Are We Already In Recession?

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

If we stop counting zombies, we’re already in recession.

How shocked would you be if it was announced that the U.S. had just entered a recession, that is, a period in which gross domestic product (GDP) declines (when adjusted for inflation) for two or more quarters?

Would you really be surprised to discover that the eight-year long “recovery,” the weakest on record, had finally rolled over into recession?

Anyone with even a passing acquaintance with the statistical pulse of the real-world economy knows the numbers are softening.

— Auto/light truck sales: either down or off a cliff, depending on how much lipstick has been applied to the pig.

— Restaurant/dining sales: down.

— Tax receipts: down.

— Retail sales: flat, stagnant or down, depending on the sector and if the numbers have been adjusted for inflation/loss of purchasing power.

— Rents in high-rent regions: finally softening after years of relentless increases.

— Consumer debt: hitting new highs.

— Corporate profits: stripped of gimmickry, stagnant or down.

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Those who study recessions know that employment often tops out just before the economy rolls over into recession. Strong employment is the last gasp of an expansionary phase.

There are several fundamental reasons why we might be in a recession that manages to avoid the official definition. The starting place is the artificial nature of the eight-year long “recovery” since 2009; in the view of many observers, the economy never really exited the 2008-09 recession.

Those in this camp look at fundamentals, not the stock market, which has been held up as a proxy for the real economy, when in fact it is only a proxy for financialization and official selection of the market as the (easily manipulated) signifier of economic vitality and prosperity.

Recessions are supposed to clear the financial deadwood–failed enterprises are liquidated, borrowers who are in default are bankrupted, and bad debt is wiped off the books via the acceptance of losses.

The story of the “recovery” 2009-2017 is that these clear-the-deadwood dynamics were suppressed. Rather than accept painful losses, the authorities saved bankrupt banks and encouraged a Zombie Economy in which zombie borrowers and enterprises are kept alive via low-cost loans and the masking of default via financial trickery: student loans that are non-performing, for example, aren’t labeled “in default;” they’re placed in a zombie category of forgiveness without actual writedowns of the debt.

If households can no longer afford to pay interest on new debt, the “solution” in a Zombie Economy is to offer them 0% loans. If corporations need to roll over debt, the Zombie Economy “solution” is the companies sell near-zero yield bonds to credulous investors.

If households can no longer afford to buy homes, the the Zombie Economy “solution” is for federal agencies such as FHA to offer near-zero down payment mortgages and guarantee private lenders against any loss.

When these agencies get into trouble due to the horrendous costs of encouraging uncreditworthy borrowers to take on debt that can’t afford, the “solution” is for the taxpayers to fund yet another $100 billion bail-out.

The stark reality is fulltime jobs, productivity and profits are all subpar. As I have noted many times, wages for the bottom 95% have gone nowhere since 2000 when adjusted for inflation. Households can no longer afford more debt unless it’s at near-zero rates of interest.

Fulltime employment–the bedrock of consumer spending and borrowing–has barely moved in eight years. Part-time waiters can’t afford to buy homes or new vehicles.

Wealth and income can only be generated in the real world by increases in productivity. Unfortunately for the “recovery” narrative, productivity is tanking.

Corporate profits are also going nowhere.

In essence, the “recovery” economy is a zombie economy living on great gulps of new debt that it can’t service. As sales, profits and tax receipts weaken, eventually employment weakens, too, as employers trim costs by cutting positions, hours worked, etc.

Eventually, zombie borrowers give up trying to service unpayable debts, zombie companies close their doors, and the illusion of “growth” collapses in a heap of corrupted numbers and false signifiers.

The “recovery” game will shift to massaging GDP so it ekes out .1% “growth” every quarter until Doomsday. The Zombie Economy can be kept alive indefinitely–look at Japan–but it not a healthy or vibrant or equality-opportunity economy; it is a sick-unto-death economy of fake narratives (growth is permanent) and fake statistics (we’ve revised previous numbers so that, surprise, GDP is still positive.)

If we stop counting zombies, we’re already in recession.

 

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15 Comments
kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
August 14, 2017 8:58 am

“Eventually, ……………….. zombie companies close their doors”

Except for the Banksters; the Gov’t has their back.

