Sorry to be such a downer – gotta call them as you see them, not as you wish they were…
Anyone who’s read this blog or spoken with me about the subject knows I have no love for most tv financial commentators. Their breathless and hyperbolic “reporting” mostly amplifies the market noise rather than providing investors much substance – “financial pornography” is a great phrase for much of their content. That said, I’ll give credit where it’s due: MSNBC has partnered with Moody’s Analytics to produce the interesting (if not immediately useful) “Adversity Index” that uses several pieces of economic data to assess the state of the economy at the state and city levels.

Moody’s adjudicates Idaho to be “At Risk” of returning to recession. The statewide figures, according to the website (data as of Feb 2011):
- Employment +1.01%
- Single-family Housing Starts -40.87%
- Housing Prices (n/a)
- Industrial Production +6.96%
The interactive site allows the user to scroll through the past 16 years and drill down on states and municipalities nationwide. An explanation of the Index is here.
Hat Tip: Dr. Pat Shannon, Dean of Boise State University College of Business and Economics (and member of Harmonic's advisory board)


























































Jun 17th
Idaho Unemployment, May 2011
Author: Kenn Lamson
Comments: 0
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics today released state-by-state Unemployment data for May 2011. According to the BLS the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for the state of Idaho was 9.4% in February, an increase of +0.2% from a year earlier. Over that period, unemployment rose by +2,000 workers, from 69,700 to 71,700.
Idaho’s unemployment rate came in above the national rate, at 9.1%, in May. Also, the year-over-year change in Idaho’s unemployment rate appeared greater than the nation as a whole; the seasonally adjusted national unemployment rate dropped -0.5% from a year earlier.
Idaho tied for having the 13th highest unemployment rate in the nation; North Dakota had the lowest, with 3.2%, and Nevada posted the highest, at 12.1%.
Idaho’s May unemployment rate declined from recent months, which saw the highest rate in at least 35 years. The unemployment rate has risen +6.5% since the all-time low of 2.7% set in May 2007.
A key explanation for Idaho’s stubbornly high unemployment rate is that over the past two years the labor force has risen much faster than hiring. This situation has historically been self-adjusting as companies ramp up the pace of hiring when the economy improves.
{GRAPHS: BLS}
An analysis by industry using non-seasonally adjusted figures shows signs of improvement in Idaho’s employment picture, however. Notably, a majority of industries show year-over-year job growth, lead on a percentage basis by finance, professional & business services, and leisure & hospitality. The construction industry continued to contract, and cuts to government payrolls are also evident.