Monday, January 13, 2014

Current Conditions Index: November 2013

Below is a partial version of the November Current Conditions Index report. The full report, which includes tables and historical data, can be found on my web site: www.llardaro.com .
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The fourth quarter isn’t playing out as well for Rhode Island as we might have hoped. For November, our state’s positive but not exactly stunning momentum continued. As has been true for some time now, there was both good news and bad news concerning Rhode Island’s economic performance. First, the good news (of sorts): although the Current Conditions Index for November fell to 67 from October’s 75, several key indicators continue to display hopeful signs for the future months. While three of the CCI’s five leading indicators improved this month, the two that failed to improve relative to last November both faced very difficult comps.   The bad news once again emerges when we contrast November’s performance for this year with that in 2012: for a fourth consecutive month, and the fifth time in six months, the CCI has failed to exceed its year-earlier value. Sadly, my earlier suspicion that a pattern of failure to improve on year-earlier values is proving to be correct. Let’s hope this doesn’t continue for much longer. Since the CCI’s readings in early 2013 were not terribly strong, we might find ourselves once again exceeding year-earlier values in just a few months. At any rate, what we are continuing to witness is a slowing in our rate of growth relative to the end of last year. This, by itself, is discouraging since our state’s current rate of growth is not exactly going to cause whiplash. The ultimate test of how robust this recovery proves to be will be defined by our ability to accelerate from current rates of growth. While more rapid national growth will clearly help with this, Rhode Island’s failure to meaningfully redefine itself for the information age (other than renaming the EDC) has left our state’s obstacles to more rapid growth, most notably our non-competitive tax and cost structure, intact. 

As stated earlier, for November, three of the CCI’s five leading indicators improved. The other two were unable to escape the effects of very difficult “comps” from a year ago. US Consumer Sentiment fell sharply (-9.4%), in part because of a 29 percent rise one year ago. November marked the third consecutive decline for Sentiment. It remains in an uptrend at present that will likely continue as long as the stock market continues to rise. Employment Service Jobs, which includes temporary employment, a prerequisite to overall employment growth, fell for only the second time in over a year, declining by 1.3 percent.  Should its uptrend reverse, this would pose problems as we move into 2014. One potentially hopeful thought: these recent declines might be revised away with the upcoming rebenchmarking of the 2013 data.

While our state’s economic momentum continues to slow, pockets of substantial momentum remain, based on the performances of both the leading indicators contained in the CCI and several of its non-leading indicators. Even with these, it will be quite some time before we return to our prior peak in economic activity. 

The remaining leading indicators improved in November. The recent surge in Single-Unit Permits, a leading indicator of housing, continued, as Permits rose by 30.1 percent compared to last November, as Rhode Island’s housing sector continued to move well beyond its recession trough. New Claims for Unemployment Insurance, the most timely measure of layoffs, improved in November, falling by 26.9 percent. Unlike the leading indicators discussed earlier, even though this indicator is not in a well-defined downtrend, the most recent three months indicate that this might be changing. The final leading indicator, Total Manufacturing Hours, which measures strength in our manufacturing sector, rose by 5.6 percent in November, driven mainly by a large increase in the length of the workweek. This indicator has now improved for eleven of the last thirteen months.

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