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Friday, July 02, 2010

So What Exactly Is A 'Double-Dip' Recession?

Economists fear recession with growth period followed by furthur decline

WASHINGTON — Concerns are rising that the economy is at risk of slipping into a "double-dip" recession.
High unemployment, Europe's debt crisis, a slowdown in China, a teetering housing market and sinking stock prices are all weighing on a fragile U.S. recovery.

So what exactly is a double-dip recession?

Robert Hall has an idea of what one looks like but no precise definition. He's chairman of the National Bureau of Economic Research, a group of academic economists that officially declares the starts and ends of recessions.

In Hall's view, a double dip is akin to a continuous recession that's punctuated by a period of growth, then followed by a further decline in the economy.

The NBER doesn't define a double dip any more specifically than that, says Hall, an economics professor at Stanford University.

In econo-speak, Hall explains: "The idea — hypothetical because it has yet to happen — is that activity might rise for a period, but not far enough to complete a cycle, then fall again, and finally rise above its original level, only then completing the cycle."

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Lets get out of this one before we talk double dipping!!

Every major recession in history has followed this pattern. The 'old W on the graphs don't lie and I would expect it to repeat again.

Concerned Retiree said...

We never got out of the first one. It was disquised very good. What common sense person was fooled into believing we were recovering.

Anonymous said...

The term means that we have Obama, and Biden in the Whitehouse. 2 Dips in charge.