10 Years After 9/11 – Summary of Impacts on Colorado

This is the final post summarizing the way the economy has performed in the 10 years after 9/11. The series of posts began in early August and has included a review of tourism; construction, housing, and financial activities; retail sales and personal services; high tech and the military.

Tourism

• From an employment perspective, tourism (accommodations and food services) has expanded in Colorado since 2001. Competitiveness within the industry has increased, as evidenced by the flat growth in output.

• In Colorado, the airline industry was “restructured” after 9/11.

• The impact of 9/11 was short term. These declines may have been offset by gains in emerging industries,
such as teleconferencing and other means of communications.

Construction, Housing, and Financial Activities

• Construction, housing (prices and foreclosures), and finance are all interrelated. A portion of today’s
problems can be tied to 9/11 and the 2001 recession. There was a mindset that the country could “spend” its way back to prosperity. That mindset created problems when overextended consumers lost their jobs or saw declines in the values of their houses.

• Construction output peaked in 2000 and has dropped-off since. From an employment standpoint, there was a slight decline during the 2001 recession. A much more severe drop-off began in 2008.

• Creative financing allowed financial employment to grow throughout the 2001 recession. Some of the
products that spurred that growth were problematic in the second half of the decade. In turn, layoffs in the
financial sector began in 2007 and have continued since. These declines are a function of lack of activity,
consolidation, automation, bank failures.

• Year-end equity market values are about the same in 2010 and 2000.

Retail Sales and Personal Services

• Sales of retail goods and personal services has become more competitive during the past decade, yet
employment has remained relatively flat. Increased savings in recent years may be an indicator that consumers learned from the 2001 and 2008 recessions that they have limited resources that can be allocated to the consumption of goods and services.

High Tech (Manufacturing; Information; and Professional Technical Services)

• Employment has dropped significantly as a result of increased efficiencies, outsourcing, and offshoring. At
the same time output has risen dramatically. MIPTS is the driver of the state economy. 9/11 played a role in the adoption of high technology goods and services (surveillance, security, teleconferencing, etc.)

Military
• The U.S. military has increased their dependence on Fort Carson since 9/11.The movement of troops in and out of the base have had a noticeable impact on the El Paso County economy.

The “Lost Decade” was a turning point in the structure of the U.S. and Colorado economies. While 9/11 did not cause this transformation, it played a role in accelerating the change that occurred in some industries.

For additional information, see The Colorado Economy Ten Years After September 11, 2001 at cber.co in the Special Reports section.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

10 Years After 9/11 – Tourism Initially Hit Hard

Over the next six weeks this blog will look back 10 years at the change in the national and state economies. In particular, it will take a simplistic look at the possible impact that 9/11 may have had on Colorado’s Lost Decade.

There are analyses that suggest Osama bin Laden inflicted extended damage on the U.S. economy. These calculations show the direct and indirect costs of fighting two wars, tracking OBL and other al Qaeda for the past 10 years, and adopting increased security measures.

Others believe the long-term financial impact of 9/11 was minimal. These viewpoints suggest the 2001 recession was a normal part of the business cycle and the self-inflicted wounds from the financial and housing crises were far greater than the impact of 9/11.

The brief comments provided in this and subsequent blogs are not intended to prove or disprove these viewpoints. Rather, the intent is to show how different sectors of the Colorado economy reacted to 9/11, the financial crises, the housing bubble, and the 2001 and 2007 recessions.  In September this blogs will be summarized and compiled at CBER.co

We’ll begin the discussion by looking at the Leisure and Hospitality sectors.

Tourism was the industry that was initially hit the hardest by 9/11, more so in states such as Nevada than Colorado. Nevertheless, the impact in Colorado was felt immediately. In 2002 there was a drop off in DIA passengers, skier visits, and park visits. This was accompanied by an obvious decline in tourism-related employment.

Sector employment remained soft through 2004. Between 2005 and 2009 the number of leisure and hospitality workers has grown at a rate similar to total state employment. Although tourism employment was hit hard in the 2007 recession, it has since recovered at a faster rate than most other sectors.

On the other hand, employment in Colorado’s air transportation industry declined over the past decade. The sharpest part of the decline coincided with 9/11. A series of industry issues (consolidation, competition, increased productivity, pricing wars, etc.) were exacerbated by the unexpected decline in business. Despite a decline in air transportation employment, the number of passengers at DIA increased from about 39 million in 2000 to more than 51 million in 2010.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

State Economic Blueprint Released

On July 22, Governor Hickenlooper’s Office of Economic Development and International Trade released its business development blueprint for the state. The document is the culmination of seven months of surveys, meetings, and information gathering.

