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The national economy grew by
approximately 3 percent during all of 1989. However, a significant decline in
the pace of activity took place during the last quarter of 1989. For the 1st
quarter of 1990 real GNP growth followed this trend with a modest 2.2 percent
increase, Table 1. Many analysts are forecasting a rather weak year in 1990 with
growth averaging only about 2.0 percent for the year. Other statistics which
suggest that the national economy is poking along include data on industrial
production and interest rates. Even with slow growth in the economy, inflation,
as measured by the CPI, increased by approximately 6.3 percent from March of
1989. This is a very disturbing development and may require stronger action on
the part of the Federal Reserve if the price level is to be held in check.
The unemployment rate in
Central Wisconsin and its three counties fell dramatically from last
year's levels. A similar phenomenon occurred for the state. The rates registered
in the local area represented record lows for the decade.
Employment in the region was virtually unchanged
from a year ago. As of March 1990 there were approximately 126.8 thousand people
employed in the three‑county area compared to 127.4 thousand last year. Only
Marathon County
experienced any new job generation. Given the inter-linkages of the area, this
was a positive sign for the region.
Nonfarm employment in the region fared better
than total employment by posting a solid 4.7 percent gain from last year.
Manufacturing and service employment paced the expansion by adding 1.2 and 1.7
thousand jobs respectively. Nonfarm employment in the three county area reached
approximately 115.4 thousand during March.
Key Central Wisconsin industries continued the
steady growth pattern established several years ago. The reported decline in
finance, insurance, and real estate may be due to a statistical aberration
rather than to economic causes. Further monitoring of this situation by the
CWERB will be required. In sum, activity in the key sectors bodes well for the
remainder of our regional economy.
Regional business leaders
believe that the national economy has weakened and that the local scene is
unchanged from their perspective. However, this group is quite optimistic about
the future prospects of their particular industries and believes that a
noticeable expansion may be in the forecast.
The Marshfield area economy had
a rather successful first quarter 1990 according to several local indicators.
The unemployment rate dropped dramatically from a year ago and the Marshfield
employment index suggests that local payrolls have increased by approximately 4
percent. However, there were other signs that the local economy, like the
national economy, has experienced somewhat of a slowdown in various areas of
economic performance. Examples would include residential construction and help
wanted advertising. This information presents a mixed picture of performance and
makes future prognostication difficult.
The national economy continues to avoid a wide
recession and set records for the length of a peace‑time expansion. The last
recession ended around December 1982. Only the war years of the 1960s surpassed
this achievement. However, the national economy faces many serious interrelated
challenges in the years ahead such as inflation, and the trade and budget
deficits. These issues and how they are addressed will influence the country's
standard of living and political prominence for generations to come. |