Despite a key economics panel declaring that the recession ended in June 2009, congressional candidates and lawmakers insist it is still ongoing and that the nation is stuck in the 'middle' of it.
It's not "funny"...It's necessary because you can really see if the end of something has happened (or if you've merely plateaued for a month) until you can look back on it and see an actual trend. It has always been so.
There needs to be a consideration of government spending when determining whether a recession is over. The government can spend a lot of money to make the indicators show growth, but when the spending winds down and growth stops - is it double dip recession or just the same recession less the government spending to indicate otherwise.
daisypusher wrote: There needs to be a consideration of government spending when determining whether a recession is over. The government can spend a lot of money to make the indicators show growth, but when the spending winds down and growth stops - is it double dip recession or just the same recession less the government spending to indicate otherwise.
Good point. Goverment spending is considered part of GDP and if you spend twice as much as you take in, it will show increased growth.
Thomas Sowell: There are no solutions, just trade-offs.
Wow... You guys should send that to the economists who make the evaluations... I'm sure they will give it the consideration it deserves and adjust their calculations accordingly!
(Just like the folks at the WSJ and their numbers on "job creation"!)