PRESS RELEASE
March 7, 2003
Contacts:
Sara Sanchez
Research Analyst
(801) 288-1838, ext. 121
Mobile: (801) 718-1059 (available this weekend)
sara@utahfoundation.org |
Janice Houston
Senior Research Analyst
(801) 288-1838, ext. 123
janice@utahfoundation.org |
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UTAH STRUGGLING TO RECOVER FROM THE
2001 RECESSION
Utah Foundation today released its February Research Report
on employment, examining the impacts of the March 2001 Recession on Utah's
current employment situation. Additionally, the report relays information
from the 2003 Economic Report to the Governor comparing Utah and the Mountain
West. The report, entitled "The National Recession: Its Impacts on
Utah and the Mountain West," should accompany this release; if not,
it is available at http://www.utahfoundation.org/reports.html.
The report finds that the employment situation in Utah is
comparatively worse than the national employment situation. While national
non-farm employment is down 1.3% since December of 2000, Utah is down
2.3%. Furthermore, if the government sector is excluded from the calculation,
Utah has lost 3.9% of its jobs during that time period.
This likely has two causes. First, the corporate community
is still recovering from a bubble of overcapacity that built up during
the nineties. This likely explains the 9.2% decline in the manufacturing
sector since December 2000 and the ongoing decline in business investment
nationally. Additionally, the Olympic Winter Games generated an estimated
35,000 job-years of employment. This likely created a smaller bubble in
the service, trade, and construction sectors.
In Utah, the only sectors registering positive job growth
since 2000 are government and the finance, insurance and real estate sector.
The net result of this is that while the national media has dubbed the
current economic situation a "jobless" recovery, in Utah this
could more aptly be termed a "job-loss" recovery.
Despite being among the worst states for job losses, Utah's
unemployment rate is lower than the national rate and remains at a moderate
level. This seemingly contradictory phenomenon has two possible explanations.
The first is a rise in the number of discouraged workers due to the recession.
These are workers who have given up looking for a job and are not counted
on unemployment rolls. The second reason relates to the Olympics, which
may have temporarily drawn people into the workforce who would not otherwise
have sought employment. Sara Sanchez, Research Analyst said, "While
Olympics-related employment may exaggerate the job losses since last year,
looking at the longer trend over two years, it is clear that Utah's economy
is hurting. Job losses began well before the Winter Games ended and other
sectors, like manufacturing, were affected more than the sectors we would
typically associate with the Olympics buildup."
Perhaps the most troubling aspect of this recession, aside
from employment, is the failure of indicators of economic health, both
on the consumer and business fronts, to recover to pre-recession levels.
It has been 23 months since the start of this recession, and the only
indicators which have risen to pre-recession levels are Gross Domestic
Product (GDP), personal consumption and, as of December 2002, personal
income. Sara Sanchez, Research Analyst, said, "The continued downward
trend of indicators such as corporate investment and consumer sentiment
indicates that full recovery on the employment front may be a while off.
On the consumer side, the growth in consumption has significantly outpaced
income, suggesting that the savings rate has fallen and consumer debt
has increased. This increase in debt loads is likely to dampen future
growth in consumption."
Utah Foundation is a nonprofit, non-advocacy research
organization. Our mission is to encourage informed public policy making
and to serve as Utah's trusted source for independent, objective research
on crucial public policy issues.
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