Mark Skousen on recession warning signs
The White House and Wall Street were exuberant last week when the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis revised upward its second-quarter estimate of gross domestic product to show 3.8% growth in real terms, compared with a negative number in the first quarter. “US economy notches fastest growth pace in nearly two years in second quarter,” reported Yahoo Finance, “suggesting robust growth despite uncertainty set off by President Donald Trump’s tariff policy.”
Dig into the numbers, however, and you find the trade war is in fact wreaking economic havoc. Buried in last week’s BEA report is a much more reliable measure of the economy—gross output, or GO. It measures spending at all stages of production, totaling an estimated $63 trillion this year—more than twice GDP of $30 trillion.
GO revealed that economic growth is slowing to a crawl, ahead only 1.2% in real terms. If you include all transactions in wholesale and retail trade, the adjusted GO is up only 0.3%. More important, overall business spending fell sharply, by an annualized 5.6% in real terms. These results are much more consistent with the weak labor-market data.
Here is more from the WSJ.