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Presented by Harry M. Davis, Ph.D NCBA Professor of Banking and Economist Appalachian State University October 29, 2015.

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Presentation on theme: "Presented by Harry M. Davis, Ph.D NCBA Professor of Banking and Economist Appalachian State University October 29, 2015."— Presentation transcript:

1 Presented by Harry M. Davis, Ph.D davishm@appstate.edu NCBA Professor of Banking and Economist Appalachian State University October 29, 2015

2 The U.S. Economy Recovery is almost 6.5 years old GDP annualized growth of.6% in the first quarter and 3.9% in the second quarter This recovery is the slowest in the post WWII period States has been adding much less to GDP than in past

3 The U.S. Economy The FED has over estimated the rate of economic each quarter since the “Great Recession” The rate of productivity growth is the slowest for a recovery in 60 years

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5 Consumers Consumer spending is growing about 2.5% a year Real per Capita after-tax income and real average weekly earnings were flat in 2012 and 2013 Real median household income was $57,342 in 2008, while in July 2015 the figure was $55,132

6 U.S. Economy - Positive Stock markets are still near record levels - earning continue to surprise on the up side Corporate profits driven somewhat by lower energy prices

7 Housing Existing home sales have been above 5 million (annualized) for the last 5 months and almost reached 6 million in July Residential construction is at the highest rate since 2008. Multi-family continue to be above average as a % of total construction but that percentage is dropping Household formations and millennials Existing home prices up about 5% y/y

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10 U.S. Employment - Positive Unemployment rate for September was 5.1% - the lowest in over 7 years Created only 136,000 new jobs in August followed 142,000 in September Created an average of 260,000 new jobs per month in 2014 The labor participation rate fell to 62.4% a greater than 38 year low in September - 350,000 individuals left the labor force

11 Employment Up until 1999, baby boomers reached adulthood and entered the workforce along with a surge in women working The labor force grew faster than the adult population – fueled economic growth and per capita income The labor participation rate (LPR) peaked in 1999

12 Employment Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates 5.8 million jobs unfilled due to lack of qualified workers Areas include: software engineers, nurses and technicians, welders and machinists, general engineers Education system and business community need to interact much more

13 NC Employment Situation August unemployment rate of 5.9% Grew 110,200 nonfarm jobs in last 12 months Since the “Great Recession” nearly 60% of all new jobs were created in the Charlotte and Raleigh metro areas

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15 N.C. per capita income as % of U.S.

16 Age Does Matter in the U.S. In 1959 people 65 and older had the highest rate of poverty (35%) Today that group has the lowest rate at 9.5% The poorest Americans today are the youngest – those 35 and under Spending in all categories except healthcare peaks at age 45

17 The FED In a box All Central Bankers are looking for one thing which is not around – a 2% rate of inflation FED should forget about raising rates until the 10-year bond rate rises above 2.4% and stays there for more than 30 days

18 Energy Pump prices lowest in 10 years Each adult auto owner has received a $800-$1,000 tax free gift from lower gas prices North America – the center of the energy universe

19 What To Do?! Regulation Czar – moratorium on new regulations Build Infrastructure – regulations Immigration reform Simplify and flatten the tax code for businesses and individuals

20 The Outlook GDP will grow about 2.75% for the year We are at full employment forgetting the labor participation rate and the number under employed Income and salary growth will remain tepid - even so, consumer spending growth will increase to 2.75% U.S. is the pick of the litter - as the growth in numerous countries is slowing

21 The Outlook Housing will continue to be a bright spot - with a slight shift in construction to single family homes The FED will raise rates very little - not even in 2016 NC’s unemployment rate will drop close to 5% in the next 12 months The state will create about 100,000 next year, down from the level for 2014 and 2015


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