Actually it just ended under his watch in June 2009, half a year after taking office, a few months after the stimulus and 9 months after the bailout: http://www.nber.org/cycles/sept2010.html
9/20/2010 1:13:56 PM
i already did this fyi
9/20/2010 1:17:32 PM
I see what you did there: /message_topic.aspx?topic=500489&page=42[Edited on September 20, 2010 at 1:23 PM. Reason : IBTL
9/20/2010 1:23:11 PM
9/20/2010 4:32:33 PM
this is no comfort to friends of mine who are struggling to keep their homes cause they cant find workwhen will obama deliver the HOPE and CHANGE he promised?
9/20/2010 4:51:00 PM
The dow is 5 digits. Recession OVER right?
9/20/2010 4:56:22 PM
^The Dow fell below 10K during the recession and it was still below 10K when it ended; it went above 10K shortly afterward and briefly dipped below again before coming back up recently. More important however is that the NBER, after waiting for the latest revisions to lots of difficult-to-determine statistics (not just or even primarily the DJIA), finally determined the endpoint.
9/20/2010 5:09:46 PM
Sweet. When does the depression end?
9/20/2010 5:11:53 PM
shallowandpedantic
9/20/2010 5:13:10 PM
9/20/2010 5:22:41 PM
lewlthe stimulus brought it to end earlier, and a bigger stimulus (and one less loaded with tax cuts) would have worked betteralso the bailout (which was not passed during the Obama Administration, although he did vote for and publicly support it) staved off Great Depression Part II: Electric Boogaloofinally, d357r0y3r, the last depression was over by 1942 thanks to military Keynesianism, although in much of the world the Great Depression ended in the late '30s
9/20/2010 5:40:10 PM
You're in for a shock, I'm sorry to say. The bailout did not "stave off" the depression. What it did do is make investment bankers rich at the expense of the people, while sewing the seeds for an even greater depression. If you really believe that we've recovered, I suggest buying bonds.
9/20/2010 5:54:18 PM
^^ And there is much evidence that WW2 actually did not end the Great Depression. The war industry grew dramatically, there is no doubt, but the rest of the private sector actually shrank further during the war. It was not until after FDR's death and the defeat of the New Dealers in Congress, leading to dramatic spending cuts and budget surpluses, that private investment returned, causing a private sector boom and post-war recovery. Stimulus has never been shown to work, not even in WW2. However, a Republican run Congress and surpluses, as was enjoyed immediately after the war, did work.
9/20/2010 7:38:30 PM
9/20/2010 7:55:37 PM
http://money.cnn.com/2010/09/20/news/economy/recession_over/index.htm?hpt=T1&iref=BN1&hpt=Sbin
9/20/2010 8:14:20 PM
9/20/2010 8:25:38 PM
haha what a joke.
9/20/2010 9:50:35 PM
^^ I know, it just seems like a ridiculous metric. And they didn't even technically say we wouldn't begin digging again soon, they just said it'd be a "different" recession.It is the same shuckin' and jivin' that gives us crap unemployment and inflation figures.
9/20/2010 10:58:58 PM
people who are confused by this don't understand calculus / derivatives
9/20/2010 11:13:14 PM
i am confused as to what i may or may not be confused by
9/21/2010 12:52:30 AM
^^^good point, I should have said "wouldn't have been starting"^^the confusion also goes on the other side, like I'm fairly sure I once heard Bush (and also Obama) proclaim the good news when the rate of GDP growth had reached its low, which meant the second derivative was positiveby comparison "end of the recession" corresponds to the first derivative being positiveand the end of the recovery (the part that feels like the recession is over) corresponds to finally being better off than before the recession started, related to the actual value, the "zeroth" derivative
9/21/2010 2:30:35 AM
The expert economists also took 2 years to tell everybody we were in a Recession as well.So excuse me if I don't pop the champagne in celebration that according to them the Recession is over, all it really means is we have stopped falling we aren't necessarily rising out of it. Its hit its trough.
9/21/2010 8:27:36 AM
9/21/2010 9:00:09 AM
9/21/2010 9:00:34 AM
Funny how some here who are always objecting to methodology seem to have no objection to this:
9/21/2010 10:50:27 AM