speeches · May 13, 1996
Regional President Speech
Cathy E. Minehan · President
Bullets for New England economic update
cmneb596
New England Mayors' meeting, 5/14/96
presentation by Cathy Minehan
• Start with macroeconomic overview (Fuhrer's directors' talk?)
- GDP growth in first quarter - 2.8 percent - stronger than expected;
special factors such as inventory reductions and GM strike made
the figure weaker than it would otherwise have been. That is,
underlying growth rate is greater than 2.8 percent, probably
around 4 percent.
- Robust GDP report tempered somewhat by unexpectedly weak
employment report for April - total payroll employment grew by
only 2,000, with construction and manufacturing registering
significant declines. Earlier this year, employment has increased
by an average of 166,000 jobs per month.
- Unemployment declined from 5.6 percent to 5.4 percent in April.
- Overall, these national data show economic strength, and raise
some concern about emerging inflationary pressures.
• The New England economy is almost tracking the national economy
in terms of employment. Over the last 12 months, the region has
gained about 80,000 jobs, on net.
- Employment growth in the region is only slightly slower than in the
nation. Chart 1: Since the recovery began in 1992, the region
as a whole has added jobs at a slower pace than the nation.
Over the 12 months ending in March, the job count expanded 1.3
percent in New England and 1.5 percent in the nation.
- Within the region (Chart 2), New Hampshire and Vermont have
grown the fastest in the recovery; Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
and Maine have been bunched in the middle; and Connecticut has
lagged behind. [Cathy - FYI - Over the 1 2 months ending in
March, gains from fastest to slowest were as follows: CT. 0.5%,
2
ME 0.7%, RI 1.0%, VT 1.3%, MA 1.6%, NH 1.7%.]
- Chart 3 takes a longer view, comparing New England's experience
in the downturn as well as the recovery with that of other
regions. While our recovery has been reasonably good, the depth
of the downturn was so great here that we have not yet regained
as many jobs as we lost.
* Among the other regions, only the Mid-Atlantic states (New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania) remain below their pre
recession job peak.
*
At the other extreme, the Mountain states (Arizona, Colorado,
Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming)
were barely affected by the recession and have grown the
fa st est in the recovery.
• Unemployment remains lower in New England than in the nation
(Chart 4).
- The nation's jobless rate dropped to 5.4 percent in April; New
England's rate dropped at the same time to 4. 7 percent.
- Unemployment has been below 5 .4 percent in New England for nine
straight months.
- Joblessness was below the national average in all six New England
states in March (Chart 5), ranging from below 4 percent in New
Hampshire and Vermont to just over 5 percent (5.1 %) in
Connecticut and Rhode Island.
* The range was wider a year ago, with the lows a little higher
(4.2 percent) and the highs much higher and above the
national rate (especially Rhode Island at 6.8 percent, also
Connecticut at 5. 7).
• The apparent inconsistency between New England's slower-than
average employment growth and lower-than-average
unemployment is easily explained.
- As they have historically, population and labor force are growing
more slowly in New England than in the nation;
- with fewer people in the region available for work, unemployment
3
can drop even as jobs rise only gradually.
• While New England has regained almost two-thirds of the 650,000
jobs lost in the 1989-91 downturn, the mix of the new jobs is
quite different from the mix of the lost jobs. Chart 6 - height of
bar is number of jobs lost in the recession or added since the
trough in December 1991.
- In the recovery, the bulk of New England job gains have been in
services, but a very small fraction of the recession losses were in
services. The wholesale and retail trade industry has also added
over 100,000 jobs in the recovery.
- Job losses have continued during the recovery in manufacturing, as
well as in the finance, insurance, and real estate industry because
of ongoing consolidations.
• How do the jobs we're gaining in the recovery stack up against the
jobs we continue to lose? One way to judge job quality is to look
at wage levels, and Chart 7 shows the results of a calculation of
average wages in the industries that are gaining and losing jobs in
the nation, New England, and Massachusetts.
- The first column indicates that the average job in New England (and
Massachusetts) pays higher wages than the average U.S. job.
- But the average wage of a representative new job is below the
average wage of the typical lost job. This is the case whether
one compares all expanding and contracting industries (columns 2
and 3) or expanding and contracting business services industries
(columns 4 and 5).
- Nonetheless (the good news), the average quality of jobs being
added in Massachusetts exceeds the quality of the average
existing job.
- And in both New England and Massachusetts, jobs in expanding
business services industries (next-to-last column) are higher
4
quality than the average existing job. This higher pay reflects the
fact that a bigger fraction of the new jobs is in high-paying
software locally than is the case nationally, rather than in low
paying "help supply" - the temp industry.
• The industry patterns of job loss and gain summarized in Chart 6 are
also shown in Chart 8, which compares the pace of New
England's employment growth by industry with national growth
since the trough.
- Manufacturing (upper left) and finance-insurance-real estate (bottom
center) stand out: growth has been noticeably slower in New
England than in the nation.
*
With respect to manufacturing, however, it is worth noting
that the region has lost jobs less steeply than the nation
over the past 12 months; earlier in the recovery,
manufacturing jobs were expanding nationally.
