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Measured from one year ago, the
Central Wisconsin economy moved
forward, albeit at a very modest pace. One factor to consider in this scenario
is the extreme weather conditions residents experienced this last winter. On
several occasions the mercury dropped below minus 30 degrees Fahrenheit
interfering with mobility, outside work, increasing heating bills and, in some
cases, causing businesses to curtail activities or even shut down for brief
periods.
Evidence to suggest that economic matters were
also frozen to some degree follows. Unemployment rates in the area were stuck at
around 6.6 percent during the past year. Total employment was virtually
unchanged from March of 1993. Further, key sector employment grew by a scant 400
jobs, or 1.4 percent, with all growth coming from one sector. Better results can
be reported for Central
Wisconsin's industrial sectors. Here growth was at an annual rate of 2.2 percent
with 2700 jobs being added to regional payrolls.
Central Wisconsin's seasonally unadjusted unemployment rates are
presented in Table 2.
Portage
County's rate fell from 6.6 to 6:4 percent over the course of the year.
Meanwhile, the unemployment rates in Marathon and Wood Counties rose by 0.1 and
0.5 points respectively and now stand at 6.7 percent in each county. The overall
labor force weighted, seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate for Central
Wisconsin increased from 6.5 to 6.6 percent over the course of the year. The
United States rate came down to 7.1 percent, but is still much higher than the
5.6 percent rate of Wisconsin.
Employment in the area grew over the course of
the year in both Portage
and Marathon Counties (Table 3). Portage added a modest
300 positions, while
Marathon
County
added an estimated 400 jobs. Wood County, however, fell off the meager pace
established by the other two counties when it registered an estimated employment
loss of 900 positions. For
Central Wisconsin,
as a whole, employment fell from 134.9 to 134.7, a decline of 0.1 percent. In
contrast, the state added 3.6 percent to its payrolls and U.S. employment
increased by 2.9 percent.
Better news is reported in
Table 4. Industrial sector employment rose from 122,410 to 125,100, a 2.2
percent growth rate from last year. The greatest expansion in terms of raw
numbers and percentage change came in the service sector. This sector added 2160
jobs growing by 5.0 percent. Trade and government employment were the two other
sectors to experience some growth, showing increases of 700 (2.5 percent) and
600 jobs (3.6 percent) respectively. In contrast, manufacturing and construction
payrolls were slightly lower by 300 and 460 positions each.
Table 5 shows this
quarter's results for key Central Wisconsin Industries. Only finance, insurance,
and real estate expanded over the period, and more importantly, by a very health
6.8 percent or 600 jobs. Paper products, lumber and wood products, and food
processing employment stagnated over the past year. Overall, thanks to finance,
insurance, and real estate
Central Wisconsin employment in
the key sector industries grew by a net 400 positions bringing total employment
in these four categories to 28.4 thousand.
Business people in the area report that national
and local economic conditions have improved somewhat over the past twelve months
(Table
6). When the CWERB questioned this panel about the future of the economy,
the responses given were less optimistic than three months ago, but were still
positive in nature. The most upbeat responses related to the economic outlook
and expectations for their particular industries. |