When GDP declines for multiple quarters in a row, it raises concerns over a possible recession.
An unofficial way to measure recessions is two consecutive quarters of negative real gross domestic product (GDP) growth. Real gross domestic product (GDP) is an official inflation-adjusted version of GDP calculated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Annual percent change in real GDP shows how much higher or lower it is relative to the previous year. The higher that real GDP is, the larger absolute increase required to achieve a certain growth rate, and vice versa.
However, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), this is not an official designation of recession. But determining when the economy is in a recession is more complicated than looking at a single data set such as GDP.
Determining when the economy is in a recession is up to a committee of experts at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). The committee officially designates recessions by monitoring a variety of economic indicators, including GDP. It also uses payroll employment, personal income, industrial production, and retail sales in the effort.
The NBER (National Bureau of Economic Research) defines recession:
A recession is a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales. A recession begins just after the economy reaches a peak of activity and ends as the economy reaches its trough.
The official designation from NBER of when a recession starts or ends doesn’t happen until months after the recession is over. In other words, NBER looks backward, not at the present moment.
- Two consecutive negative real GDP quarters is commonly believed to be the definition of a recession. This is a misperception.
- Despite a negative U.S. GDP growth reading in Q1 and Q2 of calendar year 2022, many of the indicators the NBER monitors when evaluating the state of the economy remain healthy.
- Coming into 2022, inflation was expected to moderate. Partially due to unforeseen events (including a war), inflation is likely to stick around longer.
- The Fed has fully achieved the maximum employment half of its mandate, resulting in a sole focus on achieving price stability (cooling inflation).
- Financial conditions have gone from record easy territory to nearly neutral in a matter of months.
- Although conditions are not yet restrictive, the Federal Reserve’s dramatic move risks tipping the economy into a recession in the coming quarters.
Historically, there are 12 variables that have foreshadowed a looming recession. A few of those variables include retail sales, wage growth, commodities, ISM new orders, credit spreads and money supply.
During a recession, it’s essential for investors to continue to invest.
What recessions have looked like in the past
The US has gone through 34 recessions since 1857. Thirteen of those recessions occurred after World War II.
From 1857 to 2020, recessions lasted an average of 17 months. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the average length of a recession decreased to 14 months.
The longest recession lasted 65 months, from October 1873 to March 1879. The shortest recession was the most recent, lasting two months from February 2020 to April 2020.
Investing during a recession
You, as an investor, should have an investing process and, and once decided, stick with it to improve your returns.
References:
- https://cf-store.widencdn.net/franklintempletonprod/6/7/8/678d815d-fe9c-48b4-9dde-056a19f9653f.pdf
- https://usafacts.org/data/topics/economy/economic-indicators/gdp/annual-change-real-gdp/
- https://usafacts.org/articles/what-is-a-recession-what-have-recessions-looked-like-in-the-past/