The official definition of a recession in nearly all developed
economies except the US is two consecutive quarters of negative growth. In the
US a recession is ‘called’ by the NBER. Economists, of course, just look at the
numbers. This is obviously the sensible thing to do, because a fall in GDP of
3% followed by positive growth of 0.1% is clearly worse than two periods of
-0.1% growth, but only the latter is an official recession. The media on the
other hand behaves differently, so we had the silly situation in the UK before
2013 when tiny revisions to GDP led to headlines like ‘UK avoids double dip
recession’.
Yet this minor annoyance for people like me has been turned
into an opportunity in a recent paper (pdf) by two political scientists at the LSE
(HT David Rueda). Andrew Eggers and Alexander Fouirnaies look at the data to
see if the announcement of a recession causes any additional impact on
macroeconomic aggregates compared to what you might expect from the GDP data
itself. In other words, does the announcement of a recession reduce consumption
or investment in OECD countries, conditional on actual economic fundamentals?
For ease I’ll call this an announcement effect.
For investment they get the answer that economists would hope
for - there is no announcement effect. Firms are well informed, and just look
at the numbers. However for consumption they do find a significant announcement
effect, both in terms of the actual data (and the size of the impact can be
non-trivial) and in terms of consumer confidence indicators. One final result
they emphasise, which makes clear sense from a macro point of view, is that the
impact of recession announcements on consumer spending in smaller in countries
with more robust social safety nets.
There are many reasons why this is interesting, but let me
focus on one that I have discussed before. In this post I pointed to a potential paradox. On the
one hand I believe that for most macroeconomic problems, rational expectations
rather than naive expectations is the right place to start. On the other hand I
also think that media reporting can have a strong influence on the average
persons view on certain highly politicised issues, like is man-made climate
change a serious problem, or how important is the cost of welfare fraud. I
discussed this paradox here, and argued that it could easily be
resolved by thinking about the costs and benefits of obtaining information. In
particular, the costs of researching climate change are significant, whereas the
cost to the individual of getting
their own view wrong is almost zero. (This is just a variation on the paradox
of voting.)
In the example from this paper, we have a standard macroeconomic
problem, which is trying to assess what level of consumption to choose. The
importance of the announcement effect suggests that for consumers the costs of
‘looking at the numbers’ (and, of course, interpreting them) to some extent
exceeds the benefits of going beyond media headlines. If the media can have an
influence on something that clearly has a significant financial pay-off for
individuals, then it is bound to influence attitudes when the personal costs of
making mistakes is almost zero.
David Miliband just before the 2010 election said that the Tory plans would produce a decade of lost growth "or even worse, a double-dip recession."
ReplyDeleteI wonder what percentage of people in the UK had the chance to study economics at school? I didn't (in a state comprehensive).
Krugman blog 'On The Pathetic Left' says that "Labour should be listening to Jonathan Portes and, well, Simon Wren-Lewis, but I’m sure that it’s listening much more to well-tailored men from the City."
If you're not getting information from the economic blogs, assuming you can navigate your way through the freshwater and estuarine stuff, you really are sunk.
Interesting, we know if affects people, but not firms, which are made up of people?
ReplyDeleteIt's anecdote, but those I know of who lost jobs in 2008 did so early, from companies that were profitable, but which were worried about the recession that the media and politicians were talking about coming, and wanted to slim down to survive it.