Dutchman
Dutchman
August 14, 2017 9:02 am

I never knew we were out the recession than started 2005-2008.

wholy1
wholy1
August 14, 2017 9:37 am

The “GreatER Depression”, genesis 2007-09? Cuz, like “most” everything else “in this world” with its dimension of “time” . . . it’s a P-R-O-C-E-S-S. The “state of economy” stikes me to increasingly like stagflation and the inception of a “technocratic feudalism”.

underfire
underfire
August 14, 2017 10:13 am

What would be the term to describe the economy if 10 trillion or so of printed/borrowed money hadn’t been injected into the system in the last eight or nine years? Total economic and social collapse comes to mind.

kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
  underfire
August 14, 2017 11:12 am

underfire……….
BS….it was injected into the Banksters Accounts, not the economy.

underfire
underfire
  kokoda - the most deplorable
August 14, 2017 11:34 am

Some yes, but much went to govt. employee salaries, govt. contractors, ebt cards, aid to states, the war machine etc. Rough figures, one third of federal spending is borrowed.

Diogenes
Diogenes
August 14, 2017 10:38 am

I agree with Dutchman. The recession never ended. They just used smoke and mirrors to distort the statistics.

Card802
Card802
August 14, 2017 10:42 am

Agreed again, we never left the last recession. QE 1,2,3, Twist, Buy back programs, ZERP, changing how GDP is calculated, etc etc, all normal stuff in a recovery.

unit472
unit472
August 14, 2017 11:49 am

I’m not a big fan of econometrics but it seems obvious a method of calculating real GDP that would exclude Central Bank monetary expansion and fiscal deficit spending needs to be developed.

The basic problem is obvious. If I make $20,000 per year but spend $30,000 using my credit card I did not increase my ‘income’ by 50%. In fact, I must at some point, reduce my future spending by $10,000 plus whatever interest I must pay on that $10,000 loan. Even if I bought a new tool that allowed me to make, in real terms, $30,000 the next year some portion of the additional income must be used to service my debt.

rhs jr
rhs jr
August 14, 2017 12:21 pm

We are in a worsening recession (just like most of the world) but the ZOG has the luxury of printing dollars that can buy what they want from foreign countries and those fiat dollars have really piled up in some foreign safes. One day dollars will start to seriously deflate, and then they will fly out of the safes and get spent causing hyper-inflation. TPTB will just accelerate their “money” making to provide for their FSA voters; and their MSM will tell White and Asian workers that they’re still privileged so just tighten up, shut up and accept The Mark of The Beast until we get around to your Final Solution.

Hondo
Hondo
August 14, 2017 1:10 pm

I wish I had a nicer personality, but I just don’t. Even more beneficial would be if any of you worthless, time clock slaved, ignorant bastards actually had a functioning brain. Here is an example: Recently I paid $22,000 for 3.72 acres of land in South Texas. Everyone told me how stupid this was, while they were out spending $50,000 for new pickups and cars, or purchasing way overpriced, overtaxed shitholes they call homes. My little parcel of land provides me with home grown food, living quarters, an a place to walk and relax, while their purchases have to be taxed, titled, licensed, and insured, all while losing value everyday, especially the vehicles. The taxes on my property amount to less than $9.00 annually because of agricultural exemption. If you one cell animals could ever get it through you thick skulls that the “economy” is nothing more and nothing less than a figment of your imagination then you might actually start to have some contentment in life. Notice I did not say happiness, I said contentment. If you money grubbing retards cannot grow your own food, then how on earth are you going to be content and secure in a world where the venders are dependent on the spenders and vis a vis to render enough calories for you to sustain life. Dependency upon each other is an addiction: Get the hell off of the economic merry go round and see what a real life is all about. If you haven’t watched seed sprout, tomatoes ripen, picked squash, gotten a fresh farm egg from under a hen, got laid on a bale of straw, or walked naked in the middle of the night on your own property then what life do you have. You are nothing more than a rubber stamped puppet just existing another day in a world designed to destroy you with your own consent. Now if that is not shitface shameless, stand in front of the mirror and tell me what the hell is…pussywhipped cowards, one and all. thanks

Annie
Annie
  Hondo
August 14, 2017 1:35 pm

Hondo, apparently you don’t realize who you’re talking to here. This is TBP. You say you just did this “recently”. Puts you 10 to 20 years of learning and improvements behind many of us.

Hondo
Hondo
  Annie
August 14, 2017 6:18 pm

Wasn’t my first piece of property, thank you much. Just quit squalling about the economy, it doesn’t exist. thanks

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
August 14, 2017 1:48 pm

Nope, DEPRESSION. And this one will make the first one look like Nirvana.

overthecliff
overthecliff
August 14, 2017 2:26 pm

Dutch is right. We never got out of the 2007 recession.