今年7月中旬,美国的通胀率同比上涨9.1%,再次刷新40年最高水平。
美联储(Federal Reserve)的态度已经非常明确,他们将继续加息,直到通胀水平下降为止。
美联储通过收紧货币政策减低通胀,通常都会导致经济衰退。因此,过去几个月有关经济衰退的话题愈演愈烈,出现这种情况不足为奇。似乎所有人都在密切关注经济衰退问题,就连我的妻子也不例外。
她最近问我:“你如何定义什么才是经济衰退?”
要给她一个好的定义,并不像看起来那么容易。金融界的大多数人认为经济衰退是指实际GDP连续两个季度萎缩。这个简单的定义当然有道理,即便不是经济学家也能够理解。
问题是,在前三次经济衰退中,有两次并不符合这个定义。2020年的经济衰退是史上持续时间最短的一次,仅持续了两个月,而不是两个季度。在2001年短暂的经济衰退期间,实际GDP也没有连续两个季度萎缩。
这是因为对经济衰退的官方认定是来自美国国家经济研究局(National Bureau of Economic Research)的一批经济学家,他们在认定过程中除了实际GDP以外,还会使用多个指标。
美国国家经济研究局这样描述他们的商业周期监测(Business Cycle Dating)指标:
美国国家经济研究局的定义强调,经济衰退是指总体经济活动大幅减少,并且持续数月。在我们对这个定义的解读中,我们确定了三个可以相互替换的指标:深度、扩散性和持续时间。
确定经济峰谷的基础是联邦统计部门发布的一系列月度整体实际经济活动指标。其中包括扣除转移收入的个人实际收入、非农就业人数、通过家庭普查统计的就业数据、个人实际消费支出、物价变动调整后批发零售销售额和工业产值等。在这个过程中,关于哪些指标会提供信息或者这些指标在我们决策中的比重,并没有固定的规则。最近几十年,我们最重视的两个指标是扣除转移收入的个人实际收入和非农就业人数。
虽然这两个指标读起来很长,但我们将其总结为收入与就业。如果收入和就业下滑,经济产出就很有可能减少。
当前经济局势的奇怪之处在于,经济产出增长放缓,但收入和劳动力市场依旧稳健。今年第一季度的实际GDP增速下滑。第二季度很有可能会持续下滑。
尽管如此,劳动力市场却依旧坚挺。到5月底,即使将通胀考虑在内,美国家庭收入依旧创历史新高。
在新冠疫情之前,最低裁员率为1.1%。过去一年多,裁员率一直低于这个水平:
而出现这种情况的同时,辞职率却远高于新冠疫情之前的水平:
有数百万人对自己的财务状况或找到新工作的能力足够自信,愿意辞掉当前的工作。而员工被裁员的比率却是历史最低水平。这些都是劳动力市场健康的标志。
失业率依旧只有3.6%。美国经济在今年第一季度新增160万个就业岗位。第二季度增加了110万个就业岗位。
我从这些数据中看不出经济衰退的迹象。
现在,随着美联储加息和通胀居高不下,未来几个月,个人收入可能减少,失业率可能上升。
但我们也越来越有可能看到在这些指标依旧坚挺的时候,实际GDP萎缩。如果出现这种情况,有些人可能就会陷入恐慌。有人希望对经济衰退的预测是正确的。金融行业的从业者自然感到悲观。有人认为经济系统被非法操纵。有人只是希望世界毁灭。
事实上,如果实际GDP连续两个季度下降,但美国国家经济研究局并未官方认定经济衰退,这对大多数的普通人来说并不重要。政策分析者、宏观经济分析师和像我这样的市场分析师认为这种情况很有趣,所以会有所关注,但对普通人来说,真正重要的是个人的经济状况。
俗话说得好,当你的邻居失业时就是经济衰退,当你自己失业时就是经济萧条。
如果你在未来几个月被解雇,一些经济学家们如何评价经济状况就都将变得无所谓。你会从情感和财务上有切身感受。失业无论发生在经济周期的哪个时期,都是个人的经济衰退。
即使我们按照经济衰退的官方定义来理解,如果你可以保住工作,能够继续储蓄,并且避免在受冲击的经济领域内就业,这样你个人就不会感觉到经济衰退。
失业率、通胀率、个人平均收入、储蓄率和其他经济数据,确实可以帮助理解总体经济趋势。
但没有任何个人或家庭能够代表这些平均数据。我们每个人都有自己独特的偏好、消费习惯、财务状况和生活环境。
争论经济衰退的定义可能有些吹毛求疵,但我只是希望大家为未来几个月可能出现的一种奇怪的经济状况做好准备:有人认为我们陷入了经济衰退,但有人却极力反驳这种观点。
让自己为可能更加离奇的经济状况做好准备。(财富中文网)
本文作者的个人投资组合或里萨兹财富管理公司(Ritholtz Wealth Management)管理的投资组合中可能目前持有、一直持有或未来可能持有本文提及的个别证券。
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
今年7月中旬,美国的通胀率同比上涨9.1%,再次刷新40年最高水平。
美联储(Federal Reserve)的态度已经非常明确,他们将继续加息,直到通胀水平下降为止。
美联储通过收紧货币政策减低通胀,通常都会导致经济衰退。因此,过去几个月有关经济衰退的话题愈演愈烈,出现这种情况不足为奇。似乎所有人都在密切关注经济衰退问题,就连我的妻子也不例外。
她最近问我:“你如何定义什么才是经济衰退?”