Reaction to the blueprint is mixed. Coloradans feel the strengths of the plan are:
• It has received input from people in all parts of the state and all walks of life. As such it allows various regions to have customzied plans focused on their unique strengths.
• Various groups have openly provided support for the “bottom-up” approach.
• The plan focuses on what some think are some of the state’s natural strengths, such as tourism.
• The plan gives OEDIT staff an opportunity to take actions that they feel are appropriate because it has been mandated by the people.

As well, there is trepidation about parts of the plan. A sampling of some of the concerns are:
• There is not enough attention given to innovation.
• While there is talk about innovation, there is no clear-cut definition of what it is.
• There is a lack of attention given to strengthening the infrastructure.
• Lack of sufficient attention given to the development of primary jobs.
• Input from the masses lacks the vision gained from the expertise of strong leaders.

As with any plan there are a multitude of questions and opinions. An example of these questions follows:
• Who will be accountable for achieving the various goals within the plan – state or local government?
• Since the planning process involved significant local input, will the local organizations be responsible for funding its strategic initiatives or will that responsibility fall on state government?
• What is the proposed economic impact of the plan? How many jobs will it create? What types of jobs will be created?
The good news is that there is now a plan and the state will have a direction for moving forward.

For information about the blueprint go to the OEDIT website or call 303 892 3840.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

U.S. Employment Situation – The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

The recent labor report from the BLS brings back memories of the Clint Eastwood classic, “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.”

The Good – In February, March, and April an average of 220,000 jobs were added each month.
The Bad – In May the original estimate was that 54,000 jobs had been added. It was hoped that the downward trend would simply be a bump in the road.
The Ugly – The number of jobs created for May was revised downward to 25,000 with an addition of 18,000 in June.

These are not the kind of job gains that economic recoveries are built on. It is estimated that 100,000 to 125,000 jobs must be added each month to prevent unemployment from rising. If you account for the number of older workers who have remained in the workforce, that number might be bumped to 150,000 to 175,000. It is necessary to add between 200,000 and 225,000 jobs each month, on a sustained basis, to lower the unemployment rate.

The private sector posted gains of 57,000, while budget strapped governments reduced their payrolls by 39,000. The net is +18,000 employees.

The financial sector declined by 15,000 followed by construction at 9,000 workers. In addition, the temporary help services sector shed 12,000 workers. The sector, which is often considered a harbinger of broader hiring, declined for the third consecutive month.

On the positive side of the ledger the most significant sector gains were as follows:
• Leisure and hospitality 34,000 employees
• Health care and social assistance 17,400 employees
• Professional and business services 12,000 employees
• Wholesale trade   7,100 employees
• Manufacturing   6,000 employees
• Retail trade   5,200 employees
• Other services   5,000 employees
• Transportation and warehousing   3,600 employees.
Note: Not all sectors are included in the above overview.

While there is optimism for improved economic activity in the second half of the year, the reports cast doubts about job expectations. Employment growth appears to be nothing more than a necessary evil in the new economy that is driven by technology, globalization, a housing bust, and struggling financial markets.

Clint Eastwood, where are you when the country need you the most?

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

Contribution of Consumer to Real GDP Continues to Increase

There are an abundance of data sets that are useful in evaluating the performance of the U.S. economy. If only one could be used to measure overall performance it would be Real GDP, or the inflation adjusted output of the economy. The current Real GDP is approximately $13.4 trillion.

There are 4 components of the GDP. Mathematically speaking GDP= C+I+G+X.

The following analysis briefly looks at the change in the composition of output for each of these four components over the past two decades. As such, it is not intended to depict the total amount of output or changes in that output.

Consumers (C) are the primary drivers of the U.S. economy. As can be seen, the importance of the consumer has increased:
• Q1 1990 Personal consumption was 65.8% of Real GDP.
• Q1 2001 The go-go 1990s treated the consumer well – too well. Consumption rose to 69.4%.
• Q1 2003 Consumers were encouraged to keep spending as a way to pull the country out of the 2001 recession. Consumption rose to 70.2%. Creative financing helped sustain auto sales and allowed home owners to use their dwellings as ATMs. As a result consumers saved less, spent more, and  became overleveraged.
• Q1 2008 The Great Recession and the accompanying housing bust caused sharp declines in Investment (I). That decline increased the importance of government and consumer spending (70.3%).
• Q1 2011 The reliance on consumers continued as housing markets remained weak and government spending tapered off. Consumption rose to 71.1% of Real GDP.

