This is an abbreviated version of the March Current Conditions Index report. The full report, which includes tables, along with past reports, can be found on my website: www.llardaro.com .
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The much anticipated bounce back from the
adverse effects of the harsh February weather turned out to be a non-event.
While the indicators most obviously impacted by the weather improved as
expected, several other indicators were far less accommodating, leaving the
March Current Conditions Index stuck at the same value it attained in February,
58. Unfortunately, this extended the string of consecutive months where the CCI
has failed to improve relative to its year-earlier value to eight.
New home construction, which came
to a virtual standstill last month, returned to a more reasonable level. And Retail
Sales, which should have felt weather effects, remained strong for both
February and March. As we move farther beyond the uncertainties produced by
winter weather, the underlying performance of Rhode Island’s economy is
becoming more apparent. While the overall picture that emerges is mixed, we
appear to have entered a period where our negatives are beginning to expand,
increasingly offsetting the beneficial effects of the parts of our state’s
economy that continue to exhibit strength. The result will be a period of yet
slower growth overall which will at times mask some or a great deal of the
positive momentum that exists within our state. While this is hardly the
outcome we wanted to observe, it indicates that we can expect the present
recovery to become even less broadly based should these trends persist. The
good news, which is becoming more difficult to find, is that an accelerating
rate of growth for the national economy will clearly benefit Rhode Island as we
move through the remainder of 2014. How much we benefit, however, is a very
different question. We may well see improvements in absolute terms (like the
recent decline in our Unemployment Rate), but relative to other states, we will continue to lag (we remained
#1 for joblessness in March).