Phoenix, Las Vegas, Boise all Hurting

Economic Recovery Lags in Mountain West


By Jonathan Weber, 12-17-09

  Boise and its suburbs are not faring so well.
  Boise and its suburbs are not faring so well.

The Mountain West has been hit harder than the rest of the country by the Great Recession, according to a new study from the Brookings Institution, though the data is heavily skewed by the terrible performance of three major metro areas: Phoenix, Las Vegas and Boise.

The new “Mountain Monitor,” a companion product to Brookings’ national MetroMonitor and created as part of a partnership between Brookings and the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, looks at the economy in six states: Colorado, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico.

“Across the region, the deflation of a massive housing “bubble,” widespread job losses, and the onset of a significant public-sector fiscal crisis have wreaked havoc on many communities,” says the report. “In many Intermountain region locations, the sheer abruptness of the shift from hyper-growth early in the decade to a severe contraction in the last year has spawned a sense of almost existential whiplash.”

But the economic trends are very uneven across the region. The dramatic collapse of the real estate markets in Phoenix, Las Vegas and Boise have pushed unemployment way up, and house prices in those cities continue to decline. All three cities - along with Portland, Oregon - are among the weakest performers of the top 100 metro areas in the country.

On the other hand, the Denver metropolitan areas has fared relatively well, with house prices beginning to tick upwards, and cities including Albuquerque and Colorado Springs have performed at or above national economic norms and appear well-positioned for recovery.

Overall, the ten largest metro areas in the region saw significantly higher job losses than the national average. While economic recovery has begun, it generally lags the national recovery, according to the report.

Cities and towns with a highly educated population have fared much better than those at the other end of the spectrum, which helps account for the relative strength of greater Denver (Boulder, in fact, has the most educated population in the country, with 54% of residents boasting a college degree). In Lake Havasu-Kingman, on the other hand, only 11% of residents have a college degree, and the community suffered the biggest loss of unemployment of any small city in the region.

Click here to read the full report.



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Comments

By Todd, 12-17-09
By Todd Wilkinson in Bozeman (not the other Todd), 12-17-09
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