Though the economy occasionally sputtered in 2022, it has certainly been resilient — and now, in the last month of 2023, the U.S. is still not currently in a recession, according to a traditional definition.
Even with tumultuous events earlier this year, such as the failure of three U.S. banks, the nation has not tipped into recession — and certainly not a depression, either. A depression is an extended economic breakdown, and we have not seen signs of that kind of pain.
The definition of a recession
The conventional benchmark has been that two consecutive quarters of a generally slowing economy defines a recession.
That definition was achieved in the first six months of 2022 as part of a shallow economic decline. In the first quarter, the economy shrank 1.6%, then improved, though still fell 0.6% in the second quarter due to lower inventory spending, housing investments and federal and state government spending.
However, the Bureau of Economic Analysis, an agency embedded in the U.S. Department of Commerce, estimates that as of the third quarter of 2023, the economy grew at an annual rate of 5.2%.
The Fed is pushing to slow the economy
The Federal Reserve, after issuing seven interest rate increases last year and four in 2023, is not trying to trigger a recession but does want to slow the economy. The Fed had paused interest rate hikes in June, noting inflation was showing some signs of easing, but warned that further rate increases were likely. On July 26, it fulfilled that warning by raising rates a quarter-point. The Fed left rates unchanged in September, November and December.
Lowering consumer demand is the tricky elixir intended to reverse the higher prices we face with inflation. The risk of a recession is always a possible side effect.
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