Ask HN: What Recession?

121 points by danwee ↗ HN
So, I'm reading a lot these days about lay-offs in tech companies and how many HN users (mainly from US?) are having a hard time finding top-level paying jobs.

I work on Western Europe, and in theory we should be more screwed up than other Western countries... but:

- Just landed (3 months ago) on a job that pays me 20% more than the previous one. I could have switched jobs years before, but I just got the courage to do it now

- Keep seeing the same amount of job offers on Linkedin. Now, I have the tendency to keep a list of companies that hire on an Excel file, so I can come back to it later and compare past and current situations of such companies. I have over 200 companies that operate in Western Europe (but not exclusively) that I consider "top-level" (at least from my point of view). The effect of the recession? Well, it has had one, but somehow very poor: many companies went from having around 1000 job offers open in linkedin on a weekly basis to having now around a third of that. Sure, they are not hiring like crazy anymore, but they are still hiring!

- A company that announced a 14% lay-off back in May, is now hiring again (the same pattern as before: when they were offering thousands of jobs before, now they are offering a few hundred)

Now, I have no idea how FAANG is doing in Western Europe (I never cared to track them) because I have no plans to work for them. But all the other non-FAANG companies over here are hiring. So, I don't feel the recession (yet). Touching wood.

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Overall the unemployment rate is not bad at all

https://ycharts.com/indicators/us_unemployment_rate

and we are not in a recession yet. Certainly some firms are looking at economic trends, concerned that rising interest rates will cause a recession, and laying people off preemptively. One might fear this could lead to a recession but I think if you lose your job today you are much better off than if you lose your job a year from now and the economy gets much worse.

Normal companies are still having a hard time hiring, I think FAANG companies are bloated and not terribly efficient because they tend to be monopolists who don't have competition that would force them to be lean.

But, the fear that i have (as i look for a new job), is that now i might be competing for jobs against former FAANG people - yikes!
You may be assuming FAANG are recruited on quality rather than background and networks.
And also pliability. A certain way to not get hired at FAANG is to show any tendency towards independent thought. For instance it's clear Mark Zuckerberg does not want to hear from any independent thinker in 2022 if ever.

People mistakenly look to the badly named FAANG for best practices for software development and management but if you think critically the truth is the opposite, actually they should be lumped together with Boeing, Epic, Cerner, Adobe, Microsoft, etc.

These are highly profitable because of monopoly concentration and can afford to hire a huge number of excessively paid developers and waste their time with Byzantine practices, assign them to work on dead-end projects, etc. Quality of their products is beside the point because people are going to use them no matter how bad they are.

You can imagine for yourself what will happen to a person who works in that kind of environment, but I think getting a person like that to contribute to a normal business is like getting a pig to fly.

Can't wait for the world to admit that based on stock prices and corresponding average TC, companies like Oracle have more of a justification for being in the "FAANG" than Facebook, at least right at this moment...
Too-low unemployment rate is one of the signals for a possible coming recession. The idea is that people are too worried about getting a new job after leaving their current one, or are less able to handle periods with no income, so job mobility is low.

Unemployment rates for the past 70 years with recessions marked: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/UNRATE

It's a little hard to believe right now.

Normal employers are struggling to fill positions at supermarkets, salt mines, medical device factories, hair salons, restaurants, bus companies and other firms in my area.

If you believe the business cycle is like "economy runs too hot and inflation is high, the fed pulls back and crashes the economy, the economy gradually grows back to full capacity" then the low unemployment is a sign you're at a particular point in that cycle.

Well the world is a bigger place than your own experience. I'm not feeling a recession quite yet but I wasn't really feeling the hiring craze in the past couple of years either.
I think what you're confused about is the nature of why you say "in theory we should be more screwed up than other Western countries... but:"

Because of WMDs we ought never see another war between nuclear/bio states. Ukraine doesn't matter and isn't what the war is about.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China%E2%80%93United_States_tr...

Western europe is probably going to be one of the best places to be.

But more importantly, the layoffs aren't obvious. Stripe layoffs is the current one in the HN list.

https://stripe.com/en-au/newsroom/news/ceo-patrick-collisons...

But check out the 7 pages of jobs they are still hiring for: https://stripe.com/jobs/search?skip=600

Its not layoffs in the economic sense. It's layoffs in the war sense.

My wife is currently looking for a job in Western Europe and 90% of open positios are 'fake' -- they keep previous positions open because showing that you are in a hiring freeze can impact the company's perception. Plus they want to keep collecting info so when they need to eventually hire they have a good source.
I've seen this lately. Recently, I've done interviews with multiple companies over product-related roles. They all get back to me weeks later saying "we ended up hiring internally" or "we ended up eliminating the role completely".

