home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT0137>
- <title>
- Jan. 15, 1990: Boom And Gloom
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 15, 1990 Antarctica
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 46
- Boom and Gloom
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>How is the U.S. economy doing? That depends on where you live
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--Reported by Cristina Garcia/Los Angeles,
- William McWhirter/Chicago and Richard Woodbury/Houston
- </p>
- <p> Want a job? Try once down-and-out places like Houston, Salt
- Lake City and Gary, where newspapers are thick with help-wanted
- ads. But shun former go-go hot spots such as Boston, Phoenix
- and Atlanta, where 1980s-style booms in everything from
- computers to construction have suddenly gone bust.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome to the upside-down '90s. Not since collapsing oil
- prices sent Texas and the rest of the Southwest into a slump
- nearly a decade ago has the U.S. witnessed such a stunning
- reversal of regional fortunes. The new winners include
- Midwestern farmers and Rustbelt manufacturers whose prosaic
- products, from corn to machine tools, are in hot demand around
- the world. Among the losers are Wall Street investment bankers,
- whose earnings have plunged with the waning of the buyout
- binge, and defense contractors across the country, who can
- expect new cutbacks as the cold war ends.
- </p>
- <p> The boom-and-bust cycles are sharply affecting U.S. housing
- prices, which reflect regional economic health. In Houston,
- gone are the bad-old-days of the mid-1980s when U-Haul trucks
- streamed out of town as unemployment rose above 12%. A
- combination of stable oil prices and the arrival of new
- businesses has sparked a rebound in Houston home values. At the
- same time, Northeast housing prices are sinking and the
- explosive growth of California home prices has begun to cool.
- </p>
- <p> The regional ups and downs belie the popular image of the
- U.S. as a single, monolithic marketplace where similar economic
- conditions prevail from coast to coast. While most experts
- expect the U.S. economy to expand at an anemic rate of 1% to
- 2% this year, vs. nearly 3% in 1989, that statistic masks the
- fact that some areas are already in a recession while others
- are steaming ahead. "This is still an economy made up of a lot
- of subeconomies," says Robert Dederick, chief economist of
- Chicago's Northern Trust Bank. "That will be true for a long
- time to come." A look at how the major regions are faring:
- </p>
- <p>-- The Northeast: Down at the Heels. From Boston's high-tech
- wizardry to Wall Street's takeover deals, the Northeast was on
- a roll during most of the Roaring '80s. But Wall Street
- launched a series of layoffs after the 1987 crash and the
- Massachusetts minicomputer industry went into a spin. The
- double whammy left the region with a glut of unsold houses and
- banks with billion-dollar portfolios of bad loans. The
- Massachusetts economy, which grew more than 7% in 1984, shrank
- about 1% last year.
- </p>
- <p> The regional downturn quickly spread to the housing market.
- The median price of homes in the New York City area fell from
- $190,000 in the third quarter of 1988 to $182,600 in the same
- period last year. In Connecticut so many condominiums are on
- the block that the state is setting up a program to acquire 500
- units at bargain prices and rent or sell them to low- and
- moderate-income families.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Southeast: Slow and Steady. Once a dizzily growing
- region, the Southeastern Sunbelt is currently expanding at a
- more stately pace. Many areas overbuilt grandly as new workers
- and companies poured in during the 1980s, only to find
- themselves stuck with painful housing and office surpluses when
- the influx stopped. The region now anticipates a period of
- moderate economic growth. "We need to absorb some of that extra
- supply," says Marc Bromley, president of the residential-sales
- division of Trammell Crow in Atlanta. "It will take us one or
- two years to get through the situation that was created a few
- years back."
- </p>
- <p> Other misfortunes are impeding growth. In Florida the deep
- freeze that blasted across the U.S. last month damaged an
- estimated 40% of the state citrus crop. Defense-industry
- cutbacks have hurt as well. Lockheed Aeronautical Systems has
- trimmed its Marietta, Ga., work force from 20,000 to under
- 10,000 since 1988 as the military contractor completed a
- six-year project to overhaul jet transports.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Midwest: Mostly Miraculous. Despite clear signs of a
- recession in the auto industry, much of the heartland has
- emerged from the trials of the past decade in surprisingly good
- health. Factories that laid off millions of workers in the
- mid-1980s as an overvalued U.S. dollar priced American products
- out of foreign markets have streamlined their operations and
- now compete effectively around the world. The rebound has
- lifted real estate values throughout the region. The median
- price of a single-family home in Chicago rose to $111,400 in
- the third quarter of 1989, up 10.5% from the previous year.
- Cincinnati prices climbed to $77,800, up 11.6%.
- </p>
- <p> After years of hardscrabble existence, the farmbelt has
- begun to bloom. The growing worldwide demand for U.S. grain
- boosted 1989 farm exports 35% over 1988. The Department of
- Agriculture predicts that total U.S. farm income could reach
- a near record $57 billion in 1990, up from $53 billion last
- year.
- </p>
- <p> Even as most of the region seems upward bound, Detroit is
- plunging into a painful slump. Ford, Chrysler and General
- Motors plan to close 42 of their 62 U.S. and Canadian plants,
- including 13 in Michigan, for up to three weeks this month,
- temporarily idling 140,000 workers. That marks the most
- sweeping round of auto layoffs since 1982.
- </p>
- <p>-- The Southwest: Resurgent. After seeing energy prices plummet
- in the 1980s, the eyes of Texas are watching a steady economic
- rebound. Oil prices have jumped from $15 a bbl. in 1988 to $23
- a bbl. But Texas is moving beyond its traditional dependence
- on energy, which accounted for 27% of the statewide economy in
- 1981 but is the source of only 15% today. Texas firms are
- expanding in such fields as biotechnology and
- telecommunications. Attracted by the mild Texas climate and a
- still low cost of living, such major companies as J.C. Penney,
- GTE and Exxon have moved their corporate headquarters there.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the region's real estate market remains in fragile
- health. While the median price of Houston homes rose 8.2% in
- the third quarter to $70,900, the city is glutted with 55,000
- vacant lots and the office vacancy rate is a towering 27%.
- </p>
- <p>-- The West: Wild. From the supercharged Pacific Northwest to
- struggling Arizona, no region claims a wider range of strengths
- and weaknesses. Paced by high-flying Boeing, which is working
- off a four-year backlog of aircraft orders, Seattle is
- attracting newcomers from across the country. The median price
- of a Seattle home rose 23% in the third quarter to $110,000,
- marking the largest increase in the U.S. By contrast, Phoenix
- is mired in a real estate depression in the wake of a heedless
- building spree. Lenders foreclosed on more than 15,000
- residential mortgages last year, up nearly 20% from 1988. In the
- Rocky Mountain area the Denver economy is still struggling to
- recover from the energy slump.
- </p>
- <p> California is a country-size economy by itself, accounting
- for some 14% of America's total GNP. The main threat to the
- state's prosperity comes from looming defense cuts, which would
- have a sizable impact on Southern California's aerospace
- industry. Economists predict that unemployment in California
- will rise from 5.1%, vs. the current 5.3% U.S. average, to 7.4%
- in 1992, largely as a result of defense cutbacks. Meanwhile,
- the median price of a Los Angeles home reached $224,000 in the
- third quarter of 1989, up 18.7% from the previous year. Says
- Stephen Levy, director of the Center for Continuing Study of
- the California Economy in Palo Alto: "It's very unlikely that
- home prices will rush ahead in the next two years. It's not a
- crash scenario, but I don't see prices being pushed much
- higher." In the topsy-turvy world of the '90s, even the Golden
- State will endure a changing fortune.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-