Is US already in a recession? If GDP falls for second quarter, one definition says we are

A key report Thursday could reveal that the nation’s economic output declined for a second straight month, meeting the informal criteria for a recession.

After dropping at an annual rate of 1.6% in the first quarter, gross domestic product – the value of all goods and services produced in the U.S. – is projected to have risen 0.5% in the three months ending In June, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

That would not be a decline, of course, but it’s not far from one. It is also just an estimate, meaning GDP easily could have fallen, and some economists reckon it did.

Amid soaring inflation and aggressive Federal Reserve interest rate hikes, some top analysts have been predicting a downturn is coming for months but few believed it started so early.

The possibility of another GDP slide raises a few questions.

Are we currently in a recession?

Most top economists say no. The benchmark of two quarters of falling GDP is just a rule of thumb. Usually, it does coincide with an official downturn, though it didn’t in the second and third quarters of 1947, Goldman Sachs says.

The National Bureau of Economic Research determines when recessions started and ended, usually months later. It defines one as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and that lasts more than a few months.”

To decide if a downturn fits that criteria, NBER looks at employment as well as indicators such as consumer income and spending, wholesale and retail sales, and industrial production.

Employment, likely the most critical gauge, has been robust, with employers adding 372,000 jobs in June, in line with average gains since March. Job gains have slowed since early this year as the U.S. gets closer to recovering all 22 million jobs lost in the pandemic. But job openings are near record levels and companies are still struggling to find workers.

Household income and spending have weakened, especially after accounting for inflation. And industrial production has been losing steam, with factory output falling in June, Wells Fargo wrote in a note to clients.

But overall, those measures are still up on a quarterly basis, not down.

Then why has GDP decreased?

Gross domestic product fell 1.6% in the first quarter mostly because of trade and inventories, two volatile parts of the economy. The nation’s trade deficit widened as U.S. consumers bought lots of imported TVs, clothing, toys and other products while American manufacturers sold far fewer goods to other countries.

That actually shows that U.S. households are in better financial shape than their counterparts overseas but it technically crimps economic growth.