More Green Shoots

A full recovery from the COVID-19/Shutdown Crisis is going to take a long time. We don't anticipate reaching a new peak for real GDP until the end of 2021; we don't anticipate a 4% unemployment rate until 2024.

However, there is a growing amount of evidence that the economy may have hit bottom in May. It's important to be cautious; the evidence for having hit bottom already is not definitive or bulletproof. And, given the steepness of the economy's decline versus how fast it will recover, production in June may still be lower than in May even if we've already hit the inflection point.

But the most important piece of economic news last week was that regular continuing unemployment claims declined 3.86 million to 21.05 million, the first drop since the end of February. That's still an astronomically high number compared to historical norms: the peak in the aftermath of the 2008-09 Financial Crisis was 6.64 million.

But, as we pointed out last week, recession typically end sometime between the peak of initial claims (late March) and the peak in continuing claims (possibly mid-May), so the deepest recession since the Great Depression looks increasingly likely to be the shortest, as well.

The news often reports the total number of people who have filed new claims for unemployment benefits, and the total is more than 40 million people in the past ten weeks. But it's not true that we have that many unemployed. Some claims are fraudulent, and some people have been called backed to work. It's also true that the CARES Act widened the eligibility for benefits, making them available to some business owners, self-employed workers, independent contractors, and others. Including all these categories of unemployment benefits, the total number receiving benefits is closer to 30 million from the start of the crisis, not the oft reported 40.