WIO Briefing Room
 

Relief for Long Term Unemployed; Another Boost for Homebuyers

With hundreds of thousands of jobless people about to run out of all benefits, congress has moved to extend unemployment benefits by 14 weeks nationwide for those whose relief has run out, and up to 20 weeks in states — 26 currently — where the unemployment rate is over 8.5 percent.

For the moment, the extra 14 weeks is the number that applies in NH.

The legislation also continues the $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers for another five months. It creates a new $6,500 tax credit for certain homeowners who want to buy another home.

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October Housing Sales Rise as Prices Fall: Condo Sale Surge

Declining home prices continue to help residential sales in New Hampshire. Prices are down about 11 percent and sales for the year are a hair above what they were in 2008.

Real estate agents are pleased with the October numbers. After a grim period stretching from last fall to early spring, there’s been a consistent if modest upward trend. The number of homes sold last month rose compared to this September and compared to October a year ago. The data come from the New Hampshire Association of Realtors.

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Surprise Drop in Unemployment Rate

The state unemployment rate fell 4-tenths of a percent in October.

Unemployment dropped to 6.8 percent. The decline caught most analysts by surprise. Usually, when the national rate rises, as it did, so does the state’s.

Economist Annette Nielsen with the labor market information bureau says the job growth is real. The rate is not due to lots of people dropping out of the labor force. But Nielsen takes a cautious view.

Nielsen: "I would like to see a couple of months before I would definitely say this is what’s going on."

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October Food Stamp and Medicaid Rolls Increase

The number of Food Stamp recipients rose about 3,2% to 94,750 during October. The increase of 2,930 was almost as large as the last big jump back in July when the rolls went up 3,059. Since June 2008, the Food Stamp program is serving 42% more people.

Medicaid rolls also increased to almost 116,000, an increase of 1114. This was somewhat larger than the increases of July, August and September.

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October Bankruptcies Up

Personal and business bankruptcies continue to climb. October saw a total of 466. The New Hampshire Business Review has been doing a good job of tracking this. NHBR's Bob Sanders writes that 14 businesses filed, including Spaulding Hill Development and Hawkview Estates, both of Nashua.

Sanders has been doing the math. He writes that the running total is 4,324, 34 percent more than the number of bankruptcies filed by this time last year.

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Economic Restructuring: The Big Picture

At a recent talk to the Business and Professional Women organization I focused on two related issues: If this recession was our Katrina, how much damage did it inflict on the economic infrastructure? One thing we don't know is when credit markets will recover.

So it was with some interest that I read this article in the Washington Post. I think it captures our current economic situation, nationally, and points our eyes in the right direction as we look for signs of true recovery.

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September Foreclosures Hold Steady

The phrase of the day from the NH Housing Finance Authority is the state "is bouncing along the bottom" of the downturn in the housing market. They actually call the collapse of prices a "correction" but I say, call a spade a spade.

The number of foreclosures deeds in September was 287 -- 11% more than in September 2008. The number of foreclosure auction notices, a step that precedes the final act of foreclosure, was 756. That's 5% higher than the month before and 12% higher than a year ago. Not good news.

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Fed Predicts Slow Recovery in 2010

The October 2009 Beige Book has this summary of the New England Region:

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Stimulus Update: A Thousand-Plus Jobs; Millions of Dollars

Depending on how you count a job, see my story on this way back when, stimulus spending has paid for 3,007 jobs or 1,862 as of the end of September. The total hours covered is the same -- nearly 3.9 million hours -- but depending on how you divide those hours into full-time jobs, you end up with different answers.

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Personal Income Rises Thanks to Stimulus Payments

A billion here, a billion there; pretty soon you're talking real money. Personal income in NH rose about 100 million dollars between the first and second quarters of 2009 for a grand total of $56,330,000,000.

As a percentage, that's not much but there would have been a steeper decline if federal stimulus payments in the form of higher unemployment checks and other programs had not gone up by about a billion dollars from a year ago. Total transfer payments were $8.38 billion.

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