But if you look on LinkedIn, Indeed, etc... these companies are still keeping job postings up and adding new ones all the time. It seems kinda fraudulent IMO

Yeah having job postings is not free but I think too many people believe that "companies put job offer only when they have an opening".

Ideally in a company one should have job ads all the time and if someone valuable drops CV only then reply - if you catch someone who is specialist and good burning couple thousands for an ad will still be worth it.

Just spoke to a company with a booth at a conference a few days ago.

"We've got 1000 job openings right now! What are you looking for?"

Yet... I don't actually think even if they found 1000 perfect fits tomorrow they'd all be hired.

Anecdotal evidence is not helpful when trying to evaluate an economy.

For that matter, an economy is always too complicated to usefully describe in a single word. They come up with broad terms like "recession" and give them rigorous definitions in order to get some kind of handle on it, but it doesn't reflect everybody's experience. In fact, it may not reflect anybody's experience: some will do worse, and some will do better.

The definition is "less total stuff getting done". Measuring "stuff" is already hard; defining how much "less" constitutes something to be worried about is even harder.

One common definition is "Two straight quarters of declining GDP". GDP isn't a great metric, but at least it's consistent-ish.

The US had one declining quarter of GDP, at the end of last year, and it's been up ever since. Europe as a whole has not had any negative quarters, though a few countries have.

GDP isn't a great metric, and others use a more complicated metric trying to get at how people and businesses feel: the price of goods, how much they earn, etc. GDP is supposed to be the aggregate of all that, but aggregates are misleading, in the same sense as "Mark Zuckerberg in a room full of poor people means billionaires on average". Sometimes it's useful; sometimes it isn't.

It's clear that inflation is up; that's good for some people (like people who owe debts, and can now sell their goods for more money to pay off those debts) and bad for others (those with money in the bank). None of it is where economists want it to be -- even the low unemployment figures mean something is off kilter. (Too many people employed means that people who would otherwise be doing something like training or hobbies or retired are dragged into working for some reason.)

In other words... the economy is what it is. If you're doing OK, fantastic. Others are not. Others are doing better. Overall, it's not a crisis, but worrying. There are signs that it will improve, as we get past the pandemic and start to treat the Ukraine war as a baseline rather than a downturn.

Does that help clarify at all? Or just make it more confusing?

Serious Q: what % of the GDP is silcon valley/tech-market? vs the fraudulent financial market?
Right now, US Tech is about $1.3 trillion, out of a total GDP of $23 trillion.

It's pretty consistently about 10% of GDP. Enough to have a noticeable effect: a 1% decline in GDP is an enormous deal, so if one imagined a 10% layoff through the tech industry it would be a real crisis. It's not that bad, of course.

It would be more worrying if it were an indicator of broader employment issues. Instead it seems to be specific to the Silicon Valley business cycle: a lot of growth with more hiring than really necessary, followed by an outsized contraction.

but if 50% of twitter employees are cut, regardless of role, where will they go? you have skilled employees (3500) actual people suddenly looking for work and likely in a small area of circumference...
Maybe nowhere. But since total US unemployment is 6 million, it's not a big deal in the context of "national recession".

I get the impression that it's unlikely that Twitter employees will remain unemployed long in Silicon Valley, unless they want to take an extended break. Lots of places are looking to hire. It may be a step down, but right now unemployment just isn't a national issue. (Six million total unemployed sounds like a lot, but economists expect about 4% of the ~200 million American workers to be unemployed at any moment due to the inevitable friction of people not finding jobs instantly.)

Sure, but I am wondering how many of those employees are actually in the bay area...

FB is flailing, Goog is a nightmare to get hired at, as is Apple (because of their corp egos)... (ive been here and in industry for 26 years, I know these companies DNA well... they are age-ist egomaniacs... so if you dump 3500 twitter workers on the streets os san francisco... thats going to be a tough market. and with the likelihood that many are renters, in one of the most expensive cities in the US, outcomes will be grief.

Musk better give a good severance for the careers he's abt to kill - because he can afford to do so.

> ...and others use a more complicated metric trying to get at how people and businesses feel...

Yeah, agreed, but i wonder how much of what will happen is more self-fulfilling prophecy, where a critical mass amount of people "feel lousy", and hence unconsciously push all sets of invisible levers of the economy which push the world/countires/companies into something closer to a recession. I'm going to call the global economy the "mopey teen economy"...because even if things are not "that bad", the consensus will make everyone feel like things are not so great. ;-)

In the 1970s, Jimmy Carter got hammered for saying that.

    The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways. It is a crisis of confidence. It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will. We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation.