Investment (I) includes business spending and the housing markets. The ups and downs of the contribution of investment follow:
• Q1 1990 Investment was 15.4% of Real GDP.
• Q1 1992 After the 1991 recession, investment dropped to 13.1%.
• Q1 2000 Investment rose during the go-go 1990s to 17.4%.
• Q1 2002 The 2001 recession pushed investment down to 15.5%.
• Q1 2006 With the recovery, business activity increased and investment rose to 17.7%.
• Q1 2009 Investment dropped to 11.7% as a result of the Great Recession and the fallout in the housing market.
• Q1 2011 With the recovery, a slight rebound has been seen. Investment has risen to 12.5% of Real GDP.

Government (G) spending was 20.3% of real GDP in Q1 1990. Shortly after, expenditures related to the first Iraq war and the 1991 recession temporarily drove the percentage up slightly. For the remainder of that decade, the strength in personal consumption and investment decreased the relative importance of government spending. Its percentage of real GDP declined to 17.5% in Q1 2000. Since then, it has risen steadily as a result of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and efforts to offset the effects of two recessions. Government spending was 20.2% of real GDP spending in Q1 2011.

Finally, net exports (X) have subtracted from Real GDP, i.e. there has been a trade deficit for over 20 years. In Q1 1990, Real GDP was -1.6% of Real GDP. As the trade deficit increased, net exports reached -5.9% of Real GDP in Q1 2006. In Q1 2011, net exports were -3.8% of Real GDP.

This zero sum analysis illustrates how declines in the relative importance of one GDP component require increases in the relative importance of other components. In short, this analysis shows the role of the consumer (C) in the recovery and the drag placed on the economy by the decline in the contribution of investment (I), particularly the housing market.

Looking to better times in the months ahead and an economy that has more balanced output.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

Colorado Legislative Council – Momentum Building

In late June the Colorado Legislative Council (CLC) released its quarterly update of the state economy Focus Colorado: Economic and Revenue Forecast. The report included mixed economic news – most of it good.

Nationally, there was reduced optimism compared to the CLC March forecast, with output growth revised downward from 3.2% to 2.6%. The Conference Board and Kiplinger have recorded downgrades of similar magnitude for real GDP. Other revisions include stronger employment growth and improved wage and salary projections.

The analysis of General Fund Appropriation budgets for FY 2010-11, FY 2011-12, and FY 2012-13 illustrates the fiscal challenges facing the state legislature. While funds from various sources are projected to increase, general fund appropriations will remain in the range of $7.2 to $7.3 billion for each of these periods.

On a positive note, CLC has upgraded its 2011 employment outlook from 0.7% to 1.1% or 24,400 jobs. They expect just under 40,000 jobs to be added in 2012. The forecast also points to slightly improved retail trade sales, income growth, and construction activity. On the down side slightly higher inflation is on tap.

The risks to continued growth remain significant. Consumer confidence remains low, constrained by concerns about debt, inflation, monetary policy, and weakness in the housing and construction markets. Despite these concerns, it is generally believed that these are factors that will prevent the economy from growing at a faster rate in the near term. Finally the chances of a recession are thought to be slim, less than 1-in-5.

At last, the majority of indicators are pointing to gradual improvement for the remainder of the year and solid job growth in 2012.

 

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

Colorado’s Construction Problems Date Back to 2000

Colorado’s construction industry has struggled for more than a decade!

Between 2007 and 2009 the construction and related industries accounted for the loss of 1-in-6 private sector jobs. Many believe that construction began its tumble in the middle of the decade. Employment and total valuation peaked in 2006 at 167,800 and $16.8 billion respectfully.

A closer look at Real GDP data shows that the downturn in Colorado’s construction sector actually began in 2000 and has been on a steep downhill path since. At that time the construction industry’s contribution to state output was $15.5 billion, or about 9% of the state’s private sector Real GDP (in 2005 chained dollars). Last year that contribution had dropped to $8.2 billion or about 4% of the private sector output total. From 1997 to 2010 the sector posted an annualized decline of 2.8%.

