Category Archives: Affordability
What does 2.9% unemployment mean?
As the Statesman headline shows, the unemployment in Austin has dropped below 3%. That’s lower than it’s been since the dot-com heydays of the late ’90s.
“It’s an amazing streak we’re on. As of March, we’d experienced 44 consecutive months of year-over-year total non-farm job growth of percent or better. We haven’t seen a run like that since the late 1990s, and no other large metro economy in the country is anywhere close to that figure.” said Brian Kelsey, an Austin-based economist with Civic Analytics.
Even for Austin, this is good news. But just how good is it?
According to Chris Farrell of Bloomberg Businessweek, 3% unemployment is considered full employment, but the “conventional wisdom that says such a low unemployment rate policy isn’t feasible because of inflation.” Still, our country hit that mark three times in the 20th Century:
Full employment was once defined as somewhere between 1 percent and 2 percent, a figure that reflects the normal ebb and flow of the workforce as people leave jobs seeking better opportunities. In the U.S. a full-employment economy more realistically is closer to the 3 percent to 4 percent mark, a level reached only a handful of times during the past half-century, in the 1950s, the latter part of the 60s and during the heady years of the dot.com boom in the 90s.
Even getting to 3% unemployment is something that the economy of the United States of America achieved only three times after World War II — and Austin just beat that number.
We’ve got challenges. We have an affordability crisis, and we are the most economically segregated metro area in the country. But we have an economy strong enough to fuel the changes we need to see. Wages are rising. Businesses are hiring.
An unemployment rate of 2.9% is worth celebrating.
#DOTSmartCity Update for April 20
Here’s the latest rundown of coverage on Austin’s bid for the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Smart City Challenge!
“Where Innovation Leadership and Urbanization Collide”
By Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx
http://www.transportation.gov/fastlane/where-innovation-leadership-and-urbanization-collide
Beginning today, I will be participating in roundtables, presentations and panels that highlight transportation’s role in improving quality of life, economic development, and the environment. Continue reading
10th Annual Louis Gregory Symposium on Race Unity keynote
HTU Race-Unity Symposium Keynote
Wednesday, April 13, 1:30pm
Thank you to Dr. Michael Hirsch of Huston-Tillotson University.
Thank you to President Collette Pierce Burnette, who seems to be settling into the job quite well and making her formidable presence felt in this city.
It is an honor to deliver the keynote at the Tenth Annual Louis Gregory Symposium on Race Unity.
But it is a daunting honor. The theme I was given was quote – building and/or creating race unity in Austin – unquote.
I was further asked – again, I’m quoting from the instructions I was given by Dr. Hirsch, who must really think the Office of the Mayor is imbued with unheard of powers – to lay out how Austin can – quote — “overcome racial prejudice, discrimination, and conflict and build a more powerful and inclusive city that heals wounds and looks forward to accomplishing Louis Gregory’s vision of race amity and race unity.”
Endquote. Continue reading
#DOTSmartCity update for April 12
“ATX Mayor meets with US DOT over Smart City Plan“
By Rudy Koski, Fox 7 News
http://www.fox7austin.com/news/local-news/121106310-story
A delegation with the U.S. Department of Transportation met Monday with Austin’s mayor and city mobility planners. The meeting was part of a competition for a $50 million grant to become a new federal innovation center.
The Austin proposal essentially is a pitch to be a transportation idea lab for Uncle Sam. 5 areas for innovation include: Continue reading