Economic Stress Map: The AP's Look At The Hardest Hit Counties In America

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First Posted: 11- 2-09 01:13 PM   |   Updated: 11- 2-09 03:07 PM

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Economic Stress Map

The economic recovery is proceeding unevenly in its early stages, with areas hurt most by the housing slump still lagging behind other regions, according to The Associated Press' monthly analysis of economic stress in more than 3,100 U.S. counties.

(For an interactive map by the Associated Press, click here.)

Counties in the Southeast, the industrial Midwest and the Southwest are still struggling and have made the least improvement, the analysis of September data found. The northern half of the nation is stabilizing or improving faster than the southern half. Northern counties generally didn't suffer as much from the housing bust.

The government said last week that the U.S. economy grew at a 3.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, ending four straight quarters of decline. But that growth is expected to slow as government stimulus programs wind down.

The AP's Economic Stress Index calculates a score from 1 to 100 based on a county's unemployment, foreclosure and bankruptcy rates. Under a rough rule of thumb, a county is considered stressed when its score exceeds 11.

Nationwide, the average county's Stress score dipped to 10.1 in September from 10.3 in August, helped by a steadying of foreclosure and bankruptcy rates. In September 2008, the average county Stress score was much lower: 6.73.

The highest Stress scores were still found mainly in states that endured housing booms and busts. Nevada had the highest score, 21.95, followed by Michigan, with its battered auto industry, at 17.75. California was next, at 16.2, followed by Florida, 15.4, and Arizona, 14.26.

States with the lowest Stress scores in September were North Dakota (4.07), South Dakota (5.01), Nebraska (5.71), Montana (6.6) and Wyoming (6.9).

"Housing still is at the epicenter of this crisis around the country, and places where the cycle was most egregious are also now places that are seeing some of the highest rates of unemployment," said Sean Snaith, an economist at the University of Central Florida.

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Midwestern and Plains states such as Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota and Iowa avoided the worst of the housing and financial crises. And Oklahoma and North Dakota have recently benefited from rising oil prices. The region also has been helped by a weaker dollar, which has made agricultural commodities cheaper for foreigners to buy.

Areas of the Northeast, such as Pennsylvania and upstate New York, are benefiting from economically stable industries like higher education and health care. Those are the two industries that have added jobs during the recession.

Pittsburgh, for example, is no longer an old-line industrial city. The city's largest employers are the University of Pittsburgh's Health Center and the West Penn Allegheny Health System, a network of hospitals, noted Steve Cochrane, an economist at Moody's Economy.com.

That's in contrast to much of neighboring Ohio, which still has auto-related manufacturing that has been hit hard by the downturn, Cochrane said. In September, Ohio suffered from a Stress score of 12.48, while Pennsylvania's was only 9.49.

About 36 percent of counties in September had a score of 11 or higher, down from 39 percent of counties in August. Twenty-nine states saw some improvement in their Stress scores from August to September.

Since the start of 2009, 12 states have improved their Stress scores: Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Indiana, Maine, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Vermont.

The contrast between stabilizing regions and worsening ones can be seen in the economies of Arkansas and Florida. Arkansas didn't bear the brunt of the recession until the financial markets collapsed last fall. Its unemployment rate rose from 5.2 percent in September 2008 to 7.1 percent last month. And its Stress score rose from 6.48 to 8.84 in the past year.

But its economy has begun showing signs of life. Arkansas' economy has been stable since March, with some job gains in September. Job creation is expected in the first quarter of next year.

"I think Arkansas will emerge stronger than our neighbors and a little bit ahead of the curve," said Michael Pakko, chief economist at the Institute for Economic Advancement at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

Arkansas also is home to several industries that fared well during the recession. Wal-Mart and its suppliers anchor the northwest part of the state. Food processing plants in the northeast part of the state are humming, and health service jobs in Little Rock have increased.

Florida, by contrast, was severely hurt by the housing bust. Its unemployment rate started climbing months before the official start of the recession in December 2007, from 4 percent in June 2007 to 11 percent in September. Its jobless rate is expected to remain above 10 percent into 2012.

"I'm expecting Florida to lag the nation as a whole in the recovery," Snaith said. "A lot of that is just trying to get out from under the burden of the housing market."

Three of the five-most-stressed counties with populations over 25,000 were in Nevada, also battered by the housing crisis. The five are: Imperial County, Calif. (33.51); Yuma County, Ariz. (25.82); Lyon County, Nev. (24.72); Clark County, Nev. (23.83); and Nye County, Nev. (23.72).

"There is going to be a longer process for those economies to get back into the swing of things," Pakko said.

