U.S economy contracts again, fueling recession fears
Audio By Vocalize
The US economy shrank again in the second
quarter, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said Thursday.
Gross domestic product, a wide-ranging
measure of economic activity, fell by 0.9 percent on an annualized basis from
April through June.
That decline marks a key symbolic threshold
for the most commonly used — albeit unofficial — definition of a recession as
two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth.
The hotly anticipated data release has taken
on outsized significance as investors, policymakers and ordinary Americans seek
some measure of clarity in the current muddled economic environment.
The negative dip shown in Thursday's first
read on second-quarter GDP activity -- data that will be revised two more times
-- was driven mostly by a decline in inventory levels.
Businesses in recent quarters have tried to
replenish stockpiles drawn down during the pandemic -- and in trying to adjust
for supply chain upheaval, they've found themselves overstocked at a time when
consumers have pulled back on some purchases.
Investments made in inventory during the
second quarter were therefore lower than they were in the first quarter.
"The general takeaway is the economy is
slowing, and that's what the [Federal Reserve] wants," said Ryan Sweet,
who leads real-time economics at Moody's Analytics.
Although Thursday's initial estimate marked a
sharp drop from the 6.7 percent expansion the economy underwent in the second
quarter of 2021, the White House has been adamant that the world's largest
economy, despite being buffeted by decades-high inflation and a cascade of
supply shocks, remains fundamentally sound.
The administration even took the unusual step
of publishing an explainer of sorts, maintaining that two consecutive quarters
of economic contraction does not, in and of itself, constitute a recession.
The White House posted a blog entry last week
saying that in addition to GDP, data pertaining to the labor market, corporate
and personal spending, production and incomes all go into the official
determination of a recession.
The nonprofit National Bureau of Economic
Research is the official arbiter of recessions, and it is unlikely to render a
verdict any time soon.
The group's Business Cycle Dating Committee
typically weighs a plethora of statistics over a period of months before making
a determination.
Economists say the biggest reason it would be
premature to call a recession based on Thursday's numbers is that the data can
and probably will change.
Subsequent revisions to first-quarter GDP
figures, for instance, changed from an initial drop of 1.4 percent to 1.6
percent, and Thursday's numbers are just the first of three estimates.
Adjustments are the norm rather than the
exception, since the Commerce Department repeatedly refines its calculations as
new information becomes available.
About a third of initial GDP releases rely on
statistical extrapolations and assumptions in the absence of hard data,
according to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
"These are typically single points in
time, snapshots. It's almost like looking at a balance sheet versus an income
statement over a quarter," said Eric Freedman, chief investment officer at
US Bank Wealth Management.
"New information can emerge," he
said, and when it does, those variables change the outcome.
Sometimes, the differences between estimates
are significant. Revisions to GDP in the fourth quarter of 2008, for example,
revealed that economic activity actually plunged by an annualized -8.4 percent,
indicating a much deeper recession than the initial estimate of -3.8 percent
suggested.
Right now, the biggest smudge on the lens
preventing economists from getting a clear picture is a buildup of inventories
and a corresponding imbalance in the country's usual trade flows.
"What you're starting to see and hear a
lot about right now is what's happening with inventories... Inventories are an
issue, both in terms of the mix of inventory retailers are holding as well as
the amount," Freedman said.
A rush to load up on goods during the
previous two quarters was a miscalculation for companies like big-box stores.
Walmart and Target have both told investors they expect to cut prices in order
to move products.
But from a macroeconomic perspective, some
experts think those missteps imply that the economy in the first quarter wasn't
as anemic as the drop in GDP might otherwise imply.
Anna Rathbun, chief investment officer at
CBIZ Investment Advisory Services, suggested that the 1.6 percent contraction
in first-quarter GDP was artificially low because businesses started
stockpiling inventory in the final quarter of last year.
This pulled forward economic activity that
otherwise would have taken place in the early months of this year, she said.
"The fourth quarter, to me, was bloated
a little bit," Rathbun said.
"Everyone was just hoarding
things."
In addition, when companies import more and
export less, that dynamic weighs on GDP, said Jacob Kirkegaard, a senior fellow
at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
"It's the value of production within the
physical borders of the United States, so therefore if you have,
hypothetically, exports that are flat and higher imports, then your trade
deficit is rising. In that sense, a rising trade deficit subtracts from
GDP," he said, particularly when combined with wild swings in prices.
"When you have highly fluctuating
commodity prices, and especially in periods of high inflation in general, then
it can be misleading and, in my opinion, paint an overly negative view of where
the economy is," Kirkegaard said.
"We have to be careful with saying the
GDP number is the absolutely valid metric for economic well-being in the
country."
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on
Wednesday reiterated the importance of considering various key economic
measures as the central bank determines future rate moves.
However, Powell said the first read of a GDP
report should be taken "with a grain of salt."


Leave a Comment