As has been the case throughout the economic expansion, the
Wisconsin Rapids
area experienced a growth rate between that recorded by the
Stevens Point area and the
Wausau
area economies. As a result, the
Wisconsin Rapids growth rate was similar to the
moderate pace of the region as a whole during the third quarter. This
section of the report focuses on data specific to the
Wisconsin Rapids area. Information on local labor
markets, construction activity and financial markets is contained in Tables
7-13.
Manufacturing employment in Wood
County
remains unchanged from June but stands 3.0% below the September 1984 figure
(Table 7). However, a large proportion of this decline
is the result of weakness in the lumber and wood products industry, an
industry with limited employment in the
Wisconsin Rapids
area. Government employment in the county also slipped because seasonal
gains have yet to show up in the data.
For the second consecutive quarter, trade employment showed solid gains on a
year-toyear basis. Employment in this sector is up modestly from the June
figure. The large service sector also expanded payrolls over last year. On a
percentage basis, the volatile construction sector recorded the most
impressive gains (21.2%). Increased residential and nonresidential
construction activity pushed payrolls up by 220 over last September. The
Wisconsin Rapids
employment index, which adjusts for structural differences between the Wisconsin Rapids local economy and Wood County
as a whole, showed an increase of 2.7%. These figures indicate that moderate
growth continued in the local economy during the third quarter.
The volume of help wanted advertising plunged well below the year earlier
level (Table 8). The index now stands at 97.4
compared to a reading of 138.9 a year ago, a time when the local economy was
expanding at a faster clip. The 1985 figure is very similar to the 1980 base
year level.
Continuing a pattern established in the second quarter, open cases for
public assistance dropped below the year earlier level (Table
9). However, initial applications jumped 13.2% over last year and are
42.5% above the second quarter level. This number is relatively small and
typically shows large percentage swings but increases of this magnitude will
surely translate into more open cases in the quarters ahead.
New unemployment claims and total unemployment claims processed at the Wisconsin Rapids district office each rose
significantly above the year earlier level (Table 10).
However, both figures declined from their respective second quarter totals.
This mixed performance is typical of an aging economic expansion.
Lower interest rates triggered a pick up in residential construction during
the summer months (Table 11). Local housing starts
shot up 56% over a year ago, while the estimated value of new homes climbed
28.2%. The reason for the discrepency in the two increases is a drop in
multi-family unit construction compared to the summer of 1984. Residential
alterations also could not match the pace of a year ago.
Nonresidential construction activity added a large dose of stimulus to the
local economy (Table 12). Permits were filed during
the quarter for new structures with an 'estimated value of $3.8 million. The
key reason for this surge was a Consolidated Papers Incorporated mill
expansion permit. This project will carry multiplier effects throughout the
local economy.
Bank deposits and bank loans each posted increases over a year ago (Table
13), However, deposits continued to rise at a faster pace (8.8%). This
increase in bank liquidity is likely to translate into stepped up loan
activity in the months ahead.