Showing posts with label Recession Indicator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recession Indicator. Show all posts

27 July 2022

Chances of a Recession Later This Year or Early Next Year

 

Does it look like we get a recession later this year or early next year?

Only if you look at the Treasury inversion and economic results data and assume the Fed can perform a miracle that they have never done before, or that they will stimulate a fourth bubble through a massive inflationary policy error.

So its a miracle of policy precision, or most likely the Fed will be providing an economic recession in response to their bubblenomic excesses, as usual.

But given the track record of these jokers a fourth bubble is not out of the question. And I fear it would come with grave consequences.


21 May 2018

Decline to Negative In Personal Median Income Growth Precedes Economic Recessions - Recession Warning Now?


The data seems to indicate that a sharp decline in Real Median Personal Income to a negative growth year over year seems to precede an economic recession.

As for the causes of this correlation, one might well wonder.   But given that the US economy tends to be consumption driven, a sharp decline in real median personal income would seem to be something worth considering.

And one might well ask, are we headed for that same experience today, with a broad slowing in aggregate demand because of a decline in growth of median income?

I am not happy that this is based on annual data.  I would have been monthly, or at least quarterly. 

Below this I also include a chart that shows the growth of average hourly wages of non-supervisory workers.  I looked this up because of a minor debate going on between two popular media economists, Baker and Krugman, about the start of wage stagnation, whether it has been since 1980, or the last recession.

As always it seems, I was not able to find my exact desired data, which would have been median real wage growth in non-supervisory, non-salaried workers.   But the case for 1980 as the start of stagnation seems rather good.

But I did stumble upon this phenomenon of declining personal income preceding recessions, which seems much more important, if true.  So it was not a complete waste of time to pursue this quibble over whether we are at full employment now, and why wage growth is not yet appearing.