要给她一个好的定义,并不像看起来那么容易。金融界的大多数人认为经济衰退是指实际GDP连续两个季度萎缩。这个简单的定义当然有道理,即便不是经济学家也能够理解。
问题是,在前三次经济衰退中,有两次并不符合这个定义。2020年的经济衰退是史上持续时间最短的一次,仅持续了两个月,而不是两个季度。在2001年短暂的经济衰退期间,实际GDP也没有连续两个季度萎缩。
这是因为对经济衰退的官方认定是来自美国国家经济研究局(National Bureau of Economic Research)的一批经济学家,他们在认定过程中除了实际GDP以外,还会使用多个指标。
美国国家经济研究局这样描述他们的商业周期监测(Business Cycle Dating)指标:
美国国家经济研究局的定义强调,经济衰退是指总体经济活动大幅减少,并且持续数月。在我们对这个定义的解读中,我们确定了三个可以相互替换的指标:深度、扩散性和持续时间。
确定经济峰谷的基础是联邦统计部门发布的一系列月度整体实际经济活动指标。其中包括扣除转移收入的个人实际收入、非农就业人数、通过家庭普查统计的就业数据、个人实际消费支出、物价变动调整后批发零售销售额和工业产值等。在这个过程中,关于哪些指标会提供信息或者这些指标在我们决策中的比重,并没有固定的规则。最近几十年,我们最重视的两个指标是扣除转移收入的个人实际收入和非农就业人数。
虽然这两个指标读起来很长,但我们将其总结为收入与就业。如果收入和就业下滑,经济产出就很有可能减少。
当前经济局势的奇怪之处在于,经济产出增长放缓,但收入和劳动力市场依旧稳健。今年第一季度的实际GDP增速下滑。第二季度很有可能会持续下滑。
尽管如此,劳动力市场却依旧坚挺。到5月底,即使将通胀考虑在内,美国家庭收入依旧创历史新高。
在新冠疫情之前,最低裁员率为1.1%。过去一年多,裁员率一直低于这个水平:
而出现这种情况的同时,辞职率却远高于新冠疫情之前的水平:
有数百万人对自己的财务状况或找到新工作的能力足够自信,愿意辞掉当前的工作。而员工被裁员的比率却是历史最低水平。这些都是劳动力市场健康的标志。
失业率依旧只有3.6%。美国经济在今年第一季度新增160万个就业岗位。第二季度增加了110万个就业岗位。
我从这些数据中看不出经济衰退的迹象。
现在,随着美联储加息和通胀居高不下,未来几个月,个人收入可能减少,失业率可能上升。
但我们也越来越有可能看到在这些指标依旧坚挺的时候,实际GDP萎缩。如果出现这种情况,有些人可能就会陷入恐慌。有人希望对经济衰退的预测是正确的。金融行业的从业者自然感到悲观。有人认为经济系统被非法操纵。有人只是希望世界毁灭。
事实上,如果实际GDP连续两个季度下降,但美国国家经济研究局并未官方认定经济衰退,这对大多数的普通人来说并不重要。政策分析者、宏观经济分析师和像我这样的市场分析师认为这种情况很有趣,所以会有所关注,但对普通人来说,真正重要的是个人的经济状况。
俗话说得好,当你的邻居失业时就是经济衰退,当你自己失业时就是经济萧条。
如果你在未来几个月被解雇,一些经济学家们如何评价经济状况就都将变得无所谓。你会从情感和财务上有切身感受。失业无论发生在经济周期的哪个时期,都是个人的经济衰退。
即使我们按照经济衰退的官方定义来理解,如果你可以保住工作,能够继续储蓄,并且避免在受冲击的经济领域内就业,这样你个人就不会感觉到经济衰退。
失业率、通胀率、个人平均收入、储蓄率和其他经济数据,确实可以帮助理解总体经济趋势。
但没有任何个人或家庭能够代表这些平均数据。我们每个人都有自己独特的偏好、消费习惯、财务状况和生活环境。
争论经济衰退的定义可能有些吹毛求疵,但我只是希望大家为未来几个月可能出现的一种奇怪的经济状况做好准备:有人认为我们陷入了经济衰退,但有人却极力反驳这种观点。
让自己为可能更加离奇的经济状况做好准备。(财富中文网)
本文作者的个人投资组合或里萨兹财富管理公司(Ritholtz Wealth Management)管理的投资组合中可能目前持有、一直持有或未来可能持有本文提及的个别证券。
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
In mid-July, inflation hit yet another 40 year high at 9.1% over the past 12 months.
