• Posted on Thursday, January 24, 2008
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Recession fear abounds, but evidence is anecdotal at best

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Tracking U.S. recessions

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WASHINGTON — Are we in a recession?

Everyone from nervous workers who fear that they could lose their jobs to Wall Street whizzes who've experienced wilder dives and surges than a theme-park ride are worried that the U.S. economy could tank.

President Bush, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Peter Orszag, the director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, don't think we're in a recession, and they don't think we're approaching one.

"Our economy is structurally sound, but it is dealing with short-term disruptions in the housing market and the impact of higher energy prices. These challenges are slowing growth," Bush said from the White House on Thursday. "Yet Americans can also be confident about our long-term outlook. Our economy is strong, it is dynamic and it is resilient."

But in the Swiss Alpine resort city of Davos, the respected head of Mexico's central bank, Guillermo Ortiz, said this week that he thinks the U.S. economy has slipped into a recession.

Mexico is a de facto production arm for many U.S. corporations, and slowdowns in assembly plants there would point to falling U.S. demand for consumer goods.

"The U.S. economy is already in recession, and its effects could last for a (long) time," said Ortiz, from the sidelines of the World Economic Forum, held annually in Davos.

Who's right?

The answer depends partly on which definition you choose. The textbook definition for a recession is two consecutive quarters — six months — of negative economic growth. Under this definition, the earliest we'd know is late June or July.

The National Bureau of Economic Research, which provides the dates for recessions after the fact, works off a broader definition. It defines recession as a "significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP (gross domestic product), real income, employment, industrial production and wholesale-retail sales."

By that definition, mixed economic indicators now point to a slowdown, but not recession.

Economic growth is slowing, but the weak dollar has boosted exports and that's helped offset some of the drag from the housing slump.

Recession worries shifted into high gear when December employment numbers showed an anemic gain of 18,000 jobs. Weekly job data since then suggest a more robust hiring picture.

Industrial production has been sluggish, but the National Association of Manufacturers on Wednesday issued an economic forecast that predicted 1.4 percent growth during the first half of 2008. That's not recession. The downturn in the housing and automotive sectors hit manufacturing jobs last year, but the rest of the manufacturing sector grew by 18,000 jobs. NAM projects manufacturing employment to drop by 90,000 jobs this year.

Housing continues to be the biggest weight on the U.S. economy. The National Association of Realtors reported Thursday that sales of single-family homes fell 13 percent in 2007, the second biggest decline ever.

The more troubling news was that median prices for single-family homes fell 1.8 percent last year to $217,800. It was the first time since the realtors group began keeping records that home prices have lost ground and it's believed to be the first time that's happened since the Great Depression. New-home construction also fell last year, by almost 25 percent.

The good news is that many economists believe the bottom must be somewhere in sight after a nearly two-year housing slump.

McClatchy Newspapers 2008
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ECONOMY IN TURMOIL

economy in turmoil

Read McClatchy coverage of the economic pain Americans around the country are feeling, from Florida to California to Alaska.

ECONOMY QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

 hall & pugh

McClatchy correspondents Kevin G. Hall (left) and Tony Pugh are available to answer your questions about the economic meltdown at home and abroad, and what's in store for ordinary Americans.

Q&A: THE HOUSING CRISIS

Mark Zandi, the chief economist for Moody's Economy.com, is took questions from McClatchy readers about the nation's deep housing crisis. His book, "Financial Shock," offers a 360-degree look at what caused the crisis, what mistakes were made and who made them. It offers a way forward to prevent future crises.

Q&A: TERMINAL CHAOS

U.S. air travel these days is about as fun as a trip to the dentist. Departure delays are rampant, bags often miss the flight you've caught and rising jet fuel prices have major airlines charging to check a bag. In his new book "Terminal Chaos," George Donohue, a professor and former high-level Federal Aviation Administration official, explains why our system of air travel is broken and what can be done to fix it. Read the responses.

Q&A: THE THREE TRILLION DOLLAR WAR

For two weeks, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard professor Linda Bilmes, authors of "The Three Trillion Dollar War," fielded questions about the cost of the Iraq war and its impact on the U.S. economy. They're not taking new questions, but they're still posting answers to ones they've already received. Read their responses.

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