The situation was worse then, but oil played a huge part in both. It wasn't just malaise. A key input had gone up, causing genuine inflation, regardless of monetary policy. (The solution in the 1980s was a massive expansion of government debt, with the same expansion of the money supply as the Fed could do with low rates.)

As always, there is a lot of politics: some people want the economy to feel bad, others don't. Today we have a lot more vigorous public square holding the same old discussions.

> causing genuine inflation

There's something obfuscatory about calling this inflation instead of what it fundamentally is: scarcity. I get that inflation means a price rise, but inflation is (or should be) fundamentally about monetary policy (devaluing money) rather than supply and demand.

The term predates monetarism. It means price rises of all kinds.

It's difficult enough to condense prices into a single measure without distinguishing what causes what. All the economists want for that term is to say, "Here is a standard basket of goods, and here is the average price paid for it." Even that much is hard enough to do that it requires a government bureau to do the calculation.

It would add extra confusion to redefine the term "inflation" to refer solely to price changes caused by monetary policy rather than supply or demand. Economists are likely to continue to use the term to mean what they've meant by it for over a century.

> It means price rises of all kinds.

but my point is that isn't the idea of "genuine" (like you said) inflation almost useless to say then? what's a fake rise in prices?

> Too many people employed means that people who would otherwise be doing something like training or hobbies or retired are dragged into working for some reason

Is this right? I'm sure I was taught the labour force figure used in calculating unemployment figures doesn't include people like this

You're correct, and I got ahead of myself. I got it right(er) in a sub-comment later.

Economists expect a certain number of people to be looking for jobs and not finding them because they don't match what their local market needs. It's friction. If the rate dips too low, it suggests that employers are digging too deeply to find anybody, probably by raising salaries, and risks unbalancing the rest of the economy.

IMO non top paying companies have been hiring more regularly, across the world. It's nice that you do not consider FAANG, but some people do just for the 2x-3x raise is income.

When the top payers do layoffs and/or stop hiring, overall the max compensation you can get goes way down

Just as an example, Stripe who just did layoffs yesterdays, pays $450k a year for a senior software engineer. How does that compare to your recent 20% raise?

The tech sector in the U.S is definitely still hiring if you're a senior software engineer who's willing to make $200k. But lots of people got used to very high compensation, and some also depend on it with loans they took out, that cutting their compensation by 50% would make them go bankrupt

A recession is complicated and may not be highly coupled to a specific field of employment.
A shortage of labor may cause a recession. And this seems to be the case in different places, for multiple reasons.

Countries at war are losing a large number of people (directly or indirectly). Even for those not involved directly, reduced trade makes some goods less available, and the alternative is more work needed on the buyers side (e.g., cannot buy gas, need to chop down trees manually). Limitation of available energy is a bigger driver for the transformation to renewables than any climate change fears ever were before, which requires a huge work force, which isn't available.

Anecdotal, but I know of a few companies that are cutting jobs in the US and moving them to lower-wage areas including Western Europe. Huge difference between employee compensation in SF vs much of Europe, even after taxes/benefits/etc.
If the goal is to save money, why not move those jobs to even cheaper countries?
Perhaps a perception that people in western Europe will be a closer cultural fit? Perhaps timezone proximity? Perhaps because executives want an excuse to travel regularly to Berlin or London or Paris or Barcelona?
More similar culture and laws.
And timezones. Western/Central Europe works fine especially from the East coast of the US. Asia is much harder.
What other people said, plus also if you open an office in Western Europe, you are also proximate to a new set of advertisers in relatively high-income countries.
I believe it's a good compromise on timezone (8-9 hours is manageable), political stability, safety and reasonable talent pool. You can still relocate people from cheaper countries yo richer ones. You can convince Romanian to move to Germany, but you can't convince German to move to Romania.
The funny thing is, from what I noticed living in both countries, there might be more US companies hiring talent in Romania because of the big local talent pool willing to grind, low corporate taxes, lax regulations and bureaucracy, than they're hiring in Germany due to the high taxes, strict labor laws and complex bureaucracy. When US companies want to move to EU they usually go for a low-tax, low-bureocracy country, like Netherlands, Luxembourg, or Ireland. I could be wrong, but that's my anecdote.

Dev immigration from Romania to Germany was big 10-20 years ago, but now, most Romanian devs these days, unless they get offers that go above six figures, aren't rushing to move to Germany as most take home dev wages have almost caught up, but the CoL and housing is way cheaper than in Germany. I think the push to remote work since the pandemic really convinced more US companies to double down on hiring remotely in Romania pushing wages up. I think it's similar in Poland.