The Federal Reserve has made it abundantly clear that they will raise interest rates until that inflation number comes down.
It would be unusual for the inflation rate to come down from the Fed is tightening monetary policy without experiencing a recession. So it's no surprise that recession talk has heated up in the past few months. Everyone seems to be on recession watch, even my wife.
She recently asked me, "How do you even define what a recession actually is."
Giving her a good definition was harder than it sounds at first blush. Most people in the world of finance assume a recession is when real GDP contracts for two consecutive quarters. This is a simple definition that makes a lot of sense, even to those of us who aren't economists.
The problem is, this definition hasn’t been fulfilled in two out of the last three recessions. The 2020 recession was the fastest in history, lasting just two months, not two quarters. And in the brief 2001 recession real GDP didn’t contract for two quarters in a row either.
That’s because recessions are officially determined by a group of economists at the National Bureau of Economics Research (NBER) and they use a host of measures beyond real GDP to make it official.
Here’s how NBER describes their Business Cycle Dating criteria:
The NBER’s definition emphasizes that a recession involves a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months. In our interpretation of this definition, we treat the three criteria—depth, diffusion, and duration—as somewhat interchangeable.
The determination of the months of peaks and troughs is based on a range of monthly measures of aggregate real economic activity published by the federal statistical agencies. These include real personal income less transfers, nonfarm payroll employment, employment as measured by the household survey, real personal consumption expenditures, wholesale-retail sales adjusted for price changes, and industrial production. There is no fixed rule about what measures contribute information to the process or how they are weighted in our decisions. In recent decades, the two measures we have put the most weight on are real personal income less transfers and nonfarm payroll employment.
That’s a mouthful but we can basically boil it down to income and employment. If income and employment turn south, there’s a good chance economic output will be lower.
The strange thing about the current setup is output is slowing but income and the labor market are still solid. Real GDP was down in the first quarter of the year. There is a good possibility it will also be down in the second quarter.
While economic output is slowing, the labor market remains strong. U.S. households earned more than ever through the end of May, even after accounting for inflation.
Before the pandemic, the lowest layoff rate ever was 1.1%. It’s now been lower than that for more than a year:
And this is happening at a time when the quits rate is higher than at any point pre-pandemic:
Millions of people feel confident enough in their finances or ability to find a new job that they are willingly quitting their current roles. And workers are getting laid off at some of the lowest rates ever. These are signs of a healthy labor market.
The unemployment rate also remains low at just 3.6%. The U.S. economy added 1.6 million jobs in the first quarter of this year. Another 1.1 million jobs were added in the second quarter.
Those numbers don’t look recessionary to me.
Now, it’s possible personal income and unemployment data will soften in the coming months from some combination of the Fed raising interest rates and inflation remaining stubbornly high.
But it’s also increasingly likely we could see real GDP contract while these measures remain strong. And if that happens, certain people are going to lose their minds. Some people want to be right about a recession prediction. Some people in finance are pessimistic by nature. Some people think the system is rigged. Some people just want to watch the world burn.
Here’s the thing — it doesn’t really matter to most regular people if real GDP falls two quarters in a row but NBER doesn’t label it an official recession. Policy wonks, macro tourists and markets people like me who find this stuff interesting will care but the only thing that matters to normal people is their own personal economy.
There’s the old saying that a recession is when your neighbors lose their job while a depression is when you lose your job.
If you get laid off in the coming months it doesn’t matter what some council of economists says about the economy. You’re going to feel it, emotionally and financially. Losing your job is a personal recession no matter when it takes place in the economic cycle.
And even if we do go into the official definition of a recession, if you’re able to hold onto your job, keep saving money and avoid working in a segment of the economy that gets hammered, it won’t really feel like a recession to you personally.
Unemployment rates, inflation rates, personal income averages, savings rates and all kinds of other economic data can do a decent job of helping understand trends in the economy in the aggregate.
Yet no individual or household is representative of those averages. We all have our own unique preferences, spending habits, finances and circumstances.
It may seem like splitting hairs to argue about the definition of a recession but I just want to prepare you for a potentially bizarre economic scenario in the months ahead where some people will argue we’re in a recession while others will refute that idea vigorously.
Prepare yourself for the economy to get even weirder.
Certain securities mentioned in the article may be currently held, have been held, or may be held in the future in the author’s personal portfolio or a portfolio managed by Ritholtz Wealth Management.