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Exactly what anyone with their eyes open has been seeing in the past few years. Expect this one to be fairly deep as so much is wrong with the big drivers here.


https://www.adn.com/business-econom...sses-in-alaska-grow-hitting-new-sectors/



Recession grips Alaska as employment losses hit new sectors
Author: Alex DeMarban Updated: 5 hours ago Published 17 hours ago
Job losses in Alaska accelerated in the year's first six months as low oil prices kept slamming the economy, with the downturn spreading from the oil and gas and construction sectors to hurt restaurants, bars and stores, according to a detailed view of the jobs picture released by state economists on Friday.

"I about cried when I first saw the data — it was shocking," said Caroline Schultz, an economist with the Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development who worked on the report. She described Alaska's current economic state as a "recession."

Employment fell 1.6 percent or 5,530 actual jobs during the period, compared to the same stretch in 2015. The job losses affected most sectors of the economy and rose from a 1.2 percent drop in January to a 2.5 percent decline in June.

The only area showing significant employment growth was health care and social services, up 2.3 percent.


In October, Alaska recorded the nation's highest unemployment rate at 6.8 percent, 1/10th of a point higher than New Mexico and above the national average of 4.9 percent that month.

The cutbacks come after three decades of growth except for a dip in 2009 tied to the national economic downturn.

They follow big cuts in the oil patch during a two-year drop in oil prices. The downturn also hit the construction sector that built many oil-field facilities when times were good. Energy employment reached record highs in early 2015 before falling.

Now, the damage in those sectors has spread to service-sector industries.

"We can safely say that started in the second quarter of 2016," Schultz said.

"We expect those losses have continued through 2016," though the state's data is solid only through the end of June, she said.

Private sector employment fell by 4,867 jobs, or 1.9 percent.

"Oil and gas industry employment was down 2,384 jobs, which was an average monthly loss of 16.4 percent," with the cutbacks growing during the period, the report said.

Construction employment fell 8.3 percent. That industry is also negatively affected by state government spending, which had been fueled by oil taxes.

Public sector jobs fell 0.8 percent, or 663 positions, the agency said. "The decline was driven by a 4.6 percent loss in state government, or 1,199 jobs," the report said.

Local and federal government helped offset some of the public-sector losses, with 183 jobs added primarily in school districts and 353 in federal civilian employment.

Losses of 1,536 jobs were recorded in professional and business services with drops in architectural, engineering and technical consulting. Jobs were lost in the wholesale and retail trade sector in part because of sporting-goods store closures.

A sector tied to the fishing industry — manufacturing — lost work because of weak salmon runs.

The leisure and hospitality industry saw 0.2 percent growth, or 69 new jobs, but employment in restaurants, bars and accommodations fell slightly.

The transportation and warehousing sector also saw increased employment because of air cargo and tourism-related transportation, though freight transportation fell slightly following reductions in local consumption.

The information industry was essentially flat, with the largest chunk of jobs in telecommunications holding steady. But the motion picture industry saw small gains in that sector, growing from 420 jobs to 475 over the year thanks to growth at movie theaters, Schultz said.


The report came on the heels of a report from the University of Alaska Anchorage's Institute of Social and Economic Research that found 60 percent of the boroughs and census areas in Alaska have lost jobs as oil prices have plummeted over the past two years. That report was released in November.

"It's safe to say that by all measures, we are in a recession," Schultz said, with the state recording three straight quarters of job losses, an informal measure of a recession used in Alaska.

Amid the gloomy economic news in Alaska, oil prices have been to slowly rising again with the decision Wednesday by OPEC to scale back output. Alaska West Coast crude oil price of $52.23 a barrel on Thursday was the highest it's been since July 31, 2015, when oil was in the middle of its slide to the high $20-range.


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Alex DeMarban


Mark Begich, Joaquin Jackson, and Heller resistance... Three huge reasons to worry about the NRA.
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Right now, all it would take to really trip the dominoes would be to close Eieleson, Elemendorf, Wainright, or Richardson and the other shoe would really drop.


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We need a new Uncle Ted.


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American by birth; Alaskan by choice.
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Or at least a president who was elected by people other than only those who live in the four largest metro areas of the country. smile

Last edited by Klikitarik; 12/03/16.

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Geez, great news...

But then again I've always felt if you wanted work and were a good worker/person you could always find something.

Hate it for your state. But it does ebb and flow like every area does at times.

Got really strong here with oilfield and all the mescans had big writing on the back windows, oil field trash making oilfield cash and other arrogant chit... well most are unemployed now, so WE are the ones paying their bills... go figure....


We can keep Larry Root and all his idiotic blabber and user names on here, but we can't get Ralph back..... Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over....
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When will the housing market bottom?



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A single major economic driver is a huge liability. And we have both OPEC and a politically motivated president to blame for our present condition. What they, and all their "save the world" sycophants don't seem to understand is that they're willingly risking known, proven, safe technologies (in oil exploration and development) for proven problematic development like the huge Pebble mine. (Yes, wind power and zero-emission vehicles do place greater demands on resources like copper, and Alaska will need new income sources.)

Originally Posted by Whiptail

When will the housing market bottom?


The housing market, based on what I've been watching, seems to have gotten shorter legs, at least in some parts of the market. It looks like the 'ready-to-run' units that a mil-spec family can simply move into and later move quickly are still flipping right along, but lower end stuff that is typically selling to local buyers who are inclined to want to do remodel and repair seem to have gotten somewhat sluggish. The housing market isn't hurting yet, at least not where there is adequate federal input. I'm sure there are places where it is ripe. (Of course, that does not apply to areas where the government pays directly for housing; only referencing those ares where federal money pays into the market via wages/salaries.)

Last edited by Klikitarik; 12/03/16.

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Problem is that special interests and the feds have been allowed to lock this place up economically as far as fisheries go. Even the feds require you to have a limited entry permit now to start a charter business.

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And yet the state spends and spends , crazy. Wonder how long they can continue without a "correction" ?

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They keep spending money they ain't collected yet

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Honestly I'm surprised it's not worse. From what I'm seeing in the oil industry I think it will be mid 2017 at the soonest before we've bottomed and hopefully start to rebound. And from what I've seen in the past, rebounds take off much more slowly than in the lower 48 fields where you can just drive more rigs out and start drilling. Just getting the majors to agree on funding something is 6-12 month process. Then tag on Juneau thinking they can punish business into prosperity with higher taxes and who knows.

Not sure what real estate is doing, I'm somewhat afraid to find out how much it's dropped. I saw a lot of for sale signs in our subdivision this year, but that seems to have dropped off. New homes are still being built and sold which is surprising.


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