A significant decline in activity spread across the economy, lasting longer than a few months. It is visible in industrial production, employment, real income, and wholesale-retail trade.
news.firstdata.com/glossary.cfm
A significant decline in economic activity. In the US, recession is approximately defined as two successive quarters of falling GDP, as judged by NBER. A recession in one country may be caused by, or itself cause, recession in another country with which it trades.
www-personal.umich.edu/~alandear/glossary/r.html
Broadly defined, a recession is a downturn in a nation’s economic activity. If national productivity, or gross domestic product (GDP), declines for at least two consecutive quarters, it is usually considered a recession. …
www.morganstanleyindividual.com/customerservice/dictionary/Default.asp
Just to name a few.
Notice how NONE of that is in relation to the “credit crunch” or the “houseing market.”
As for the job creation, myth:
* Real After-Tax Personal Income Increased At A Strong 4.5 Percent Annual Rate In The First Quarter. Per capita, real after-tax income has risen by 10.4 percent – more than $3,000 – since President Bush took office.
* Real Wages Rose 1.3 Percent Over The 12 Months Ending In March. This is faster than the average rate of the late 1990s economy, and it means an extra $765 in the past year for the typical family with two wage earners.
* The Economy Has Now Experienced Over Five Years Of Uninterrupted Growth, Averaging 3.0 Percent A Year Since 2001.
* Since The First Quarter Of 2001, Productivity Growth Has Averaged 2.8 Percent. This is well above average productivity growth in the 1990s, 1980s, and 1970s.
* Consumer Spending Increased At A Solid 3.8 Percent Annual Rate In The First Quarter.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/05/20070504-1.html
According to http://jobsearchtech.about.com/library/weekly/aa070303.htm in 2003 the US Unemployment rate was a whopping 6.3%.
Today it is 4.8%. Given the margin of error, that could actually be as low as 0.8% one of the lowest unemployment rates in the 20th or 21st centuries.
As I said, anyone in a position of power (so they have the actual facts in front of them) who is NOT trying to get elected (so they have no motive to distort the information) and has the expertise (experience and/or schooling) is saying there is no recession at this time.
That is NOT to say that if Mrs. Clinton or Mr. Obama or Mr. McCain get elected that the current trend downward (started in 2006 after the mid-term elections and the change over of power) won’t get worse and drive us INTO a recession. It’s just saying that, according to the definition of recession, and the current statistics we are not yet IN a recession.
Thus, any campaigning about getting us OUT of a recession is hype being thrown out to dupe the masses into feeling like there is a recession.
Money Magazine just had a huge article about it. Most people (I don’t remember the exact figure, but it was more then 80%) feel good about their own finances and situation, but most people also worry about their neighbor’s situation. Why? Because they are told their neighbors are in dire straights by the media and the demagogues. Not because their neighbors are selling their homes for a loss or are suddenly driving Ford Pintos after selling their 2006 Jaguars and Bentleys.
Admittedly, this WAS the first year I took a loss in the market. My eldest’s 529B lost 1.8%. Considering everything else made 22.7-28.3% I can’t say I experienced a financial recession on a personal level either.