Houston Chronicle

Recession hit U.S. in February, ending historic run of growth

- By Rachel Siegel

The United States officially fell into recession in February, ending a historic 128-month expansion as the coronaviru­s swept the country and put the economy into a tailspin.

The Business Cycle Dating Committee, which tracks and dates business cycles for the National Bureau of Economic Research, said the economy peaked just before the pandemic forced business and social activity into a holding pattern. Recessions often refer to two consecutiv­e quarters of contractio­n, but the NBER’s calculatio­n includes other factors, such as domestic production and employment.

“The time that it takes for the economy to return to its previous peak level of activity or its previous trend path may be quite extended,” the committee’s report said.

States and communitie­s began issuing stay-at-home orders in mid-March to stem the spread of the highly contagious virus. The moves prevented an estimated 60 million coronaviru­s infections in the

United States, according to a study published Monday, but came at great cost to the economy. More than 40 million Americans lost their jobs in the coronaviru­s recession as consumers stayed out of shopping malls, restaurant­s, theaters and other places where crowds gathers. Travel, tourism, retail and other industries were devastated, tipping such well-known brands as J. Crew, Neiman Marcus and Hertz into bankruptcy.

And though the nation’s unemployme­nt rate dropped to 13.3 percent in May, versus 14.7 percent in April, the reading comes with an asterisk. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said

it had misclassif­ied data in May, April and March. Without the error, the unemployme­nt rate would have been 16.3 percent for May and 19.7 percent for April, the agency said.

Now, as states gradually ease pandemic restrictio­ns, the question will be whether “reopening” fuels an economic turnaround anytime soon, or whether the downturn will extend into next year as people struggle to go back to work and the nation contends with a possible second wave of infections.

That the economy had plunged into a recession was not a surprise. As economist Ernie Tedeschi put it: “It’s now official (and utterly unsurprisi­ng).”

Still, NBER’s report highlighte­d just how sharply the pandemic upended such vast swaths of the economy and closed the book on an expansion that started in June 2009.

“In the case of the February 2020 peak in economic activity, the committee concluded that the drop in activity had been so great and so widely diffused throughout the economy that the downturn should be classified as a recession even if it proved to be quite brief,” the report noted.

In tracking business cycles and their inflection points, the NBER committee also takes into account indicators such as initial unemployme­nt insurance claims, wholesale retail sales and industrial production. The committee’s official reports come retrospect­ively — or once it becomes clear there won’t be a need for major revisions even when more data becomes available.

Government officials and economists have offered different timelines for when the economy might rebound, offering up an alphabet soup of “W,”- “V”and “U”-shaped recoveries that could unfold later in the year or into 2021.

The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office expects the economic consequenc­es of the novel coronaviru­s to exceed $8 trillion and suggests the economy will not fully recover until 2030. It also expects unemployme­nt to hover above 10 percent into 2021, meaning the nation could still have joblessnes­s that is worse than the Great Recession for months.

But experts say the turnaround will hinge on controllin­g the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 109,000 people in the United States.

The NBER report had no effect on Wall Street, which is in the midst of a stunning three-month rally. On Monday, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index moved into positive territory for the year, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite set a record high, and the Dow Jones industrial average extended its winning streak to six days.

 ?? Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press ?? A man walks past signs of a store in Niles, Ill., that was forced out of business this spring as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The widespread business shutdowns and layoffs were among the factors that tipped the U.S. into a recession.
Nam Y. Huh / Associated Press A man walks past signs of a store in Niles, Ill., that was forced out of business this spring as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The widespread business shutdowns and layoffs were among the factors that tipped the U.S. into a recession.

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