RANKINGS:

A list of the 20 most economically stressed counties with populations over 25,000 and their September 2009 Stress scores, according to The Associated Press Economic Stress Index:

1. Imperial County, Calif, 33.51

2. Yuma County, Ariz., 25.82

3. Lyon County, Nev., 24.72

4. Clark County, Nev., 23.83

5. Nye County, Nev., 23.72

6. Merced County, Calif., 23.39

7. Yuba County, Calif., 23.29

8. San Joaquin County, Calif., 22.69

9. Lauderdale County, Tenn., 22.68

10. Wayne County, Mich., 22.5

11. Lapeer County, Mich., 22.44

12. St. Clair County, Mich., 22.42

13. Riverside County, Calif., 22.37

14. Dallas County, Ala., 22.17

15. Stanislaus County, Calif., 22.16

16. Macomb County, Mich., 22.02

17. Chester County, S.C., 21.48

18. Marion County, S.C., 21.4

19. Union County, S.C., 21.19

20. Lee County, Fla., 21.18


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The economic recovery is proceeding unevenly in its early stages, with areas hurt most by the housing slump still lagging behind other regions, according to The Associated Press' monthly analysis of e...
The economic recovery is proceeding unevenly in its early stages, with areas hurt most by the housing slump still lagging behind other regions, according to The Associated Press' monthly analysis of e...
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- voxpop4 I'm a Fan of voxpop4 3 fans permalink

Let's get out of this crappy stupid war in Iraq and Afghanistan..get gasoline down to 79 cents a gal...or get off of Arab Oil (OPEC)! We'll be fine! No oil sales will destroy all our enemies! Iran, Saudi arabia Venezuela, let em drink that oil.. But if we dont change our energy system..we will all be in the "Privy House"! I prefer a nice tiled bathroom! I'm spoiled.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 AM on 11/05/2009
- eichler1 I'm a Fan of eichler1 5 fans permalink

Only tools like AP reporters would be disingenuous enough to report that there even is a "recovery." Yo, where are the jobs that pay a living wage? Oops, those got shipped offshore, to replaced by 26-hour-per-week (no health benefit) WalMart employment. The "recovery" is completely a MSM fabrication. So the stress index map is a total joke, because there is stress everywhere, thanks to Obama's kowtowing to the bankers, insurers, big pharma, etc. Good luck, America. You're going to need it. Just be sure to do one thing: don't believe the hype.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 AM on 11/05/2009

Why is education & health care still so expensive for so many, especially in the 'most prosperous nation on earth'? WHy are there no jobs? Why no unemployment extension?
good articles; http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 11/03/2009
- desertman I'm a Fan of desertman 14 fans permalink

A vast number of people in the world are willing and able to do your job for pennies on the dollar. Therein lies the problem.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 PM on 11/03/2009

This may sound confusing but the reason education and health care is so expensive is because it is free for too many people. Quick explanation is that when people have to pay for their own goods or services, they tend to shop wiser and be more proactive in the process. Too many people get free education and free health care.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 11/05/2009
- eichler1 I'm a Fan of eichler1 5 fans permalink

Dude, you're on drugs. The French have "free" healthcare -- they also enjoy longer lifespans and spend 1/2 per as much capita on healthcare as Americans do. So much for your wise shopping theory, LOL!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 AM on 11/05/2009

If that's the case, why is our school system, which everyone gets to go for "free" so bad?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 11/05/2009
- seal62 I'm a Fan of seal62 8 fans permalink

Crap...i'm in 12th.Wife asked..you ready to go back to work?I had to lol...where?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:44 AM on 11/03/2009

Lots of unemployment. So why does the Establishment want the government to accumulate more debt? Time for a severe cut in government spending, and we can start with wiping the U.S. Department of Education off the map.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:17 AM on 11/03/2009
- jeffrey678 I'm a Fan of jeffrey678 8 fans permalink

WHY?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:58 AM on 11/03/2009
- gwix I'm a Fan of gwix permalink

Since obviously school did not benefit you in the least, I can see why you might have arrived at that conclusion. But I am grateful that there are others who did benefit and can make a better judgment.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 AM on 11/03/2009
- Read Books I'm a Fan of Read Books 11 fans permalink

I can only speculate at NorthernCross reasoning, since he/she did not specify it.

Here is the MBA-style argument: Centralized planning works poorly for a country as large, populated, and heterogeneous as the U.S. (in contrast to a tiny Scandinavian country). It is best to push down decision rights to the lowest level possible, like HP, Montessori School, and Google do. Empower local communities to experiment and find creative solutions, rather than follow the cookie-cutter diktats of distant regulators.

