The reality is that the recession never ended for 95% of U.S. households, and by many metrics the recession has deepened.
If you want to claim the 2008 recession ended, you have to find a metric that reflects "growth." For instance, gross domestic product (GDP), which has expanded since 2009.
But as Lance Roberts, Gordon T. Long and I discuss in Is the US in a Recession? (43 min. video, 52 slides), this metric of "growth" is suspect on a number of counts.For example, does this chart of full-time employees relative to the population look expansionary?
Or how about this chart of median household income, which adjusted for inflation is down 7.2%?
Or
how about real personal income less government personal transfers on a
5-year basis (the red line)? Notice that the red line only popped
briefly above 0% into "growth" in late 2012 as those who could declared
income in 2012 before the 1013 tax increases kicked in.
None of these charts is remotely expansionary. We can further question broad-based measures of expansion such as GDP statistically: in
economies with high income/wealth inequality such as the U.S., the top
5%'s expansion of income and wealth creates an illusion that the entire
workforce is doing better when the opposite is true.
If
you doubt this, please examine this chart of income disparity. Note
that the vast majority of income increases have accrued to the top 5%:
In
other words, huge leaps in the income and wealth of the top 5% mask the
decline of income and wealth of the bottom 95%. Average all wealth and
income and it appears that the economy is expanding to the benefit of
all, when it fact only the top 5% have escaped the recession; the recession never ended for the bottom 95%.
An even better way to create an illusory expansion is to simply not measure trends that would reveal a deepening recession. For
example, what percentage of student loans are purposefully taken out as
a substitute for income, i.e. used to pay basic living expenses rather
than education? Anecdotally, there is plentiful evidence that a great
many people are signing up for one class at the local community college
in order to get a student loan to live on.
Is
it any wonder that student loan default rates are soaring? The people
taking out student loans just to get by have no means to make payments
once the loan money is consumed.
Is
an economy of people obtaining student loans they have no way to
service as the only available means to keep themselves off the street a
healthy economy?
Correspondent B.C. recently sent some statistics on housing and the Millennial Generation's jobs/work/earnings prospects.
(For example, household_formation)
(For example, household_formation)
Age 20-34:
Headship rate: 36% (percentage who are heads of households)
Full-time employment: 44%
Unemployment: 8-13%
Persons per household: 2.72
Participation rate: 76% (the number of people who are counted as participating in the economy)
Full-time employment: 44%
Unemployment: 8-13%
Persons per household: 2.72
Participation rate: 76% (the number of people who are counted as participating in the economy)
How
many people 34 and under qualify for a non-subsidized home mortgage?
That is, how many qualify under traditional rules (income = 3 X mortgage
payments, 20% down payment in cash, etc.) How many people in this age
group can possibly qualify for a conventional mortgage when only 44%
have full-time jobs?
Is an economy in which people in their 30s cannot find full-time work or afford to buy a house a non-recessionary economy?
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