What Recession? You Won’t Believe Biden’s Latest Goalpost Adjustment

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What makes a recession not a depression? Jack says Presidentish Joe Biden that it isn’t.

Axios reported Thursday that the White House’s economic advisors changed their definition of what a recession was. A recession is defined as two or more quarters economic decline. However, the Biden administration claims that “by most measures,” Axios says, “the largest economy in the world remains comfortably in expansion mode.”

The White House is trying to prevent the heightened recession talkter that would accompany two quarters with shrinking GDP.

You can change the accepted definition.

The White House Council of Economic Advisors claimed that despite a decline in GDP during the first quarter of the year, it is unlikely that there will be a recession in the second quarter.

This is Cecilia Rouse, CEA chair, and Jared Bernstein, CEA member.

At an annualized rate 1.6%, the economy contracted in the first quarter. Atlanta Fed’s growth tracker predicts that the economy will shrink by 2.1% in the second quarter.

We are technically in a recession, but it won’t be officially declared until next week. The contraction seems to be accelerating and not easing off — much like the “transitory inflation”.

Fox News’ Art Laffer, an economist who was one of the architects Ronald Reagan’s boom years, stated this week that “Recession is here” and would “last for awhile.”

Many Americans believe we are already in recession, even some well-known names.

According to surveys, Americans have the lowest level of confidence in America’s economy. Business executives are also the most disillusioned since the outbreak of the coronavirus epidemic. Even celebrities are beginning to pay more attention to this problem, including rapper Cardi B, Andrew Yang, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

Can’t even put gas in your car. Are you fed up with being told by the secretary for Transportation that you must spend $60 million on a Tesla. Steak is now considered a rare treat (pun intended). Are you curious how long it will take to get your 401K back where it should be?

These are just a few of the many pains Americans feel during the Biden administration. However, the administration wants us believe that everything is fine.

How is the White House’s denial therapy going to play out politically?

This administration has a bad habit of telling Americans exactly what they don’t know to be true. The south border is secure, the Afghanistan Bugout wasn’t a failure, and inflation is a high class problem.

Gaslighting is just as evident as it is stupid.

Biden will attempt to convince us that we are not in recession when the second quarter growth figures — actually, shrinkage — come out next week.

Yet, Americans’ wages are decreasing. Today, there are still fewer Americans without jobs than there were before the lockdowns. Baby formula, tampons and a wide range of other seemingly random goods are not available to us. Even though the housing market is slowing down, more people are being priced out of homeownership by rising costs. The interest rates are on the rise. Retirement portfolios are shrinking. Credit cards are exhausted. Tech companies are slowing down or eliminating new hires, and even laying off employees.

Perhaps the most telling sign that the economy is really in trouble is the AT&T report yesterday that they expect a $2 billion cash flow deficit this year. Why? The reason? People would rather gnaw at their phones than go without them.

Biden has decided to go for the “Who are you going to believe? Me or your own lyin?” approach amid all this doom.