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BACKGROUND

The Current Conditions Index (CCI) is a monthly indicator that details the present state of the Rhode Island economy by following the behavior of twelve key economic indicators pertaining to housing, retail sales, fiscal pressures, the employment situation, and labor supply:

  • Government Employment
  • Employment Services Jobs*
  • Retail Sales
  • University of Michigan US Consumer Sentiment Index**
  • Single-Unit Housing Permits
  • Private Service-Producing Employment***
  • Manufacturing Man-hours****
  • Average Hourly Manufacturing Wage
  • Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment Rate
  • Resident Labor Force
  • New Initial Claims for Unemployment Insurance
  • Unemployment Insurance Regular Benefit Exhaustions

The CCI ranges from 0, when no indicators improve compared to year-earlier levels, to 100, when all twelve show improvement. Values above 50, the "neutral" value, indicate that the Rhode Island economy is expanding, while values below 50 are indicative of contraction. Prior to "The Great Recession" that began in June of 2007, the CCI had never attained a value of 0, indicating that no indicators improved relative to year-earlier values. This changed in 2008, when the CCI fell to 0 on three occasions, and in 2009, when another value of 0 was recorded. Prior to this, the low for the CCI had been 8, which occurred for only a single month on several occasions. For almost all of 2008, the CCI recorded values of 8. The CCI attained its maximum value of 100 on several occasions, for almost all of 1984 and once in 1986. Note that these values occurred exclusively when Rhode Island was still a manufacturing-based economy.

*
Up until February 2006, the CCI used Help Wanted Advertising for Providence, RI as one of its indicators (and toward the end of its use an econometric adjustment was required). This indicator replaces Help Wanted Advertising.
** Prior to the October 2001 report, the CCI used Existing Home Sales in Rhode Island. This indicator replaces Existing Home Sales. 
*** Prior to the January 2003 report, Miscellaneous Service Employment, a major category of the SIC codes, was used. Now that NAICS replaces the SIC codes, the current indicator was chosen to replace Miscellaneous Service Employment.
****Beginning with the November 2005 report, Manufacturing Man-hours will be referred to as Total Manufacturing Hours.

 


THE CCI THIS MONTH
MONTHLY HIGHLIGHTS:

JANUARY 2023: 33

 

 

 

The revised labor market data for Rhode Island were both very disappointing and concerning. The household survey, from which the Labor Force, resident employment and the Unemployment Rate are derived registered large negative changes for the second half of 2022, with the exception of the Unemployment Rate. Along with a mind boggling (secular) downtrend in the Labor Force participation that extends all the way back to late 2006, the official (naïve) Unemployment Rate fell all the way to 3.1 percent in January, even as resident employment, the number of employed Rhode Island residents, was revised lower and was in a downtrend throughout the second half of last year. Ironically, the economic statistic I was most worried about, payroll employment, the number of jobs in Rhode Island, which had remained well below its pre-pandemic level, did not see dramatically lower values, as changes were relatively minor. It remains, however, well below its pre-pandemic high, has fallen back to an earlier peak in December of 2006, and has trended downwards since last August. Along with all of this, Current Conditions Index values for much of last year were revised: There were three upward revisions and six downward revisions, almost all of which occurred since August.

 

In an attempt to put this all together, Rhode Island’s economy has performed badly since late summer, ending 2022 with a neutral value of 50 then moving into the contraction range with a value of 33 in January of 2023. January’s economic performance ended a long string of improvements in the CCI, where it had remained in the expansion or neutral ranges since June of 2021.

 

The list of disappointing indicator performances is unfortunately rather long. Consider the leading indicators contained in the CCI. Layoffs, in terms of New Claims has begun to rise over the past two months. New home construction, based on Single-Unit Permits, has also been declining for some time now. Total Manufacturing Hours, an indicator that did extremely well during the pandemic and afterwards, has now begun to falter, declining in January (-0.3%). US Consumer Sentiment has also been falling since July of 2021. Employment Service Jobs, which includes temps and leads future changes in employment, has now declined on a monthly basis for seven consecutive  months and twice based on year-earlier values.

 

Beyond these, the one statistic that I feared would eventually go negative has, at least for now: Retail Sales. While this has been declining in real terms for some time, in January it fell relative to a year ago in dollar terms for the first time since June of 2020. Remember, this is not a survey-based statistic.

 

As has now become all too apparent, the monthly CCI’s behavior along with weakness in the leading indicators contained in the CCI correctly signaled that problems were in our future. As it turns out, unbeknown to us, we were already experiencing these issues throughout most of the second half of 2022. It took data revisions to make this more readily apparent. So the inevitable question emerges: Has Rhode Island prepared itself for a slowing economy? Sadly, the answer is no. While a few measures were implemented during the pandemic and post-pandemic period, our structural deficiencies remain, even after receiving massive amounts of federal money and registering large budget surpluses.

