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

GDP data from the BEA, chart by Mish

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

Advance Retail Sales Month-Over-Month 2022-12 Part 2

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 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

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?

Alice Wonderland Recession Debate

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.


More By This Author:

The BLS Reports Employment In The Second Quarter Fell By 287 Thousand
The Biggest Collapse In M2 Money Supply Since The Great Depression
What Does The Demand For Temporary Help Suggest About A Recession?

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