4th Quarter 2022 GDP Is Much Weaker Than Headline Numbers, Recession Is Not Off

GDP data from the BEA, chart by Mish

Please consider the BEA’s Gross Domestic Product, Fourth Quarter 2022 (Advance Estimate)

Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to the “advance” estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. 

In the third quarter, real GDP increased 3.2 percent. The GDP estimate released today is based on source data that are incomplete or subject to further revision by the source agency. 

2022 Q4 Headline Details 

  • Real GDP was up 2.9 percentage points (PP).
  • Real Final Sales (RFS) were up 1.4 PP. RFS is the bottom line number. The rest is inventory adjustment which nets to zero over time. 
  • Inventory adjustments added 1.5 PP. Good luck with that inventory build in 2023 Q1 given falling consumer demand. 
  • Real Final Sales to Private Domestic Purchasers was just 0.2 PP. Government spending including military aid contributed 1.2 PP to the RFS total.   

2022 Q4 Other Details 

  • Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) contributed 1.42 PP to GDP, with goods at .26 PP and services 1.16 PP.
  • Fixed Investment subtracted 1.20 PP with residential declining 1.29 PP.
  • Change in Private Inventories added 1.46 PP.
  • Exports subtracted 0.15 PP
  • Imports added 0.71 PP (falling demand for stuff).
  • Government consumption added 0.64 PP.

It’s difficult to pretend this is a strong report.

What About Q1 and Q2?

Lots of people were touting recession in the first half because we had two quarters of falling GDP. 

I was not one of them. I did think a recession started in May but subsequent numbers proved me wrong. 

Note that RFS to private domestic purchasers was up 2.1 PP in 2022 Q1 and another 0.5 PP in Q2. No conceivable recession there.

Weak Consumer Spending

RFS to private domestic purchasers is a mere 0.2 PP in Q4 and I suspect most of that was in October. 

Real spending was robust in October but fell off the cliff starting November. The decline accelerated in December.

Month-Over-Month Advances and Declines

  • Food Service: -0.9 percent
  • Food Stores: +0.0 percent
  • Gas Stations: -4.6 Percent
  • General Merchandise: -0.8 Percent
  • Excluding Motor Vehicles and Gas: -0.7 Percent
  • Excluding Motor Vehicles: -1.1 Percent
  • Nonstore (Think Amazon): -1.1 Percent
  • Motor Vehicles: -1.2 Percent
  • Department Stores: -6.6 Percent

For discussion, please see What Do Real Income and Spending Suggest About Recession Timing?

2022 Gross Domestic Income

Real GDI data from BEA, chart by Mish

Real Gross Domestic Income (GDI) and Real GDP are two measures of the same thing. They equal over time. 

The BEA does not release GDI with the Advance GDP estimate so we do not yet know what that will be. The last two quarters net to zero.

That is yet another indication that jobs are not as rosy as people think. 

Money Supply

M1 and M2 numbers are from the Fed, ODL is a derivative of M2

Money supply is falling off a cliff, another sign of economic weakness.

For discussion, please see The Biggest Collapse in M2 Money Supply Since the Great Depression

Finally, please see A Better Definition of Money and Lacy Hunt’s Thoughts on When a Recession Will Start

Lacy Hunt at Hoisington management thinks recession started in November and I suggest either November or December. 

What Does Alice Say?

In case you missed it, please see Alice Debates the Mad Hatter and the Red Queen on Timing the Recession

I go over jobs, industrial production, inflation and other indicators (including a swipe at climate change) in a humorous way.

Please give it a look.