From what I saw, they open a small office in Germany when they either want to tap some university/research institution or open a big office when they want to bring in (and low-ball) a lot of Indian/Turkish/non-EU devs who's goal is moving to the EU, as Germany is a popular immigration destination for non-EU devs rather than Romania or Eastern Europe which are less desirable immigration destinations (although that does seem to be changing slowly).

Interesting insight. Thanks!
> but you can't convince German to move to Romania.

I think nobody is trying, but with the right salary I'd love to. Some acquaintances did something like this: they moved from France to Poland and have a salary that's locally really good. There's more companies that hire like that on the basis that a certain salary gets you further somewhere east.

Are there any left ? I heard anecdotes that tech salaries in places like Bangalore are now on par with of Western Europe.
Employment is a lagging indicator.
The stock market is a leading indicator however. While down 20%, it's still above pre-pandemic highs. I don't the stock market is screaming severe recession at the moment.
If the recession fear-mongering thesis is right, the stock market is at a local maximum right now because of several mispricings: stock markets have priced in a lower "pivot" from the fed than there will be, and there's a lot of "dip buying" - pent up demand that has stayed out of the market so far. These two factors give you the expectation for another 20-30% drop in the S&P.

If the "what recession" thesis is right, chances are this was just a price correction, where companies' values are adjusted based on non-infinite time horizons. Stocks may still drop a bit as this correction finishes and earnings some in, but they are equally likely to rise.

There's a chance that the fear mongers are right.

Of course there is a chance the pessimists are correct. After all, that is largely the consensus view.
Care to share your excel list for (West) European companies?
I think the better heuristic for the state of the job market is job openings rather than headlines. There are still thousands of job openings you can find on LinkedIn. News outlets are built to grab attention and not help you build an accurate representation of reality. The news sounds alarming, but I think all it amounts to is the tech job market cooling off from being red hot, and big tech companies getting bloated because of inflated earnings during the pandemic. That being said, things can change quickly, just a year ago people were paying millions for jpegs on the internet lol.
There are job openings and even active recruiting for many of them. But from what I've seen companies are being much more selective, hiring processes are being stretched out, and offers may be less generous.
Companies need to hire after layoffs because some people they did not intend to lay off may leave and the people who they laid off may not be fitting to replace them.
"It isn't affecting me so it doesn't exist" is a fairly elementary mistake, yeah?
“A recession is when you hear about your neighbor losing their job, a depression is when you lose your job.”
And anxiety in between
You cut it before the punchline: "...and a recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his job".
Well, technically, it's only a recession if it comes from the Rècession region of France.

What OP is referring to is called bubbly fiscal agony.

Orange juice, milk, water... I just don't know which one!
This make me spit all my coffee.
I would buy you another cup of coffee to replace it, but money is a little tight these days...
Have my humble upvote good sir or madam. A good day to you!
Times are getting so tough that people are stealing jokes [0].

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33283106

Relax buddy, it's a meme [0].

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme

Oh it's definitely a meme. My reply is also a meme. We're just having fun.
Some would say a well-documented and evidence-supported meme is no meme at all.
Oh damn, that was good. The actual citation is what threw me, well done.
I ain't your buddy, friend.
This joke is widely adapted and reused, though. You could basically call it a meme format at this point.
I understand the joke, but I wonder... what's the instance that made it popular?
Yeah this was fantastic. Let them have cake!
I wish HN had awards like Reddit, I would spend coin on this comment. I got a much-needed proper belly laugh from it. :)
I think the implied question was "It isn't affecting me, here is the data I see around myself. That data is incongruent with the headlines, can you offer an explanation and show me what I am missing?"
And the answer is if someone surveys the inside of an office, they'll report very high employment rates.

The world is large and diverse. To understand it, one has to look at statistics. Looking at people runs in to hard limits very quickly, because it is only possible to see people who are in the same place as the viewer.

That's a generous interpretation. I think someone capable of negotiating themselves a new tech job at higher pay could only be asking this question rhetorically and not because they are incapable of answering it themselves.
(comment deleted)
The internet commenter's fallacy: I can only interpret things that happen to other people through things that have happened to me.

To some degree, this is just the human condition, but it is especially common (and annoying) in internet comments.

I think something about not being face to face makes people prone to think of your fellow commenters as an abstraction, and to interpret the ways their experiences differ as from yours as their misunderstanding rather than your not having that set of experiences. I'm aware of this, and am often able to catch myself and reflect further before hitting send, but will still observe this if I look over my past comments.
We aren’t in a recession yet.

Companies are starting to see the slowdown, so they are taking preemptive action so as earnings contract, P/Es will hold up better.

The politically minded readers of Hacker News refused to listen to those who said 2 quarters of negative GDP doesn’t necessarily mean a recession.

