Posted on 02/01/2013 11:03:14 AM PST by Kaslin
To compute "Real GDP" one has to adjust nominal GDP by a measure of inflation. Different measures of inflation provide different answers.
Doug Short at Advisor Perspectives has an excellent column following every GDP release showing what the reported GDP would look like with various deflators.
His latest report is Will the "Real" GDP Please Stand Up? (The Deflator Makes Big a Difference)
How do you get from Nominal GDP to Real GDP? You subtract inflation. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) uses its own GDP deflator for this purpose, which is somewhat different from the BEA's deflator for Personal Consumption Expenditures and quite a bit different from the better-known Bureau of Labor Statistics' inflation gauge, the Consumer Price Index.
The Lower the Deflator, the Higher the GDP
The BEA puts the latest compounded annual percentage change in the GDP deflator (i.e., the inflation rate) at 0.60%.
Interestingly enough, the Briefing.com consensus forecast was for the deflator to come in at 1.6%. Had the deflator indeed come in at the Briefing.com consensus of 1.6%, Real GDP would have been a percent lower at -1.13%. Had the deflator indeed remained unchanged from the previous quarter, today's Q4 real GDP would be two percent lower at -2.21%.
With the GDP deflator (the official measure), the reported GDP was -.14%
Here are a few charts courtesy of Doug Short.
click on any chart for sharper image
Real GDP with GDP Deflator
Real GDP with CPI Deflator
Wednesday evening I asked Doug Short for a chart using HPI-CPI as a deflator. It's a chart he normally does not produce but did so this time because we had the data.
Real GDP with HPI-CPI Deflator
HPI-CPI Discussion
For background and an explanation of the HPI-CPI please see Dissecting the Fed-Sponsored Housing Bubble; HPI-CPI Revisited; Real Housing Prices; Price Inflation Higher than Fed Admits
Using HPI-CPI as a deflator it hardly appears there was a recession in 2001 at all.
It's debatable which of the three charts best describes reality. However, I vote for the third believing that houses are consumed, even if very slowly (although the land on which the house sits is not). The current assumption is houses are a capital expenditure and people rent housing from themselves at an implied OER - Owners' Equivalent Rate (see preceding link for discussion).
Regardless, the current deflator of .60% is simply not believable, meaning GDP is overstated.
Regression Trends Show Lower GDP Growth Over Time
Notice the linear regression trendlines in the first and third charts. The middle chart would have looked similar if it had such a trendline.
Clearly the trend is toward lower and lower GDP readings. And I expect this trend to continue, likely accelerate to the downside.
Inquiring minds may be asking "Why?"
Ten Reasons for Declining GDP Growth
Everything can be summed up into one little four letter word: DEBT.
We have waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay toooooooooooo much of it, private and public.
Here is something scary you won’t hear in the press and the LIV (Low Information Voter) will never think about.
Our Federal government is now so large a part of our economy (by current calcs) that their spending affects the GDP. When they “don’t spend so much” the GDP slows.
They have been pumping for so long to inflate the numbers that any curtailing of spending going to affect the US economy and GDP.
We are officially hooked. Our economy is now partly dependent on our FED spending tax dollars they don’t have. The whole GDP calculation has to be re-worked for the private sector.
Remember, the FED produces nothing that creates wealth. They have no product or service that can be used, bought, sold or traded. The FED cannot create wealth.
At least when you things, it provides heat and light. Heat and light can be sold and is usefull. In this way, burning piles of money would be more useful than sending money to the FED.
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