The Q4 GDP numbers do nothing to change my mind.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
MONEY SUPPLY is a vertical wall up, with a slight dip from insane wall. GDP is an government bootlicker way to measure an economy as government spending is a huge part of it, as are dropping bombs in wars which are not really great for anyone’s actual economy and the opposite of anything productive or domestic about it. GDP is a chump’s way to measure good times. the old misery index the best. old school definitions always preferable. recession is when my neighbor loses their house or job. i know of NOT a soul this applies to.
Avery
Avery
1 year ago
Per Gateway Pundit just now, looks like Pfizer! has great plans to boost the GDP for years to come.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
You claim Pfizer is restarting the gain-of-function research b/c the old virus doesn’t mutate fast enough to generate the expected quarterly profit?
Siliconguy
Siliconguy
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
I’m pretty sure Pfizer’s plans fall under the broken window fallacy.
radar
radar
1 year ago
“The most troubling information in the GDP report is the precipitous drop
in real disposable income, which fell over $1 trillion in 2022. For
context, this is the second-largest percentage drop in real disposable
income ever, behind only 1932, the worst year of the Great Depression.”
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 year ago
Reply to  radar
Scary that the 3rd greatest drop was also in the Depression.
We are living in “interesting times.”
MBP
MBP
1 year ago
Chart showing “Financial conditions” versus how much banks are tightening standards for C&I loans: link to fred.stlouisfed.org
I suspect one should fade all this “conditions are loosening” talk.
FromBrussels2
FromBrussels2
1 year ago
….and much worse than any fn cyclical recession, WW3 ‘is not off’ either….in fact it has just been declared, though not officially yet ….That s what happens, history shows, when totally desperate, hopelessly debt inflated empires, with unsustainable social/economic liabilities start crumbling…..for they do NEED culprits for the unsolvable demise they re in ….This time around the culprit is RUSSIA (again) ! LOL ! Gonna be a tough nut to crack , I am afraid ….
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
Why do you live in such a hellhole as Brussels then? Shouldn’t you emigrate to someplace better where your talents and good nature are fully recognized and where you can prosper under a firm but benevolent government who thinks only of your wellbeing?
Zardoz
Zardoz
1 year ago
Reply to  Doug78
He is on secret mission for make capture of Moose and Squirrel… only then can return to glorious Soviet Union where fearless leader shall award Golden Potato!
shamrock
shamrock
1 year ago
Recession is not off, but it’s not on either.
xbizo
xbizo
1 year ago
Methinks you are right, Mish, but the government numbers will not tell your story. Why? Because true inflation is higher than reported. The means that revenues, discounted by inflation, will appear higher than reality. If inflation is understated by 5%, and I think it is, any contraction in the economy won’t show up until GDP shrinks over 5%. At -2% growth, it shows as a 3% increase in GDP. Voila! No recession!
LawrenceBird
LawrenceBird
1 year ago
Wasn’t a lot of the inventory build in petroleum and related products? Not so worried about that.
1-shot
1-shot
1 year ago
The problem with these statistics is they dont reflect reality.
80-90% of the population is in recession. 10% or less continues to earn, hire, invest, spend and live like we’re in the boom years of 1999 or 2006 or 2020. Average and median measurements no longer reflect the real world.
I can sell a Ferrari and a $10 million house faster than a used pickup or a $200 house
hmk
hmk
1 year ago
Reply to  1-shot
What doesn’t reflect reality is the inflations statistics, they are deliberatly understated. It is higher than the offical propagnda numbers that the politburo publishes. The govt benefits the most from falsely undereporting inflation, its like the fox guarding the chicken coop.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Reply to  hmk
bingo. winner. inflation stats are bogus as hell. shadow stats is only blog consistently properly and academically honest about them. i think mish is honest, just grossly wrong about inflation as most are. last time i used a benjamin in my wallet, it hardly buys much anymore. compared to a few years ago. forget 10 or 30 years ago.
Zardoz
Zardoz
1 year ago
Reply to  1-shot
Who’s concerned with the filthy proles and their insignificant problems? I can’t get Henessy in bottles that fit my private jet cup holders!
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Then buy a new jet this time with the correct cup holders. Problem solved.
rktbrkr
rktbrkr
1 year ago
New home starts in my Jersey Shore town are approximately zero, all high end infill & teardowns, too expensive for conventional financing, so Powell has accomplished that. Gas prices just jumped 20 cents after declining fast & steady after the Nov election and egg prices are still obscene. (If gas prices had dropped before the election instead of after it the House would be blue and sane.)
JRM
JRM
1 year ago
Reply to  rktbrkr
Only insane people believe DEMOCATS are sane!!!!
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
Looks like a weak recession for the moment. That doesn’t make me unhappy.
Mish
Mish
1 year ago
Reply to  Doug78
“Looks like a weak recession for the moment.”
Yes, I said all along, recession will be weak.
But then rebound will be weak or nonexistent flirting with zero for a long time factoring in Biden-sponsored inflation.
Roco
Roco
1 year ago
Reply to  Mish
At what point does a weak prolonged recession become a depression? Is there a difference? Serious question.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
1 year ago
Reply to  Roco
The economy grew in the 1970s as well. At least according to the government statistics. Believe me stagflation is recession because gdp is overestimated and (pick your inflation indicator) underestimates. At best real grown in 2022 was zero and much more likely negative.
Sending stuff to Ukraine to blow up other stuff is not economic growth. We’re that the case then WW1 or the siege of Constantinople would have been the best things that ever happened to the world economy. Growth is production not destruction.
My humble opinion is that the 2020s are going to be the 70s with better clothes worse music and a more fragile economy
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
Reply to  Mish
Being shallow it won’t push down inflation enough to make the Fed happy so they will raise rates again.

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