It would be really nice if we could take a deeper dive into economics, markets, etc and all learn but …

Has there ever been a recession so widely accepted and talked about before it kicked in?

I mean that honestly; I know there's a downturn and it'll probably continue, but my instinct is that something so widely talked about and accepted will probably not be as bad as it seems. Again I have no proof and maybe my instincts are totally wrong, but that's the feeling

It's very common for recessions to be widely talked about before they happen. I first heard talk about the upcoming housing bubble burst in 2003, five years before the bubble actually burst.

"Economists have predicted 9 of the last 5 recessions" - Paul Samuelson

> I first heard talk about the upcoming housing bubble burst in 2003, five years before the bubble actually burst.

2006 is when the housing bubble was pierced. It took another couple of years to fully deflate, so bursting isn't likely the best depiction of the event, but typically when we talk about bubbles bursting we refer to the first moment of weakness, not the tail end.

It was the securities market that crashed fast and hard five years later. The housing market crash played a role in that happening, I'm sure, but isn't housing itself.

I first learned what 'no doc' loans where in 2004. I worked inside a mortgage company for a while, and was a bit shocked by some of the numbers I saw. BUT... I don't think a housing bubble/crash was a foregone conclusion in 2003/2004, but warning signs were there and got louder over time.
The housing bubble occupied the front cover of the economist several times in 2004.
(comment deleted)
> I mean that honestly; I know there's a downturn and it'll probably continue, but my instinct is that something so widely talked about and accepted will probably not be as bad as it seems. Again I have no proof and maybe my instincts are totally wrong, but that's the feeling

Pretty much the center of opinion in mid-2006 was that the housing market was in a "slowdown" but that any recession would be brief, talk of "soft landings" and everything else. Everyone could see that it was rolling over, but there was a lot of optimistic talk about it.

Your opinion here is almost exactly the opinion seen 6-12 months before a strong recession.

There was some discussion of a contraction/recession due to the spike in commodities around 2014 by economists, but that never quite developed into a broad common opinion that a recession was due. And there was no Fed rate hike cycle starting then (since the Fed knew that inflation that was confined to commodities would be its own tax and brake on the economy, in the absence of other measures of inflation taking off).

According to the general definition of a recession - two consecutive quarters of negative gross domestic product - the U.S. entered a recession in the summer of 2022.
Probably depends on whether it stays up or not. See here: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/A191RL1Q225SBEA

7 of the 12 recessions marked on the graph temporarily jumped up then dropped back down during the recession.

A note though that the "2 quarters negative real GDP growth" has only ever been a rule of thumb that tends to fit (on that graph above, the dips below 0 outside of recessions only ever lasted one quarter). The official determination has always been made by NBER ( https://www.nber.org/ ), and how they determine it is more complicated (though AFAIK the details aren't public). I think it's too soon for them to make a determination on this one though, they make it while looking backwards, so these two quarters may yet become official which would maintain the pattern.

Perhaps, though this more of a response to "We aren’t in a recession yet" as this is an odd thing to say being just 1 quarter out.
Here's some actual data on hiring rate from LinkedIn:

https://economicgraph.linkedin.com/en-us/resources/linkedin-...

Looks like the hiring rate is down some since May but still quite positive. It's always been above 1% for the last two years, and reached a max of about 1.35% in June of last year. It is down 10.6% this October, compared to October of last year, but the actual variation in hiring rate is not huge. They break it down by industry, some industries have increased hiring, some have decreased it.

The "works on my machine" for the economic world.
So obviously what we need is docker for the economy
And any non random sample of a much larger population is almost certainly biased.
Same can be said in the reverse: "It is affecting me, so it does exist". Bias on both ends, qualitative data is often not reliable.

Last election: "If my social circle thinks we are going to win, then it is a given". Both share a pattern: a tech bubble (pun intended)

Some data (need more) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33453819

You are indeed correct. Much of the "data" I've seen here in support of the recession argument revolve around tech layoffs (and, of course, inflation), and when someone points out that real GDP grew and the unemployment rate is low, someone will respond by telling you how bad their neighbor in some tech city has it right now.
OP has a great point: most recessions have low job numbers (because of weak demand).

Speaking for the US: This 'recession' is weird because consumer demand is strong, job openings are high, the unemployment rate is near record lows, and GDP grew in the last quarter. So, to echo OP - what recession? A drop in the stock market does not a recession make.

It almost seems as if some quarters are willing a recession into being, but consumers are not having it. Granted the federal reserve is trying to curtail consumer spending to curb inflation, so I get why businesses would predict a recession. In all, it feels like the twilight zone.

