The economists said employment peaked in February and fell sharply
afterward, marking the beginning of the downturn.
The US
economy entered a recession in February, a group of economists declared
Monday, ending the longest expansion on record.
The economists
said employment peaked in February and fell sharply afterward, marking the
beginning of the downturn.
The economists make up a committee within the National Bureau of Economic Research, a trade group that determines when recessions begin and end.
It defines a
recession as a decline in economic activity that lasts more than a few months.
The committee
noted, though, that in this case, the depth of the downturn since February had
led it to determine that a recession had begun.
The unprecedented
magnitude of the decline in employment and production, and its broad reach
across the entire economy, warrants the designation of this episode as a
recession, even if it turns out to be briefer than earlier contractions, the
NBER panel said.
The unemployment
rate is officially 13.3 per cent, down from 14.7 per cent in April. Both
figures are higher than in any other downturn since World War II.
A broader measure
of underemployment that includes some of the unemployed who have given up
looking and those who have been reduced to part-time status is 21.2 per cent.
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