- In the other industries shown, New England's recovery growth path
tracks the nation's.
• Chart 9 shows a number of other economic indicators for the region.
Most, like the employment data, suggest that activity in the
region is somewhat slower than in the nation.
- Consumer confidence (upper left) has been barely holding its own
nationally over the last year or so and has declined in New
England.
- Help-wanted advertising (upper right) - a good indicator of business
hiring plans - is also level with a year ago for the nation and
down in New England, with the decline concentrated in the first
few months of this year.
- Retail sales have shown fairly steady gains in the nation and less
forward momentum locally, until early this year when the New
England figure jumped up.
5
- Housing activity has been subdued in New England. Housing
permits have moved very little in the region since coming down
from boom levels early in the recession, while nationwide permits
have been rising gradually.
- Wages and prices are rising and the rates of increase are picking up
a bit in New England after a couple of years of running below the
national pace (two lower panels).
• Overall, the New England economy is reasonably healthy. Economic
growth, while slower than in the nation, is roughly on par with the
region's long-term history, and residents' incomes continue to expand
at a moderate pace.
6
U.S. Bureau of the Census Definitions of U.S. Regions
New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Rhode Island, Vermont
Middle Atlantic: New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania
East North Central: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin
West North Central: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska,
North Dakota, South Dakota
South Atlantic: Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia,
Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia
East South Central: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee
West South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas
Mountain: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico,
Utah, Wyoming
Pacific: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington
Selected Charts
to Accompany Remarks by
Cathy E. Minehan
New England Mayors' Meeting
May 14, 1996
Chart 1
Total Nonfarm Employment
US Index, Feb. 1992 Trough = 1
NE Index, Dec. 1991 Trough= 1
1.14
1.12
..........
. . . ·· ..... ". . .
1.10 .. . .---· 1•.,• I ·. . . . United States
.
..
.
.\
1.08
·-·\
. .•. ------·
1.06
.----·
//New England
,-
1.04
.. ,-•
. --
, ....
1.02 . . ___ :··
:··•.··
.....
....... _ ..... .. .•. .. .··•-1·
1.00
0.98
0.96
Jan-88 Jan-89 Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 2
Nonfarm Payroll Employment in the New England States
Index, Each State's Employment Trough = 1
New Hampshire
1.12 -------------------------------------------------------------
Vennont
United States
Massachusetts
1.08 -------------
---- Rhode Island
Maine
1.04
Connecticut
1.00
0.96 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jan-90 Jul-90 Jan-91 Jul-91 Jan-92 Jul-92 Jan-93 Jul-93 Jan-94 Jul-94 Jan-95 Jul-95 Jan-96 Jul-96 Jan-97
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 3
Nonfarm Payroll Employment by Census Region
Index, Each Region's Pre-Recession Employment Peak = 1
1.30
Mountain
1.20 ···································-·····················-······································-··········································································· .
East So. Central
West So. Central
West No. Central
Pacific less CA
1.10 .
_,,,...~;;;...J·· South Atlantic ·
------- East No. Central
Pacific
California
1.00
Middle Atlantic
______ New England
0.90 .
Jul-88 Jul-89 Jul-90 Jul-91 Jul-92 Jul-93 Jul-94 Jul-95 Jul-96
Jan-89 Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96 Jan-97
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 4
Unemployment Rates
Percent
9
..
. .,.
--· ': ' New England
;····
. ..
. .: : ~' V -■~ : . . . .
8
! \ .
.. . . ..
. ··- . .i ..
• "i
7 -
.
6 --
..
. .
. .
.. . .. . ... .
'V• • ••
' . ..
5 \ ! ' '• \.
.. ..
'•
V
4
Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96
Note: Data beginning January 1994 reflect the redesigned CPS survey and are not strictly
comparable to data for 1993 and earlier years.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 5
Unemployment Rates in the United States and New England
Seasonally Adjusted
United States
New England
Massachusetts
Connecticut
Maine
New Hampshire
6.8
Rhode Island
Vermont
0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0
Percent
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 6
Mix of New England Jobs Lost and Recovered
Recession: February 1989 to December 1991
Recovery: December 1991 to March 1996
Thousands of Jobs
1111 Recession
300 ■
Recovery
200
100 -
0
Transportation,
Public Utilities Government
-100
-200
*Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 7
Weighted Average Annual Wages of a 'Representative' Job in the United States,
New England and Massachusetts during the 1991-94 Economic Recovery
Expanding Contracting
4-Digit 4-Digit
Expanding Contracting Business Business
All 2-Digit 2-Digit Services Services
lndustries" Industries Industries Industries Industries
United States $26,683 $24,203 $38,944 $20,340 $32,816
New England $29,530 $28,371 $40,594 $31,316 $44,207
Massachusetts $30,781 $31,117 $39,925 $34,236 $42,368
a Average wages for all industries are for the year 1994, not the average of 1991 through 1994.
Source U S Bureau of Labor Statistics, FRB calculations.
from Joshua Gleason, "The Performance of Business Services in the National and
Regional Employment Recovery," New England Economic Indicators, March 1996,
pp. 23-27.