My company stopped hiring for about a month when there was a lot of uncertainty but we seem to be doing well financially and are now hiring more headcount so the mood around hiring seems to have gotten better.
Looking at the US labor statistics, you'd think this was a golden age. But that 20% raise you got is only about 9% when you factor in the likely inflation taking place in your area.

The thing is that recessions start somewhere. They never hit the entire economy at once. This one started in the most highly-leveraged areas of the economy because the crisis that's brewing is all about money. More specifically, it's all about access to collateral that allows money to flow. That pipe is constricting by the day.

Sooner or later, the recession hits everyone.

>> that 20% raise you got is only about 9% when you factor in the likely inflation taking place in your area

Food and energy prices are up, but asset prices are down. Cash goes further today in some ways that in did last year this time.

What assets are you buying today with cash that are cheap and offset the pain of higher food and gas? Meta stock isn’t a great milk substitute.

Housing is one asset class that is dropping in price, but the increasing cost of borrowing is more than offsetting that decline.

I was looking at buying some farm equipment to reap the rewards of that higher food price, but it certainly hasn't fallen in value. Very much the opposite.

He has a point, though. On a developer salary, the basics like food and gas make up only a small portion of one's income. It may be an increasing portion, but still just a portion. The remainder can buy more, depending on what you want to buy.

Well, the entire market is cheaper, not just Meta stock.

Housing is cheaper if you have available cash, it it isn’t if you need to borrow. The reason it costs more to borrow is because cash is more valuable now.

> But that 20% raise you got

I'd gladly take a 20% raise with this inflation. I'm taking a pay cut, plus the inflation's reduction to real pay, plus rent will be going up at a rate outpacing inflation.

Choosing to ignore news while asking why your own experience doesn't match news seems disingenuous. News like recession is not made up for political or humourous reasons.
How about news optimizing for news pieces that are the most controversial/fear inducing/outrageous to get more clicks and thus more revenue?
Or as another poster posted, perhaps the media is pushing this to keep tech workers afraid of moving to another job or asking for more money.
Not to stray into conspiracy theory territory, but if inflation is a massive issue, bringing it down by smashing confidence through the media would be a very effective way to do it.

It explains why few people are seeing a downturn with their own eyes in spite of what the media is telling us.

Its also probable you are in a bubble with your friends.

The cost of living has gone up a lot where I live, but myself and friends earn enough that the significant grocery and energy bill spikes have zero impact on us, but if we were on a lower income and already on a tight budget we would definitely need to be cutting back on any non essentials.

Choosing to ignore your own experience whilst the news doesn’t match seems more disingenuous.

I’ve been reading about this cost of living crisis and recession since 2021, and still waiting for it to bite despite the media’s best efforts to kill confidence.

>News like recession is not made up for political ... reasons.

This is such an absurd statement I feel like it must be tongue-in-cheek.

People have been screaming about a recession for the last year now, with not a whole lot of hard data to back it up. Inflation aside, the US is doing well, and even on that metric we're doing better than most of Europe right now. Stories of doom grab eyeballs, and a bunch of people really want the US/Europe to have a bad time, so there's also a lot of wishcasting going on.
The U.S. and especially the dollar are doing better than pretty much everyone right now… but haven’t we been told for years that we are now part of a globalized economy? If the EU, Japan, and China all fall into recessions at the same time won’t they take the US down with them?
It's super complicated because part of the reason the other economies are having issues is because of the US dollar strength. Obviously the impact of a strong US dollar from inside the US is different because it makes importing cheaper and exporting harder but does affect domestic consumption.

There are hundreds(thousands) of physical supply chains that are each different and which will react differently. The financial supply chains are incomprehensibly convoluted.

In short the economies will influence each other but no one knows when or how the US will be affected.

Bear in mind that tech can decouple from other industries. It's possible you have a recession, say, in Banking while Fintech is growing like crazy (because it has a much smaller starting base).
People have been screaming about a recession for the last year now, with not a whole lot of hard data to back it up.

Other than 2 quarters of negative GDP growth - which was the common understanding until it became politically inconvenient.

In which case the recession is over, since we just finished a quarter of positive GDP growth.

Or maybe one metric is insufficient to judge an entire economy.

Perhaps a little overstated. In the past, -0.1% growth was considered flat. We only got the “-0.1% is the same as -9%, technically speaking” arguments when they became politically convenient.

If US growth had rebounded from -0.1% to +0.1%, I suspect partisan hacks’ positions would instantly reverse and we’d have republicans telling us that a tenth a percent is not really growth, and democrats yelling that technically it’s no different than +9% so there’s no recession.

I'd reserve judgement until they're done raising interest rates. These things take time to propagate throughout the economy.
And if one thing’s clear, it’s that even if we aren’t in a recession now, they will absolutely keep raising rates until we are.

