<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, arial">quote:</font><HR>This is a common mistake. We aren't in a recession, nor have we been in a recession this past year. A recession is 2 consecutive quarters of GDP decline.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Well, I'm sure that's why Alyson said "at least informally." She knew that we aren't
technically in a recession. But it sure feels like it to a lot of folks, myself included. (I've been out of work since
last November. I went back to school from January to June, but was intermittently looking, especially as the end of the course rolled around. I've been actively looking for work for
four months and I just took a job for less than half of what I was getting that is almost 60 miles away because I needed
something.)
To paraphrase Ronald Reagan, "A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A depression is when
you lose
your job." (Of course he added, "And a recovery is when Mr. Carter loses
his job."
)
Actually there are different
kinds of recessions based on various indicators. An economy-wide recession is indeed two consecutive quarters of GDP decline. (Which we're likely to have by year's end, since the third quarter was awful.) But you can also have a sector recession based on two quarters of negative trends in a number of areas: employment recessions, sector or industry recessions, geographic recessions.
The economy
has been on a generally downward trajectory since at least the fourth quarter of 2000, and things have been getting worse all year. Even prior to September 11th things didn't look rosy. Now they're looking extra grim, especiall in the TV biz. All the networks, but especially the all-news channels, collectively lost a
lot of money during the wall-to-wall coverage immediately following the attacks.
Advertising was hit not only by the internet bubble bursting (a lot fewer companies with products and services to tout all of a sudden) by a weakening in other sectors of the economy, which meant business across the board advertised less. The magazine industy was also hit hard for the same reasons. Newspapers lost millions by cutting ad space in favor of terrorist attack coverage, and now they're finding fewer takers as well. Some publications aren't going to survive the current troubles.
Regards,
Joe
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Joseph DeMartino
Sigh Corps
Pat Tallman Division
joseph-demartino@att.net