We have lived through more than 12 months of the advocates for an immediate central bank interest rate cut saying that if we don't get a rate cut this month, the economy will enter a recession. So far those advocates have been wrong. It reminds me of the Paul Samuelson joke: “the stock market has predicted nine out of the last five recessions”.
When we think about recessions. many people adopt the definition of a technical recession: two or more quarters of negative GDP growth (Q on Q). It's a useful rule of thumb, but it can miss significant economic contractions that are interrupted by a quarter of smallish growth. Focusing on technical recessions can also elevate short, slightly negative events that are not as serious. The working definition I use is that a recession is an extended period of economic contraction and an associated decrease in the number employed and a substantial increase in the unemployment rate.
While Australia's economic growth is in the doldrums, the economy is some way from a recession. And our labour market performance has been strong. On average, a recession happens about once a decade. Naively, without considering the economic fundamentals, the probability of a recession in 2025 is around 10 per cent.
Using the above definition, I have looked at six factors that could indicate a recession. They are:
- GDP Technical Recession,
- Negative Annual GDP Growth,
- GDP per Capita Technical Recession,
- Rapid Unemployment Growth,
- Employment Technical Recession,
- Negative Annual Employment Growth,
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