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Bleak reading for the valley

Economic index shows sharp drop

Not since the months following the terrorist attacks in September 2001 has Southern Nevada's economic picture looked so bleak.

All 10 data series contributed negatively to the Southern Nevada Index of Leading Economic Indicators in January, the first time that's happened since the index was established in 1990, UNLV economist Keith Schwer said.

In November 2001, every series except gallons of gasoline sold were negative.

The March index, based on January's data, showed a sharp decline to 131.94, compared with a record high of 133.93 the previous month. The index stood at 133.17 in March 2007.


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  • "There was always something that would run against the tide, even when it was jumping around," Schwer said of the economic index. "It seems very clear we're getting a clear signal that the economy is headed toward recession."

    Though it's far from clear when a one-month drop foretells a recession, Schwer thinks the softening in Nevada's labor market supports his call.

    Southern Nevada's total employment grew 0.9 percent to 921,400 and the unemployment rate increased a full percentage point from a year ago to 5.7 percent.

    Schwer said job growth is still a positive for Las Vegas. The index excludes employment data because it's a "coincidence indicator," he said, peaking and dipping with the general economy.

    The index, compiled by the Center for Business and Economic Research at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, is a six-month forecast from the month of the data, based on a net-weighted average of each series after adjustments for seasonal variation.

    The accompanying Review-Journal chart includes several of the index's categories, along with data such as new residents, and employment and housing numbers, updated for the most recent month for which figures are available.

    The biggest declines continue to be in construction activity, with new home permits down nearly 70 percent and commercial permits down 36.3 percent. Population growth slowed to 5,694 new residents in February, down 16 percent from the same month a year ago.

    Clark County gaming revenue fell 4 percent in February to $865.9 million, visitor volume slipped 1.1 percent to 3.51 million and passengers at McCarran International Airport dipped 2.8 percent to 3.58 million.

    Strong construction activity on the Strip has kept the decline in residential construction from pinching off economic expansion for some time now, Schwer said. Difficulties arising from stockpiling of residential building permits in late 2007 and the subsequent shortfall this year have created a small problem interpreting the data, he said.

    "Calling turning points in the business cycle is difficult at best," Schwer said. "The early calls of a recession in 2006 and 2007 have not come to pass and were, in the final analysis, hard to separate from shots in the dark."

    Tax rebates and other spending upturns should help moderate the downslide, the economist said. However, getting the housing market back on its feet will not come quickly.

    "Indeed, it is possible that we may not experience much of a recession or depression, but the subsequent recovery may not be much either," Schwer said.

    John Restrepo of Restrepo Consulting Group said he doesn't think the tax rebate will have much of an effect on the economy because most people will use it to pay down debt.

    The other component of job growth is wages, Restrepo said. The average wage in Las Vegas grew from $24,500 in 1992 to $41,400 in 2007, but adjusted for inflation, it's about $28,000, he said.

    Meanwhile, the cost of living in Las Vegas is 10 percent higher than the national average, driven by housing, utilities, transportation and health care, Restrepo said.

    "We're doing better than other places, but we've found that we were not immune to the laws of economics and gravity, which we thought we were," he said.

    Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.

    Nevada Foreclosures
    TOP 10 FORECLOSURE SALES ZIP CODES IN CLARK COUNTY
    ZIP code Sales Average age of homes
    89131 792 5.8
    89031 681 8.2
    89148 537 4.5
    89052 511 6.0
    89129 510 8.0
    89123 490 8.4
    89015 457 14.6
    89141 429 4.6
    89139 405 4.6
    89108 395 25.1
    Source: SalesTraq
     
     
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    boomtown wrote on April 12, 2008 04:36 PM: Thanks for keeping me up to date on the doom and gloom RJ. It's good to know sin city is going to fail. It should turn into Detroit within a few years and then eventually just dry up and blow away. I think we need at least one article a day to keep any sense of optimism away.


    Genius wrote on April 12, 2008 12:52 PM: The ONLY reason for all the foreclosures is people NOT paying their bills. Government bailout is not the answer as it only teaches people that they are not responsible for their own actions or behaviors. This problem must be resolved by the banks and their customers. We all must support a NV Constitution amendment capping residential property tax increase, to reign in the insane local government spending. Why are we having to pay for nonessential government "services", we need only pay for essential services.


    Gloom and Doom... wrote on April 12, 2008 12:13 PM: Vegas is history..... Time for all of you "Californianites" to go away and give me back my hometown. A town that once had very few people (I graduated in the late 70s at LVHS with a class of 300). Go away, all of the negative people that seem to lurk and fufill their lives by responding to every article printed by the RJ. Give me back my town of almost no crime, where people new each other and respected one another. GO AWAY !!!


    rb wrote on April 12, 2008 11:12 AM: The only way to get a job here now is to be a female in her 20's willing to show off her body. 28K is a pitiful wage considering the cost of living. The likelihood that these people will ever be able to afford a house is the same as megabucks, good luck. Way to go GW....


    resident wrote on April 12, 2008 10:45 AM: This to me is incredible:

    "The average wage in Las Vegas grew from $24,500 in 1992 to $41,400 in 2007, but adjusted for inflation, it's about $28,000, he said."

    Over $13000 eaten away by inflation? God help save our dollar from the hands of central bankers.


    Hey Tina Marland... wrote on April 12, 2008 10:13 AM: Hey Tina Marland...
    McDonalds on Maryland Parkway is hiring, therefore you don't need the extension... tell Ronald I said "Hi".


    Tina Marland wrote on April 12, 2008 09:47 AM: If the unemployment rate is 5.7%, why can't unemployment extensions be issued? I have been unemployed since 7/07 and it's really tough trying to get a job.Do you have any information on this? Thank you.


    mark wrote on April 12, 2008 08:16 AM: Bad bad bad,that`s all you ever hear.Truth is we are all better off than we were in 2001.A wake up call for bankers and a lot of deadbeats with bad credit.Slower and smarer growth!If this is not the bottom of this cycle, it is getting very close.


    Lee wrote on April 12, 2008 07:02 AM: Your house will continue to go down in value, and your property taxes will stay the same or rise.