Scarcely a news cycle goes by these days without Wall Street types, various economists, and the occasional journalist opining about whether the US is headed for a recession or in a recession or isn’t likely to be in a recession anytime soon.
Or whether we’re headed for a soft landing. Or a hard landing or some other sort of landing as the result of the terrible conflict in the Middle East.
Are you confused by all this blather? If so, welcome to the club.
And welcome to the world of the Business Cycle Dating Committee.
The committee, created in 1978 by the National Bureau of Economic Research, is a nongovernmental, nonpartisan organization of academic economists that rules definitively on when recessions begin or end. It operates on the basis of economics, not politics.
To avoid having to reverse itself, the committee doesn’t announce for months (or sometimes more than a year) after the fact that a recession has begun or ended. For example, it took until July 19, 2021 for the committee to announce that the economy had bottomed in April of 2020. That’s the committee’s most recent announcement.
Given this time lag, why should you care about the committee?
Because the information that it produces can help economists predict the future more accurately. And because understanding history can give you important context for helping to understand the present.
The committee generally makes its calls from four to 21 months after the fact. “There is no fixed timing rule,” James Poterba, an economics professor at MIT, president of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a business cycle committee member since 2008, told me recently. “We wait long enough so that the existence of a peak or trough is not in doubt, and until we can assign an accurate peak or trough date.”
Poterba has plenty of prominent company on the eight-person committee, which includes committee chair Robert Hall of Stanford and Christina and David Romer of the University of California at Berkley. (You can find the entire membership list here.)
Even though I’m a born skeptic, I trust the committee because unlike most of the players opining about recession, the committee is nonpartisan and noncommercial, and isn’t hungry for publicity. It also isn’t willing to offer any sort of interim opinion on our nation’s economic status.
In addition to being dispassionate and honest, the committee has the best definition of a recession that I’ve ever seen: “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and that lasts more than a few months.”