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93% of US Counties Still Haven’t Recovered from the Recession

Those of you who watched the State of the Union address last night know that President Obama spent some time, as usual, crowing about his economic record. To my surprise, he mentioned the “Great Recession” only once, but he spent plenty of time talking about how the economy has grown during his term is office. As you might expect, these words need to be taken with a grain of salt. A recent study from the National Association of Counties (NACO) provides more evidence to support our suspicions. According to their study, across all of the United States’ 3069 counties that have their own county government, only 214, or 7%, of them have recovered to pre-Recession levels on all four of their indicators, jobs, unemployment rate, GDP recovery, and home prices. That means 2882 of the counties NACO considered have yet to do so. From their report:
By 2015, 214 county economies recovered to their pre-recession levels on all four indicators analyzed, almost three times more than by 2014. Most of these county economies are in Texas, Nebraska and Kansas. For the first time, 17 of the 126 large county economies — in counties with more than 500,000 residents — are part of this group. The majority are in California and Texas.

Overall, the county economies recovered on all four indicators by 2015 still represent only 7 percent of all county economies. In contrast, almost 16 percent of county economies had not recovered on any indicator by 2015, mostly in the South and Midwest. States such as Florida, Georgia, Illinois and Mississippi have more than a third of their county economies still reeling from the latest downturn across all economic indicators.
The report has this section under the cheery sounding subheading “Economic Recovery is Spreading Out”, but it’s really hard to see this in too positive a light. For those interested, here is the relevant map:

214 County Economies Recovered on all Four Indicators by 2015

As you can see, the darkest blue indicates counties that have totally recovered on all four of their indicators. Most of the country’s counties, though, are still stuck on the lower end of the spectrum. As you can see, the colors for 0-2 recovered indicators far out number the fully and mostly recovered counties.
It does qualify as progress, I suppose, from last year when, as the Wall Street Journal noted, the organization’s study found only 65 of the nation’s counties had recovered on all four points. The Journal has done the hard work of crunching the numbers on NACO’s study. Here is what they have note:
Last year, 72 of the recovered counties were in Texas, the most of any state. Nebraska followed with 22. Minnesota, Kentucky, North Dakota, Montana and Kansas each had at least 10 fully recovered counties.
Meanwhile, in 27 states, not a single county had fully recovered.
Some of the nation’s largest counties finally recovered from the recession in 2015, including the counties containing

Denver, San Francisco, San Jose, […]

By |2016-01-19T15:44:38-06:00January 19th, 2016|Uncategorized|0 Comments

U.S. Car Sales Set New Annual Record

U.S. vehicle sales broke the all the all-time record in 2015, though they did not finish off the year with quite the strength expected. December’s results still were strong, totaling a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 17.2 million units, rather than the lofty 18 million that many analysts were anticipating. Non-seasonally adjusted, total sales came in at 17.5 million, a +6% increase from 2014 and compared to the 2000 record of 17.4 million. According to Kelley Blue Book, the average transaction price for December sales was $34,428, up about $297 from December 2014. They also note that luxury sales spiked in December, accounting for around 15% of the market, more than 2% higher than the rest of the year’s average. In addition, SUVs and trucks continue to make up a larger share of sales, which is also helping to boost average transaction prices. Some individual company highlights included an +8% year-on-year retail sales increase for GM, boosted by high demand for Silverado and GMC Sierra pickup trucks. Fiat Chrysler’s annual sales were up +7%, with the groups Jeep brand sales up +42% in December alone. Ford’s full year sales rose by +5.3%, led by increased demand for its Lincoln brand MKC and Navigator SUV models.

U.S. Light Vehicle Sales

By |2016-01-06T07:46:18-06:00January 6th, 2016|Articles|0 Comments

America’s Fastest Growing Occupations

What are America’s fastest growing occupations going to be over the next decade? The BLS projects that wind turbine service technicians are going to be the country’s fastest growing occupation between 2014 and 2024, with a whopping +108% growth. Their services are certainly going to be in demand with U.S. wind energy capacity predicted to increase +15% this year and +14% in 2016, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. However, the vast majority of fast job growth over the coming decade or so will be in the healthcare sector, accounting for all but three of the top ten fastest growing occupations. Occupational therapy assistants and physical therapist assistants can expect job growth of +42.7% and +40.6% respectively by 2024. (Source: Statista)

 

America's Fastest Growing Occupations

By |2015-12-16T10:25:48-06:00December 16th, 2015|Articles|0 Comments
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