Study Questions If Connecticut Emerged From Recession
Study Questions If Connecticut Emerged From Recession
By Keith M. Phaneuf
©The Connecticut Mirror
New data shows Connecticutâs economy was damaged more severely than most economists originally thought in the last recession, according to a provocative new report released Wednesday by the University of Connecticutâs economic think-tank.
The latest analysis from the Connecticut Center for Economic Analysis warned the state âhas an even steeper hill to climbâ and could see little or no net job growth over the next 18 months, a grim prospect as Governor Dannel P. Malloy looks ahead to a reelection campaign in 2014.
And the study suggested that the state technically might still be in a recession.
The center also hit again on one of its favorite themes, urging the Malloy administration to mobilize unused research and development and other related business tax credits to underwrite major capital projects to grow jobs.
âThe new understanding of the depths from which we are recovering reinforces ... the absolute necessity for Connecticut to pursue aggressive policies and sustained investments to accelerate recovery and job creation,â the report states.
It added that there are fewer jobs in Connecticut now than in 1988, calling it âa generation without job creation.â
The report hinges on new data from the National Bureau of Economic Analysis, which provides information on Connecticutâs real gross domestic product, or the value of goods and services produced by its businesses, adjusted for inflation. A recession generally is described as two consecutive quarters of declining GDP.
Many economists say the last economic downturn, which became known as the Great Recession, began nationally in December 2007 and ended by July 2009. In Connecticut, which tends to both enter and leave economic downswings later than the national average, the recession generally is charted between March 2008 and the first few months of 2010.
But the UConn center noted that the National Bureau of Economic Analysis recently âsharply loweredâ its seasonally adjusted numbers for Connecticut for 2006 through 2010.
The low point, which came in the fourth quarter of 2009, was supposed to be a GDP of $204.5 billion. But new data show the stateâs rock bottom of economic output was actually about 7 percent lower, coming in just above $190 billion.
Based on the national bureauâs numbers, Connecticut fell into the Great Recession as early as the third quarter of 2007.
And if the measure of a recessionâs end is regaining the GDP level held prior to the decline, then it could be argued the Nutmeg State is still in a recession, said Fred V. Carstensen, an economist and the UConn centerâs director.
âWe thought weâd recovered,â Carstensen said, âbut we never really got out.â
A downturn in the stateâs finance, insurance and real estate sectors was a precursor to the recession, which also strongly hit certain other services, manufacturing, transportation and utilities.
And while services and manufacturing have enjoyed a ârelatively strongâ recovery, improvement in finance, insurance and real estate âappears to be fizzling out,â the report states.
Not All Gloom and Doom
Not all is gloom and doom, though, with permits for new housing construction recovering strongly during the first half of 2012, the report states. And that comes despite new federal data showing the median price for single-family house sales fell more sharply in Connecticut during the second quarter of this year than in any other state.
The center projects economic growth rates of 0.6 percent from now through the first half of 2013, after which it should climb to 1.3 percent by 2014.
Carstensen described this as âvery weak growthâ that could lead to a meager 5,000 new jobs being added over the next 18 months, and possibly less if the Federal Reserve does not take steps to control escalating interest rates. If true, the stateâs economic troubles could linger until the early months of the 2014 campaign.
âThe administration has a much larger problem to address than theyâd realized, than we had realized,â he said.
The center has praised the Malloy administration for several of its biggest economic development efforts, including developing a bioscience research initiative with the Jackson Laboratory and the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington. But it also repeatedly has urged the administration to mobilize a portion of the nearly $2.5 billion in so-called âstrandedâ business tax credits that have built up on the stateâs ledger over several decades.
These are credits that companies are entitled to, but cannot claim because they do not earn enough or they do not owe enough taxes to use the benefit.
Carstensen insists that by tying credits to job growth targets, state officials could ensure that new income, sales and other taxes generated by new workers would offset the cost of any corporate tax relief provided to businesses.
But when the center made that argument in its May report, state Department of Economic and Community Development Commissioner Catherine Smith was openly skeptical.
âMr Carstensenâs assertion that unleashing stranded tax credits is the cure-all for our economy is off the mark,â Smith said at the time. âThese credits are not âentirely self-fundingâ because they reduce state revenue when redeemed and there is no evidence that the holders of unredeemed credits would take advantage of Professor Carstensenâs scheme at all, much less at a level that would create tens of thousands of new jobs.â
The commissioner added that Connecticutâs economic turnaround would depend on âa comprehensive, strategic approach that addresses all the issues that make us more attractive to workers and companies alike, including education, economic development, housing, innovation, and worker training â something the governor has long been committed to.â
(This story originally appeared at CTMirror.org, the website of The Connecticut Mirror, an independent, nonprofit news organization covering government, politics, and public policy in the state.)