THE ECONOMY IN 2015: LIFT-OFF? Dr. Mike Walden Reynolds Distinguished Professor North Carolina State University 1.

Post on 23-Dec-2015

216 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

1

THE ECONOMY IN 2015: LIFT-OFF?

Dr. Mike Walden

Reynolds Distinguished Professor

North Carolina State University

THE NATIONAL ECONOMY

GDP and Employment: back to pre-recessionary levels

Growth rates have accelerated

Confidence up

2

REASONS FOR IMPROVEMENT

Rebound from initial slow growth

Housing improvement

Wealth upswing

Continued FED stimulus

3

AND, THE PLUNGE IN GAS PRICES

Down 50% since summer

Like a $225 billion tax cut

Doubling of US oil supply in six years

Slowing of usage growth in Asia

4

THE FUTURE OF GAS PRICES

Saudis have not cut their supply

Expect US supply to be curtailed

Some rebound in price in 2015

5

THE HOUSING MARKET IN 2015

IMPROVEMENT HAS SLOWED

PRE-RECESSIONARY LEVELS NOT FORESEEN

WILL THE MILLENNIALS BUY?

6

INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES

INFLATION IS STILL TAME (IS IT TOO LOW?)

SURPRISE: DROP IN LONG-RATES IN 2015

PERMANENT LOW?

7

RISING INTERNATIONAL VALUE OF THE $

WILL INCREASE

THE PRICE OF

U.S. EXPORTS

8

POLICY IN 2015: ALL EYES ON THE FEDERAL RESERVE

MORTGAGE BUYING HAS STOPPED

RAISING SHORT-TERM INTEREST RATES IS NEXT

WHEN?

9

NATIONAL OUTLOOK3% GDP GROWTH

3 MILLION PAYROLL JOBS

5.0% TO 5.5% HEADLINE JOBLESS RATE

INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES STILL LOW

10

NATIONAL ECONOMIC ISSUESMissing middle income jobs

Slow wage and salary gains

Technological unemployment

Rising dependency rate

Federal fiscal balance

Infrastructure improvement

11

WHAT COULD GO WRONG?EXPANDED UKRANIAN CONFLICT

CHINESE REAL ESTATE IMPLOSION

MIDDLE EAST: IRAN; TERRORIST ATTACK IN SAUDI ARABIA

12

NORTH CAROLINA ECONOMY

13

NC PAYROLL JOB GROWTH

14

2010 2011 2012 2013 20140

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF THE NORTH CAROLINA UNEMPLOYMENT RATE 2007: HEADLINE, 4.5%; U5, 5.6%; U6, 8.5%

4,09-3,10

2,10-1,11

3,10-2,11

4,10-3,11

2,11-1,12

3,11-2,12

4,11-3,12

2,12-1,13

3,12-2,13

2,13-1/14

3,13-2,14

4,13-3,14

5

7

9

11

13

15

17

headline U5 U6

%

15

MIDDLE-INCOME JOBS HAVE BEEN THE SLOWEST GROWING DURING THE RECOVERY

16

Leisure/Hosp.

Other Serv.

Trd/Tranp/Util

Educ/Hlth Care

Construction

Gov't

Manufacturing

Prof/Bus Serv

Information

Financial Serv

-10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25

USNC

%

GEOGRAPHIC ECONOMIC INEQUALITY ALSO CONTINUES IN NORTH CAROLINA

Raleigh/Cary 15.8% Charlotte 14.1%

Asheville 10.4% North Carolina 9.5% Durham-CH 8.6% Wilmington 8.2% Burlington 7.9% Greenville 6.3% Greensboro-HP 5.7% Winston-Salem 5.4% Jacksonsville 4.6% Hickory 3.2% Goldsboro 2.1% Fayetteville 0.6%

Rocky Mount -2.0%

17

18

20

07

fe

b2

00

7 m

ay

20

07

au

g2

00

7 n

ov

20

08

fe

b2

00

8 m

ay

20

08

au

g2

00

8 n

ov

20

09

fe

b2

00

9 m

ay

20

09

au

g2

00

9 n

ov

20

10

fe

b2

01

0 m

ay

20

10

au

g2

01

0 n

ov

20

11

fe

b2

01

1 m

ay

20

11

au

g2

01

1 n

ov

20

12

fe

b

20

12

ma

y2

01

2 a

ug

20

12

no

v2

01

3 f

eb

20

13

ma

y2

01

3 a

ug

20

13

no

v2

01

4 f

eb

20

14

ma

y

70

75

80

85

90

95

100

105

NCSU INDEX OF NORTH CAROLINA LEADING ECONOMIC INDICATORS

Source: calculations by Dr. Michael Walden

NORTH CAROLINA OUTLOOK

CONTINUED GROWTH

125,000 PAYROLL JOBS

5.0% TO 5.5% HEADLINE JOBLESS RATE

AUTO ASSEMBLY PLANT?

19

IN SUMMARY

2015 WILL BE A “GOOD YEAR”

MORE HOUSEHOLDS AND BUSINESSES WILL “GET AHEAD”

CHALLENGES RELATED TO GROWTH RATHER THAN DECLINE!

20

top related