This is the University of Oregon State of Oregon Economic Indicators for August 2020. The release date is October 6, 2020. Special thanks to our sponsor, KeyBank!
Link to full report (with charts!) here.
The Oregon Measure of Economic Activity rose from a revised -0.03 in July to 0.22 in August. The moving average measure, which smooths out the volatility, now stands at 0.73, which equates to above average growth in Oregon. Highlights of the report include:
- The construction and employment-heavy services sectors both made positive contributions. The manufacturing sector made a negative contribution, weighed down by a low level of hours worked in the sector.
- Importantly, the household sector now makes a positive contribution due to a falling level of initial unemployment claims and a lower unemployment rate.
- The University of Oregon Index of Economic Indicators rose 0.9%. A wide range of indicators improved during the month: Initial unemployment claims, employment services payrolls, the Oregon weight-miles tax (a measure of trucking activity), and core manufacturing orders.
- New housing permits continues to hold steady. Consumer sentiment and hours worked in manufacturing remain the weaker spots on the data. Consumer sentiment should rise as unemployment rates fall further.
- As a technical matter, the recession most likely lasted one quarter. Growth rebounded in the third quarter of this year; forecasters increasingly expect 30% or higher growth in the third quarter. While not enough to fully recover the losses from earlier in the year, the recovery is expected to be sustainable but the pace of further gains remains uncertain.
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