This decline in output is relevant for two reasons. First, the construction industry affects all of Colorado. More than half of the state’s counties have a higher than average concentration of construction workers. Second, a case can be made that the industry hasn’t bottomed out yet.

Unfortunately, about the only viable solution is time.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

Weak U.S. Employment Report – a Trend or a Bump in the Road to Recovery?

The BLS recently announced that U.S. employment in May rose by just 54,000 workers on a month-over-prior month seasonally adjusted basis. This is a sharp departure from the average monthly gains of 200,000+ for the previous three months. Clearly, the lackluster Q1 real GDP growth of 1.8% was too weak to stimulate increased job gains in the second quarter.

On a positive note, May was the 15th consecutive month of job gains in the private sector, with an addition of 83,000 in May. At the same time, the public sector shed 29,000 jobs as state and local governments scramble to address either budget cuts or inadequate revenue gains. This is the seventh consecutive month of declines for government employment.

Most of the gains (+51,000) came from the service producing sectors, while the goods producing sectors added only 3,000 jobs. Construction and housing woes continue to be a serious drag on the national economy.

Simplistically speaking, about 100,000 jobs need to be added each month to keep up with increases in the population. The unemployment rate will increase when fewer jobs are added.

About 200,000 jobs are required to bring the unemployment rate down significantly. At that rate (200,000 jobs added each month), it will take about three years to return to the peak employment of 2008.

In 30 days we will know if this dismal report was a sign that the economy has slowed or if it is a blip in the road to recovery. In about two weeks, the Office of Labor Market Information will provide their update for the state. Stay tuned.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

Got Jobs? Colorado Economy Stalled

Got jobs?

The Colorado Office of Labor Market Information recently released data that shows that four-month average employment for the state was 12,500 workers above the same period in 2010. The private sector posted a gain of 14,700 employees while total government employment decreased by 2,200.

Over the past four months, a group of industry sectors have increased their payrolls by 32,800 jobs (see chart below). These sectors account for 60% of total employment.

At the top of the list of gainers are tourism (+10,300) and private education  and health services (+9,900). The next three sectors are the extractive industries (+2,800), wholesale trade(+1,900), and higher education (+1,800).

Nationally, the recovery is shaping up differently than in Colorado. The leading U.S. sectors are professional and business services (PBS), tourism, health care, and manufacturing. Job growth in the Colorado PBS and manufacturing sectors seems lackluster compared to the U.S.. Companies in both sectors are part of the state advanced technology cluster, a key driver of the economy.

Meanwhile, the other 40% of the sectors has shed 20,300 jobs. Construction jobs continue to top out the list of industries shedding jobs (-8,800), followed by financial activities and the information sector, both posting losses of 3,600 jobs. Local education, PK-12, has dropped 2,200 workers while the federal government payrolls are down by 1,700. The decrease in federal employment is an anomaly. A number of temporary jobs were added in mid-2010 to complete the decennial census.

Fortunately, the movement of the state economy is different than movement of an airplane, where “stalling out” can have disastrous consequences. At the moment, a recession is unlikely; however, it is frustrating to endure a two-year recovery (jobs and output) that is moving forward at a “stalled pace.”

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.

Third Consecutive Month of 200,000+ Job Growth

On Friday (5/6/11), the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced the U.S. had added 244,000 jobs in April (2011), the third consecutive month for the U.S. to add at least 200,000 net jobs. Private sector jobs were added at the highest rate in 5 years.

The Professional and Business Services sector added about 51,000 new workers, followed by tourism (46,000), and health care (37,000). Manufacturing posted gains of 29,000 employees.

As expected the largest loser was government, primarily local governments. Sector employment dropped off by 24,000 workers.

The nation has regained 1.3 million jobs in the past year; however payrolls have about 7 million fewer workers than at the pre-recession peak. Despite this improvement, the recovery continues to be painful for a society that thrives off instant gratification.

The current momentum will continue if inflation remains in check, the double dip in the construction sector and housing markets is short-lived, and net job gains continue to average at least 200,000 jobs per month. It will take about 3 more years to recover all jobs at that rate of growth.

In two weeks the Colorado Office of Labor Market Information will release its preliminary employment update for April. Positive, but less than robust job gains are expected, with PBS, Tourism, Health Care, and Higher Education leading the way.

©Copyright 2011 by CBER.