Chart 8
Sources of Employment Growth by Sector
Indexed to New England trough Dec. 1991 =1
2.00
Manufacturing Construction Transportation and
1.20 1.20
Public Utilities
1.80
1.10 1.60 1.10
.. .
United States .
1.40 \ ' ~. .
··~ ... - ..... • . . 1.00
.. ~- --·-· -- ..... -- ..... ---
1.20
New England
0.90 0.90
1.00
0.80 '-'----L--.1---..J..---'---'---"----' 0.80 .....,__ _ .,_ _. __ _ ,___-1..._-..1. __ l_J 0.80 .....__ _ _,__ _, ___..,___.....1...._-.l.._--J~
Jan-90 Jan-92 Jan-94 Jan-96 Jan-90 ,Jan-92 Jan-94 Jan-96 Jan-90 Jan-92 Jan-94 Jan-96
Jan-91 Jan-93 Jan-95 Jan-91 Jan-93 Jan-95 Jan-91 Jan-93 Jan-95
Retail and Finance, Insurance, Services
1.20 Wholesale Trade 1.20 and Real Estate 1.20
.
·- ..
1.10 .. . . 1.10 1.10
.
.
.
... -"~- -.
-· ....
----
1.00 1.00 1.00
0.90 0.90 0.90
0.80 '-'----L--'--..J..---'--__.,_ _J .......J 0.80 '-'----'----''----'---.....1....--.l.. _ ___J__, 0.80 ...,__ _ ..___;___,_ _ _ .___....,___--1.._--1___.J
Jan-90 Jan-92 Jan-94 Jan-96 Jan-90 Jan-92 Jan-94 Jan-96 Jan-90 Jan-92 Jan-94 Jan-96
Jan-91 Jan-93 Jan-95 Jan-91 Jan-93 Jan-95 Jan-91 Jan-93 Jan-95
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Chart 9
Current Economic Indicators
Consumer Confidence Help Wanted Advertising Index
Index 1985 = 100 Index 1967 = 100
120 ,---------------------, 120 .--------------------,
Apr
100
100
80 .
A. ...
............. -- ··········l1. . ·······t----- ,
: .: : \A:\. .~
;: .-: : : : ·, ~ :I: ,: 80
60 .. -jI- -~I ~-fI .. I~ 'I· ··· II ,--• .. . 1 : . ... I \ :- I - - I ~ --
.. ~' r ..
\ i~ l
.... 60 ..
40 ¥\#_: • ••: '·.. •.. __ . __ ,..-· ...: .. ·. .. ...... ..
1 .New .. England . 40 - ,-.,., ., ..: \.-~- .. -~~..:~~---~---·
20 ···-- ........ .. -•····-- .....
_
0 L..L.~~'-'-'-'-~' .u..u..u.u.~~U.U.UJ..U.U..U..U..U..U..W~. W.U..UJ..U....W-'-U-J 20 ....... u..u..u..u..u.J..~w.u.....CU.u..u..u..u..u.u..u..w..u..w.'-'-'-'-~u......w.uu...u.u..u..u....J
Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96 Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96
Retail Sales
Housing Permits
Index 1984 Q4 = 1 Index 1984 Q4 = 1
1.9 .--------------------, 1.2 ,---------------------,
1.8 -···
1.0 · · .. ······ .
1.7 -
0.8 ..•..
1.6
. .
0.6 · ,. · .j. •
\ .f\ . ~
1.5 -.:.-._ ...
: ~ • : : I 1•"'•1 •1 '"1 • rI , =•~
~• • • •~ . '. "V, ' . , t I··•JI ·.JfI,•: - ... ·••• , ll. I , . . : : :~ ·I I - . , : , "-~: I~ I : •• ..; ~ • • ■ '"., I • ,.:I I. .t '"I¥ I
0.4 ..
1.4 ·.·
1.3 LL.u.u~.u_L.u.u.u.u.u_L.u..u..u.u.w.L.u..u..u..u..w.1...u.u.u.u.....u.u..u..u..u....w.--J 0.2 ~.u..u..w..w..u..w..u..w.~w.u..u..u..UJ..U~UJ..U.U..U..W......cw.,.u..u..u_u.w..w..u..u.~
Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96 Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96
Average Hourly Earnings Consumer Price Index
Percent Change from Year Earlier Percent Change from Year Earlier
6.----------------------, Br---------------------,
7 .
3
2 .
1 - .. Boston
0 L..L.~~.....u.~~.u.L..u..w..u..w..w..w..u..u..u..u..u..u..u.u.u..u..u..u..cw.,.cw.,...w_,........., 0 L.W..w..w..u..w.....u...u..u..u..u..w.L~.u..u....w.....w~u....J...w..w.u..u...u..1..u..w..u..w..w..u..u..J
Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96 Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96
Source: New England Economic Indicators, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
Cite this document
APA
Cathy E. Minehan (1996, May 13). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19960514_cathy_e_minehan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19960514_cathy_e_minehan,
author = {Cathy E. Minehan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1996},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19960514_cathy_e_minehan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}