Sovereign: Moreso than a fall in a statistical estimate (GDP), a recession IS a fall in output.
LeRoy: In REAL output, to be more precise; though NBER actually looks at a lot of other variables, such as employment. The standard 'textbook' definition of two consecutive quarters of declining real GDP is actually kind of a junior high school definition. As we have been commenting here in Moneybox, it is abundantly clear that real GDP per capita is certainly declining; and that is at least a proxy variable for the nebulous 'standard of living'. I don't think we are in disagreement that the standard of living is falling for most 'average' Americans. For some, it is falling at an alarming rate; which is why you hear stories (which are TRUE) of Americans selling off their family heirlooms so they can put gas in their car tanks.
Sovereign:
Of late, output of vehicles AND houses has fallen.
LeRoy: No doubt. The auto industry and the construction industry, especially, are the leading indicators of this recession. Men, in particular, are losing jobs in large numbers; women, being more concentrated in the education and healthcare sectors, are doing a bit better on the jobs front, though their pay is very stagnant. Some of them are probably getting tired of supporting the 'loafing-around-at-home' men in their lives. Expect a big uptick in the divorce rate.
Sovereign:
GDP
is adjusted moronically for inflation by applying ONE number -- the
deflator -- rather than by subdividing the economy into 10-15 sectors
and deflating each of them by its applicable inflation rate. Doing that
would adjust each sector by an inflation rate that is far more
difficult to fake.
LeRoy: Why 10-15? Why not 28-33? Isn't your number of 'sectors' kind of arbitrary?
Sovereign:
To begin with, also, GDP before inflation is estimated and lied about to make the incumbent govt look good.
LeRoy: True, but no one really thinks this began before Richard Nixon started finagling with the numbers in about, well, 1973. And it didn't really reach serious proportions until 1983, when they started using 'Owner's Equivalent Rent' to hide the rapid increase in the cost of housing. They started messing with the unemployment numbers a bit earlier, during the Kennedy administration.
Sovereign:
Even
if GDP before inflation is said to have grown, it is merely in dollars.
Quality is not estimated.
LeRoy: Well, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) does try to estimate quality. The funny thing is, the quality of goods always seems to IMPROVE, in their opinion; they never seem to record any declines in quality. You and I know that is bogus, but...
Sovereign:
Nor is the content's difficulty. A dollar of
manure is considered equal to a dollar of uranium.
LeRoy: Now this, I do not think is a valid complaint on your part. A dollar of manure no doubt weighs a great deal more than a dollar of uranium. More to the point, though, if someone is spending a dollar on manure, they must think it has a dollar of value to them (as fertilizer, one hopes, and not as food; see my recent reply to Tundra here in Moneybox!); otherwise, they would not be spending a dollar on it.
Sovereign:
To validly
"call" a recession requires estimating the physical volume of output
and its quality. USA goods fall behind Germany's and China's on the
world market, so you can assume USA quality has fallen.
LeRoy: I think the quality of many of our goods has likely fallen. On the other hand, I think the quality of HP notebook computers has probably risen in the last few years. It's a mixed bag.
Sovereign:
Inside
USA, a lot of "GDP" is services. These have fallen drastically in
quality, as demonstrated by things like auto and electronics repairs,
as well as the plethora of rotten vegetables in supermarkets, along
with hormoned meats and milk, plus chemicalized breads. You really
don't want products or services from American workers any more. They
are likely to be on the telephone or planning vacations at work, or
doing medical claims. Manicures, however, can be trusted and are done
by Koreans. And medical care is OK if by Americans, but inordinately
expensive (now around $45 a minute and 16% of GDP "on the books").
LeRoy: OK. I run into knuckle-headed cashiers at 7-11 almost every week, who have never learned how to make change, like the nincompoop who thought that two dimes was equal to forty cents. Blame that on our educational system, which I have complained about ad nauseum. But vegetables, meat, milk, and bread are goods, not services. Non-durable goods, to be precise, and maybe they're leaving those vegetables out there in the produce aisle a little too long, if they're turning rotten. I get better quality vegetables out here, which I suppose is a benefit of living in a very agricultural area, as northern Colorado is and Manhattan is not.