KEY POINTS
  • As the president of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a member on the Business Cycle Dating Committee, James Poterba helps determine when a recession officially starts and ends.
  • CNBC interviewed the MIT economist about the practice of dating downturns, and discussed why the work matters.

As the president of the National Bureau of Economic Research and a member on the Business Cycle Dating Committee, James Poterba helps determine when a recession officially starts and ends. Why is that important? What do those dates tell us?

When the NBER was founded in 1920, its economists mainly studied workers' income, businesses and capital, said Poterba, who is also an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. However, noticing that things didn't stay good or bad for too long — they were always changing — the bureau soon turned its attention to the cycles of the economy, as well.