasted two months, for example, the
shortest cycle on record.
WHO DETERMINES RECESSION?
In the United States the official call is made by a panel of economists
convened by the National Bureau of Economic Research, sometimes as much
as a year or more after the fact.
The private non-profit research group defines recession as a
"significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the
economy and that lasts more than a few months."
While each of three criteria - depth, diffusion, and duration — "needs
to be met individually to some degree, extreme conditions revealed by
one criterion may partially offset weaker indications from another," the
group says.
WHAT IS THE SAHM RULE?
There are other approaches to calling a recession, including the
employment-based Sahm rule, named after former Fed economist Claudia
Sahm, who created it to flag the onset of recession more quickly than
official arbiters do.
The rule states when the 3-month rolling average of the unemployment
rate rises a half a percentage point from its low, the economy has
entered a recession.
WHAT IS A 'SHALLOW RECESSION?'
Recessions come in many shapes. They can be deep but brief, like the
pandemic recession which lasted two months but deleted 22 million jobs
and sent the unemployment rate briefly to 14.7%.
They can be deep and scarring, like the Great Recession or the
Depression, taking a decade or longer for the labor market to revive.
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Flags are seen outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New
York City, where markets roiled after Russia continues to attack
Ukraine, in New York, U.S., February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs
Economists and analysts have recently flagged the possibility that the United
States is headed into a "shallow recession," one in which the economy contracts
only marginally, and for a limited time.
WHAT IS A GROWTH RECESSION? Another idea being discussed by some economists and
analysts is the notion of a "growth recession," in which economic growth slows
below the U.S. long-term growth trend of 1.5 to 2 percentage points per year,
but does not contract, while unemployment increases. This is the scenario mapped
out by some Fed policymakers in their forecasts this week.
WHAT'S THE LINK BETWEEN INVERTED YIELD CURVE AND RECESSION?
When the market rate for short-term borrowing exceeds that for a longer-term
loan, it is known as an inverted yield curve, and seen as a harbinger of a
recession.
Historically at least some part of the yield curve has inverted before every
recent recession, and alarm bells started ringing when that happened on June 13.
Research from the Federal Reserve argues that the most widely followed
yield-curve measure, the gap between yields on the two-year and the 10-year
Treasury notes, doesn't actually predict much of anything; a better gauge is the
gap between three-month and 18-month rates, which has not inverted.
WHAT IS THE BEAR MARKET LINK TO RECESSION?
The recent steep stock sell-off has also set off alarms. Nine of 12 bear
markets, or drops of more than 20%, that have occurred since 1948 have been
accompanied by recessions, according to investment research firm CFRA.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider; Editing by Heather Timmons and
Nick Zieminski)
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