Unlike the 2008 recession that was a result is mismanagement in the financial sector, this recession is very much an intentional act of monetary policy.

Overall unemployment and job opening numbers are still fine, at least in the US. The headlines are a handful of high-profile previous market darlings that overhired like crazy and added 20-50% headcount during the pandemic. They're not indicative of any kind of trend, just like the great resignation panic wasn't, either, and labor force participation declines overall tracked at about the same rate as they have for decades. Trend lines are bumpy, but they're still generally moving at any smoothed multiyear line as they have for a long time. The only real outlier is headline CPI inflation, but even that bumped up mostly earlier in the year and hasn't stayed high, though the way it's reported "year over year" means it'll look that way until a year after the initial shock unless prices actually go down again, which is unlikely due to ratchet effect.

Other than inflation, most of what we're seeing is just regression to the mean after a lot of shit went bonkers during the pandemic.

The "mean" for software jobs is still about the best sector job market the world has ever seen outside of the last two years of software jobs and 2005-era mortgage finance. Maybe early Iraq War oil exploration, but you had to move to the Dakotas or bumfuck West Texas if you wanted in on that.

Lots of highly paid tech jobs relied on company stock via RSUs which have been creamed. Relying back on regular salary doesn't seem so good any more.
"We have jobs" is a very low threshold to say there is no recession

I'd be more focused on 10%+ inflation and the 0.x GDP growth rate forecasts, especially since these forecasts are known to be somewhat optimistic

> Just landed (3 months ago) on a job that pays me 20% more than the previous one.

Well that doesn't even cover the 20% food price increase and ~40% energy price increase

I've posted this elsewhere, but I'll repeat it.

First they send your work home, and then they send it next door.

Corporate learned during COVID that the metro premium isn't worth it any more. These layoff announcements--which have always occurred in the shadows--have three purposes:

1. Shift jobs to cheaper locales. In the US, many metro jobs are being moved to cheaper locations like the midwest. Western European labor is also relatively cheaper. Work from home works for you and your boss. I live in Raleigh-Durham. Things are on fire over here. Google, Apple, Oracle, Microsoft, and Amazon are all hiring at a rapid clip. My fiance just finished her PhD in comp bio, and she has competing offers... but last I heard, biotech is dead and some other thing about long term R&D slowing down due to rate hikes (more on why I think this is nonsense later).

2. Off set the massive over-hiring. The rush of cash during COVID and record profits lured many companies into growth-mode-at-any-cost. While they still need the head count in many cases, people were willing to cut corners in hiring and project quality (i.e. does this really have returns to justify the investment) so a cull is needed. Think about crypto for example. I have a feeling a good number of companies are regretting jumping on the crypto NFT train right about now.

3. I believe companies and the media loudly communicate layoffs in part to reduce labor's negotiating power. I can't prove this, but it seems about right. In December, Facebook was struggling to hire. It was in the news. Right now, I'm sure many people are afraid to ask for more money, but I've managed to wring out 10-20% more than what's being asked for by recruiters despite what everyone is hearing.

I know people thinking this is all Fed induced, but you have to remember, the money that was spent during COVID hasn't gone anywhere. It's still circulating. Companies also borrowed record amounts of cash during ZIRP that's due in 30+ years. Many of these companies have returns in the 10-30% band. A bump to 4-5% is no where near enough to slow down business given how much cheap money was created.

For more evidence, go look at the start up raises. In a recessionary environment, VC would be completely dead. Yes, deal making has slowed and garbage companies can't find financing, but let's be real: those companies should have never existed in the first place.

> 3. I believe companies and the media loudly communicate layoffs in part to reduce labor's negotiating power.

I thought this was to make share holders happy. Fewer employees, more money for the owners. But to improve negotiation seems useful, too.

Hadn't thought about that. Good point. I'm sure that plays into as well.
Large layoffs are always newsworthy. Same as M&A.
> Corporate learned during COVID that the metro premium isn't worth it any more.

I'm quite sure they were realizing it before that. Here in Canada, Statistics Canada data was already showing stronger job markets away from the large urban areas during the mid-2010s, which continues today, and the 2016 census showed a meaningful decline in large urban areas with communities of 1,000-29,999 seeing the largest growth. The 'counter-urbanization' moment was already well underway.

It is fair to say that COVID sped things up. There was, and still is, a lot of friction involved in making that transition, but COVID no doubt provided a lot of grease.

> Shift jobs to cheaper locales. ... I live in Raleigh-Durham.

Me too. Moved here 17 years ago. It's becoming far less a 'cheaper locale', much like many of the other formerly cheaper locales. Housing here is one of the areas still going up while other areas are cooling off, though I've just started seeing some cooling and price reductions in the past month or so. I'm not even sure what counts as 'cheaper' any more.

