Explainer-U.S. GDP shrinks in second quarter. Is the nation in recession?

FILE PHOTO: Cranes and containers are seen at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California in this aerial image · Reuters

By Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy shrank for a second straight quarter, data released on Thursday showed, amplifying an ongoing debate over whether the country is, or will soon be, in recession.

The 0.9% annualized rate of decline in U.S. gross domestic product in the second quarter followed a 1.6% drop in the first quarter.

The reading means the world's largest economy now fits an often-cited rule of thumb for a recession.

Although the "two-quarter" definition is handy for analysts, journalists and the general public, it is not how economists think about business cycles.

That's partly because GDP is a broad measure that can be influenced by factors like government spending or international trade. And the first read on it from the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis is often revised quite substantially, and should - as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell noted on Wednesday - be taken with a grain of salt.

Instead, economists focus on data on jobs, industrial production, spending and incomes - and job growth in particular has remained strong so far. U.S. employers hired more workers than expected in June and raised wages. But there are growing indications of cooling in the job market, with new claims for jobless benefits, for instance, edging up in recent weeks.

GRAPHIC: U.S. private employment https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/gkvlgerkopb/chart.png

On the downside, personal consumption data for May, released earlier this month, showed spending and disposable income dropped on an inflation-adjusted basis. That sparked a host of gloomy forecasts for June, data for which is due out on Friday, and increasing speculation that a downturn is coming soon, if it is not here already.

The GDP report on Thursday showed consumer spending grew just 1% last quarter, down sharply from 1.8% in the prior period. Residential investment plunged 14%.

And things are likely to get worse, economists say. Inflation is running at more than three times the Fed's 2% target, and the central bank on Wednesday raised its policy rate by three-quarters of a percentage point and signaled more rate hikes are to come.

Those higher borrowing costs are expected to slow hiring and investment, dragging further on already slowing economic growth.

But whether a recession is already here is unclear, and the weeks ahead are likely to include pitched debate about the real health of the economy.

ARE RECESSIONS ALWAYS TWO STRAIGHT QUARTERS OF FALLING GDP?

Usually, but not always.