National Economic Outlook - September 2013
Written By:
Ingo Winzer, President
Ingo Winzer, President
Local Market Monitor
The
rate of annual job growth in August, 1.7 percent, was basically the same as in
previous months. We had better get used to the idea that this is the new normal, because there probably
won't be much help from the lagging government and construction sectors.
Budget
difficulties will prevent any meaningful increase in government spending, even
though local and state revenues are now in better shape. The recession revealed
the extent of unfunded pension liabilities
for public employees, which will absorb any extra dollars.
The
expected recovery in the construction
sector is running up against new realities
that will slow hiring. One of these is the falling
homeownership rate, currently 65 percent - down from 69 percent in 2004-05
- and almost certainly going lower. Falling homeownership just means that more
people rent, but for jobs in construction it means slow hiring because
apartments can be built with fewer workers. Despite higher home prices this
year, only 65 percent of new building permits were for single-family homes, by
far the lowest percent in a decade.
Another
unhappy reality for construction is that the number of potential home buyers will be restricted for years
because so many existing homeowners are either directly underwater with their
mortgage or are so far in debt with home
equity loans that it amounts to the same thing. When you owe more than your
home is worth, you can't afford to sell it, which means you can't afford to buy
a new one, either. Americans took on $600 billion of home equity debt and have
paid down only 20 percent of that.
Jobs
were flat in manufacturing, despite
more car production, as consumers move away from PCs. Jobs in retail were up a
solid 2.7 percent, jobs in restaurants an even better 3.5 percent. Business
services jobs were up 3.4 percent, healthcare jobs up 2 percent. The
unemployment rate dropped to 7.3 percent.
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