 

In this report and on my Twitter feed (@ladardo) I have documented numerous instances where key economic indicators of our state’s economy are either moving in the wrong direction or are actually falling. More concerning to me is the fact that a number of these are leading economic indicators. All of this began to take hold and to dominate overall performance around August of last year. Will the performances of these variables turn around and begin a period of sustained improvement? Possibly, but I’m not willing to bet on that possibility given national trends, especially monetary and financial tightening.

 

The recent behavior of Rhode Island’s economy in light of the new data suggests the possibility that we are either moving toward or have begun to enter a recession. At this point, it is far too early to make that determination. Clearly, data will be revised, hopefully higher, and new data might be stronger. But that is not at all certain given the combination of a slowing national economy and monetary tightening, many of whose effects we have yet to feel. Working against us is the fact that Rhode Island has historically suffered from FILO (First In, Last Out). So, we could be witnessing FI, which is not entirely unrealistic to assume. Let’s hope not. Unfortunately, we won’t know this for a while.

 

My best estimate is that what we are witnessing is the beginning of FI (First In). I take no pleasure in stating that at this point in time, I am no longer able to rule out the possibility that Rhode Island has entered the earliest stages of a recession. This is only a possibility at present. Only time will tell if this turns out to be true. 

  

 

 

 

 

 

  

Monthly CCI Values (red = recession)
(Note: These are revised values. Original reports sometimes specify different CCI values, based on originally released data.

Jan   Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1983 42   58 58 67 75 83 83 75 83 83 83 92
1984 100   92 100 100 100 100 100 92 100 92 92 83
1985 67   75 75 75 67 75 67 50 50 58 83 67
1986 75   83 100 92 92 83 92 92 92 92 92 67
1987 67   67 58 58 67 75 75 75 75 67 75 75
1988 83   83 75 67 67 67 58 50 67 58 50 58
1989 67   50 50 33 58 33 25 25 25 33 33 33
1990 25   25 25 25 17 17 17 17 33 17 25 25
1991 25   17 17 8 25 17 25 25 25 33 17 17
1992 42   42 58 75 75 83 75 67 67 83 83 92
1993 75   83 67 67 83 67 75 75 75 58 42 58
1994 58   67 67 58 58 75 67 67 67 67 83 75
1995 58   58 58 67 50 42 42 42 58 33 67 42
1996 50   42 75 75 67 75 75 67 75 92 83 92
1997 100   92 83 75 67 75 75 75 83 75 92 83
1998 83   75 75 75 75

75

75 67 58 75

75

50

1999 83   75 75 83 67 83 75 75 92 75 83 58
2000 83   83 83 67 42 50 58 50 58 67 67 67
2001 42 33 25 17 33 50 25 33 33 42 33 42
2002 58   75 67 58 42 33 50 50 58 67 67 50
2003 50   50 50 58 58 58 83 67 83 75 92 67
2004 67   67 58 67 58 58 67 67 67 58 50 67
2005 50   67 50 50 42 75 58 67 42 58 58 67
2006 58   58 67 58 33 50 33 58 75 83 58 67
2007 50   50 33 33 58 50 33 33 17 17 8 25
2008 8 8 8 17 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 8
2009 17 8 0 8 17 33 17 42 33 42 50 33
2010 42   58 67 67 75 75 83 83 67 67 75 83
2011 50 67 67 58 50 58 58 42 50 50 58 50
2012 58   50 58/75 50/75 58/67 67/75 50/58 67/75 50/58 75/83 75/83 92
2013 75   67 83 67 83 75 75 67

75

75 67 75
2014 67   67 58 58 67 50 67 67 75 67 58 67
2015 58   58 67 58 67 75 75 92 83 67 75 58
2016 58   67 50 42 50 42 67 75 75 50 58 75
2017 75   83 92 83 83 83 83 83 75 83 92 83
2018 75   92 75 67 92 83 75 67 67 42 83 58
2019 75   33 58 58 58 75 83 67 50 75 58 83
2020 75   75 33 8 8 25 25 25 25 17 25 25
2021 25   17 42 75 92 83 100 75 83 83 83 92
2022 75   75 75 67 67 67 75 92 92 75 67 50
2023 33                        

You can download monthly reports in PDF format starting
with January 1999 by clicking on the monthly index value.
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Historical Annual CCI Values

1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
42
54
33
74
96
67
88
69
65
39
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

1999

22
21
70
69
67
51
72
81
72
77
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
65
39
56
66
63
57
54
40
7
24
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
70 55 74 75 63 64 56 85 79 61
2020 2021 2022              
26 65                

 

CCI History

Copyright © 2014 Leonard Lardaro, Ph.D. All rights reserved.

 

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