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Edit Shopping CART(1)  |  Saturday, November 21, 2009
 
 
SPEECHES  &  TESTIMONY
The Economic Outlook and Budget Challenges
 

Although current indicators do not suggest the present downturn is fundamentally worse than past recessions, it could become more severe if it follows the pattern of similar recessions on record. Pursuing short-term remedies at the expense of the nation's long-term fiscal health would be detrimental to the economy.

 

The purpose of my presentation is to review the state of the economy, and to draw historical lessons from the academic literature to help sketch out the range of possibilities going forward.

It is always a perilous thing to opine on the state of the economy. The data that we use to assess the economy are published with significant lags. While we can now feel fairly certain about the character of the fourth quarter of 2008, the current quarter is still underway, and economies can and do change direction rapidly.

Accordingly, discussion of the current state of the economy should be cautious. However, there is one thing that is well established at this point. There is no debate among economists that we are currently in a recession. The National Bureau of Economic Research is the official arbiter of such matters, and they have dated the beginning of this recession to December 2007.

This determination is important, because economists have established that the economy tends to proceed in a "nonlinear" fashion; that is, we can think of history as having consisted of discretely different "good" times and "bad" times. When we are in good times, good quarters tend to follow good quarters. When we are in bad times, bad quarters follow one another.

 Click here to view this testimony as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.

Kevin A. Hassett is a senior fellow and the director of economic policy studies at AEI.