FEOS wrote:
Turquoise wrote:
FEOS wrote:
Recession is the entire economy, not individual industries.
Well, what I mean is, we've discussed the concept before that how the economy is doing depends on your perspective. I'm saying most people would say we're in a recession. People in the oil industry and military contractors are less likely to say that because they are doing well.
As I said, perception is 9/10 of reality for most of the public.
Nay, I believe it is pretty much taken as a fact that we are now in the late-beginnings of the recession.
Quick cite to wiki:
Wiki wrote:
Since 2007, there had been speculation of a possible recession starting in late 2007 or early 2008. The United States housing market correction (a consequence of United States housing bubble) and subprime mortgage crisis had significantly contributed to anticipation of a possible recession.
While some economists were confident about a recession[27], others were not as easily convinced.[28] While some believed that the current slowdown would at best be a mild and brief recession,[29] there was always an anticipation that the economy may start recovering in the later part of 2008.[30]
The 2008 performance of the U.S. economy is difficult to predict due to the declining house prices and the subprime crisis, the full impact of which is still unclear.
U.S. employers shed 63,000 jobs in February 2008, the most in five years, supporting the view that the U.S. is falling into a recession. [31]. NBER's president, Harvard University economist Martin Feldstein, recently said on March 14, 2008 we are in a recession, though it was not an official NBER declaration[32]. He said the nation has entered a recession that could be the worst since World War II. The economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month predicted the GDP growth will slow to 0.1 percent in January to March.
A TrimTabs report on April 1, 2008 suggested a possible ending of recession based on treasury withholding data in very near future[33].
Martin Feldstein, head of NBER said on March 7, 2007: I think that December/January was the peak and that we have been sliding into recession ever since then. I think it could go on longer last two recessions (which) lasted eight months peak to trough".[34]. However former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan said on April 6, 2008 that "There is more than a 50 percent chance the United States could go into recession." However Anatole Kaletsky has argued that recession unlikely if US economy gets through next two crucial months[35].
On April 29, 2008, several US states are declared by Moody’s to be in a recession, they are as follows: Rhode Island, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Florida, Tennessee, California, Nevada and Arizona. [36]
The US Economy grew in the first quarter by 0.6%, meaning that the US does not meet the classical definition of a recession and the Commerce Department says the US is "stuck in a rut". However a number of economists still believe the economy is in a recession.
Further reading:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_crisis_of_2008Even further reading:
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2 … ssion.htmlAnd a bit more:
http://money.cnn.com/2008/01/23/news/ec … 2008012315
Last edited by Thorax (2008-06-07 16:41:51)