It's still an oasis relative to the hubs. Gas is $3.50, you can get a condo for $150K. There are trees and flowers. People are nice.
This. I get that prices in many metros are still too high for your average earner, but I don’t understand how people can compare the price of housing in LA to a place like Indianapolis.
Can you actually get a condo for $150k in Raleigh, Durham, or Chapel Hill? Or is this in some distant town like Sanford or Pittsboro?

I'm genuinely curious, that sounds unreasonably low to me given what the housing market has done in the last few years. The triangle has a sprawl problem and it's only getting worse as most of the affordable housing is pushed further into the exurbs.

Agreed. I'm up in Youngsville (20 miles north of Raleigh) and... it'd be hard to get housing for a family of 3 for under $250k. Under $250k, it's mostly mobile homes. There's a smattering of condos in that range, but mostly over $250k.

We talked to a builder in Youngsville about building - mid 2021. Had initially verbal priced at high 400s. They back a few weeks later with "it's gonna be mid 500s, to low 600s." We backed out. 3 months later they're listing spec homes - in the same sub with $350k homes built 2 years ago - for $900k+.

Can you get something for $150k that a single person might want to live in? Probably, but you'll be commuting a lot to get to the Triangle proper.

Compared to LA, perhaps, this is 'affordable', but it's really... been a problem here (and it seems all over) the last few years.

Yeah, I'm in Durham near Southpoint. If you're not trying to be in Downtown, it's still affordable. Two bedrooms, two bath.

But beware, the universe is trying to move here.

So far most of the layoffs I've seen have been for nontechnical roles at big tech.

In the 2000 crash it was still fairly easy to find a job if you could code. Even though the big tech companies of the time were doing mass layoffs and losing 95% of market cap.

Who knows what it will be like this time. But I wouldn't take layoffs at high profile publicly traded tech companies as an indicator of the whole market. In some cases these companies are still even hiring a few engineers here and there while doing layoffs.

So far as I can tell demand for software engineers may actually be slightly higher than it was a year ago in the larger market.

> So far most of the layoffs I've seen have been for nontechnical roles at big tech.

That's not the case. Engineers may not be as numerous but in each of the recent layoffs engineers were let go as well.

You wrote: <<In the 2000 crash it was still fairly easy to find a job if you could code.>>

Personal anecdata: I lived in Silicon Valley in this era. It was awful. That was absolutely not true. I spent two years sorting papers for ~12 USD per hour ("temp worker"). Eventually, I gave up on SV and moved to New York City. I found a very good job in less than two months.

Seems like it was true in your case given that all you had to do was look in NYC, where you found a new job almost immediately.
Most people wouldn't consider a 2500 mile move for a job a "fairly easy" thing to do.
Moving may not be easy, but the original claim was merely that finding a job was easy. The anecdote supports it.
That was exactly my point. Finance was booming in New York City, but the valley would not look at junior hires. So many cheap mid-career devs (with a mortgage) were desperate for a job! I had no chance.

Random anecdote: One thing I remember moving from SF to NYC (in that era): Instantly lower quality of life. I know, I know, that was a long time ago! The weather in NYC is awful compared to SF. I could walk to supermarket without a coat for 11 months a year. And no endless police & ambulance sirens or loud garbage trucks! And housing was more expensive and much lower quality.

I got hired at Amazon about a month after 9/11 pretty much at the depths of the 2000-2001 tech recession, after having lost my prior job only a month or two before that.
The recession where my electricity bill quadrupled.
Perhaps we should judge not by what is happening only with ourselves, but take a look around us ;-)

The inflation is rising, central banks in EU, UK (and US) are increasing rates to fight inflation (in a wrong way IMHO), energy prices are rising without a solution in the horizon, food prices have also increased considerably, small shops are closing, small businesses are struggling, but hey look, I switched jobs, got a 20% pay rise and can't understand why you're all complaining... :-(

There will pretty much always be job openings in large companies, as people who fill essential roles retire, move away, etc. Sounds like the companies you monitor have reduced open roles by 66-90+% which is quite significant. Most companies, before they start laying off existing workers, will simply cut their hiring and hope to shrink their business through natural attrition (hiring fewer people than are leaving), which is probably what you're seeing.

EDIT: More broadly though, we are not actually in a recession yet, it's just that there are numerous signs of an emerging global economic slowdown. It's difficult to draw any concrete conclusions about the state of the economy from traditional metrics such as asset prices, inflation, GDP, unemployment, etc, because years of loose monetary policy coupled with recent shocks such as the pandemic and the war in Ukraine have messed with those metrics.