Artikel ini cukup menarik, di ambil dari Yahoo Finance, dimana menurut saya
point yg menarik :

- Definisi resesi adalah pelambatan pertumbuhan ekonomi selama 6 bulan
berturut2, artinya resesi atau tidak di AS  baru ketahuan sekitar Juni 2008.
- Hanya terjadi 10 resesi di AS selama 63 tahun. Rata-rata lamanya resesi
adalah hanya 10 bulan. Rata2 penurunan aktivitas ekonomi sekitar hanya
2.5persen.

Mudah2an artikel ini membuat tambah tenang bukannya tambah rusuh :D
Rethinking the Recession

by Ben Stein <http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/archive/yourlife/ben-stein/1>
 Posted on Thursday, January 17, 2008, 12:00AM

Are we in a recession? No one knows. Indeed, it's literally impossible to
know.

A recession is six consecutive months of negative economic growth. At most,
December 2007 would be our first month, so we wouldn't know until sometime
in June 2008 if, by the end of May 2008, we'd been in a decline for six
straight months. So no matter what anyone tells you, we can't know if we're
in a recession yet.

*Mea Culpa*

The December retail sales figures were poor. Obviously, housing is weak.
Autos look to be softening (good time to buy a Cadillac). Even most
commodities are off their peak.

More important than any of these to us economists, however, are two factors.
First, because of repeatedly being stung by losses in real estate lending,
lenders are reluctant to lend, which is causing a slowdown in economic
activity. Second, money supply growth has been sluggish for the last several
months. This is often a signal of a weakening economy.

I want to be honest here (and everywhere): This slowdown is happening faster
and harder than I thought it would. I was too optimistic. My optimism was
based on a belief that the Federal Reserve would act more aggressively than
it has in fighting the slowdown. It didn't, and we're paying the price.

Let's hope that Ben Bernanke, the chair of the Federal Reserve Board, has
learned his lesson. Hopefully, he'll now plunge in with both feet to get a
lot of liquidity into the system, and reassure lenders that he'll backstop
them and not let them fail. He's now perceived as weak, and he'll have to
act aggressively to get the ball rolling again. But he can do it.

*Retro Recessions*

For now, however, assume that he's doing too little too late, and that we'll
have a recession. Here, then, are a few salient facts about postwar
recessions, which I've discussed before.

There have been 10 recessions in the last 63 years. The average length of
these downturns has been about 10 months. The average decline in economic
activity from peak to trough was about 2.5 percent. No decline has been
worse than about 3.7 percent.

In the past 25 years, there have only been 2 recessions, which is an
extremely good record. The two recessions -- in the early 1990s and the
2000-2001 correction -- have been extremely brief. The really severe
recessions of the postwar era have been engineered by the Fed to fight
inflation -- in the early 1970s and early '80s.

When the Fed is fighting to promote expansion and not to rein it in,
recessions tend to be brief. Real consumption doesn't fall for more than a
few months in such cycles. It would be almost unheard of for there to be a
year-on-year fall in retail sales from 2007-2008 if the Fed is actively
liquefying the economy.

Unemployment always rises in recessions. The degree of the rise is usually
modest, generally only about 2 percentage points, although some -- like the
one engineered by the Fed in the early Reagan years -- have gone as high as
4 points. The average length of involuntary unemployment during recessions
is about six weeks.

*Slacker Overboard*

There is some good news in here.

Even in a recession, more than 90 percent of workers who want to work will
be employed. Even in a recession, most businesses will make a profit. Even
in a recession in this era, more than 10 million men and women will need
cars and trucks. Many millions will need new homes. Tens of millions will
need retirement investment products and life insurance. In the United
States, even in a recession, there are plenty of people with money to spend.

Those who tend to their work, who get to the office or showroom or shop
early, stay late, work hard, stay on the phones dialing for deals (as my
pal, Barron Thomas, puts it), will make money. Those who stay sharp and make
a point of befriending their clients will make money. Yes, some extra effort
will be needed, but it'll pay off. There's still money to be made, even when
the economy itself has slowed down.

It's the guy or gal who puts in extra effort who stays ahead and even
prospers when the economy is in a slowdown. The easygoing, laid-back
time-servers get tossed overboard.

*Stay Hungry (Not Literally)*

There's another key truth about recessions: They always end, and the economy
always goes on to a new plateau. It may take a while, but the stock market
always moves on to a new high.

So stay hungry. Work harder. Dig deeper. Keep investing in broad indexes.
You'll come out all right on the other side.

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