NorthernCross should have mentioned his/her rationale.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 11/04/2009
- Oakland I'm a Fan of Oakland 11 fans permalink
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They aren't through yet. I'm sure there another 15 or 20 trade deals with third world countries that they are just dying to pass.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 AM on 11/03/2009
- v eyepete I'm a Fan of v eyepete 30 fans permalink

I suppose this is like blaming Obama for the Bush years, but I think real estate people are the scourge of the earth. They lie, they cheat, they steal, and falsely drive up prices with their own commission in mind. It is greed and avarice that is destroying us. The rich bankers are safe behind their walls in their exclusive walled communities. The rest of us can eat cake. What about some Roosevelt era type work programs? God knows there are roads and bridges that need fixing.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 AM on 11/03/2009

It's not like blaming Obama for the Bush years, but it may be less on-target than you think. It was a cluster #$%@ of the loss of regulation in lending institutions, which allowed loans to be bundled and bank employees to be financially rewarded for selling loans to people who could not by any stretch pay them back, plus general greed and a boom mentality all around. I have friends who are realtors who were worried for years about how some realtors were doing drive-by home assessments to determine loans, as in not even getting out of their car to see if the house had problems inside or around back. It was unsustainable practice, not ethical or legal, but happening so fast with all the new "Boom" realtors jumping in. Long time realtors who looked out for their clients will be what we are left with when the dust settles on this, and those who kept working with devastated clients during foreclosures and short sales without regard for personal gain will have a deserved reputation for honesty.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 11/03/2009
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There's going to be no recovery. The middle class is not coming back, and there will be a broadened population of the country which will settle into permanant "working poor" status. Like the fat bottom of the old food pyramid, we are spread out underneath a pinacle of wealth, supporting it, and taking our rightful place in the world economy - as workers and consumers.

All that welfare money given to wall street should have been given right to the american people - so they could keep their homes, train for better jobs, and start small businesses. The banks should have been forced to refinance, and creditors should have been prevented from ruining people's credit ratings due to catastrophic events (job loss and illness). Once your credit rating is ruined, everything is more expensive and you can't get a loan.

Everything which was stacked against us should have been torn down. Or at least started to be torn down.

I don't believe in change anymore. The best we can hope for is to pool our resources as families, try to work the system and network as best we can, and get ahead however we can.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:50 AM on 11/03/2009
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I'm actually encouraged - a top 20 "bad news" list and Cleveland isn't on it!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 AM on 11/03/2009

Reagan economics and classic old Neo-liberalism again. Cars will fail and nobody poor can afford to buy it again. Good luck consumers.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 AM on 11/03/2009
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 131 fans permalink

The lack of regulation in the mortgage and banking industries has contributed to this economic meltdown. States like California, which reportedly has about 60% of the nation's bankruptcies, have been especially hard hit by the lack of regulation in mortgage lending and banking.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 AM on 11/03/2009
- grasyknol I'm a Fan of grasyknol 22 fans permalink
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These unemployment numbers are staggering. I think we've entered a new phase. I'm not even sure if Americans fully realize that the middle class has been weakened to such an extent that it's not returning to anything resembling what it once was.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 AM on 11/03/2009
- Enliberate I'm a Fan of Enliberate 10 fans permalink

Just like New Orleans.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:00 AM on 11/03/2009
- RadCenter I'm a Fan of RadCenter 26 fans permalink

Which numbers? if you mean the numbers in the list at the end of the article, those are stress scores, not unemployment figures. Not that the real unemployment numbers are not bad.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:18 PM on 11/03/2009
- ladyvader I'm a Fan of ladyvader 86 fans permalink
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I just did some looking up of the county results of the past two elections.

2008-12 Blue, 8 Red
2004- 14 Red, 6 Blue

Only five counties voted blue in both elections.

Do blame this solely on the Dems. The GnOPers have plenty of blame to go around.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 AM on 11/03/2009

My brother lives in Lapeer County, MI and worked in Wayne County, MI until he lost his job 3 weeks ago.

Im very worried about him. He has 5 mouths to feed including his own.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 PM on 11/02/2009
- Johnagain I'm a Fan of Johnagain 45 fans permalink
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My brother just left Oakland County for Chicago for a job. Even though Oakland is not on the list, it is in bad shape too. No neighborhood remains unscathed in SE Michigan, or anywhere in Michigan for that matter.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 11/03/2009

If only Reagan were still around. He was the right man in 1980 and the same policies would lead us out of the darkness once again. God bless Ronald Wilson Reagan.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 11/02/2009
- 2tango I'm a Fan of 2tango 21 fans permalink

It looks like you are blind like a bat, thanks to Reagan we are in this mess.

Thanks to his "free-Enterpise" and His Globalization that took all the american jobs overseas.

Thanks to the last 30 years of Illussions from Reagan/bus­h/Clinton/­Bush= Disaster

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 PM on 11/02/2009

The globalization was going to happen no matter what. This is especially true in the age of information.

USA needs to 1) Secure the borders, 2) Cut taxes, 3) Reduce government spending to 1995 levels 4) Balanced budget amendment 5) Law that says government spending cannot be more than 20% of GDP (Thanks Milten Friedman) 6) Open up new lands for oil drilling 7) encourage more development of coal, solar, nuclear, and natural gas energy sources 8) develop new coal and oil refineries 9) end cap and trade discussion, 10) end the government takeover of health care. I could go on but this is a good start.

Reagan tried to do all of that but ran into Tip O'Neil and the Democrat led House and Senate. If he would have Congress, we would be energy independent and our social programs would not all be near bankrupt.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 AM on 11/03/2009
- romdrom I'm a Fan of romdrom 4 fans permalink
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Oh barf. I had 8 years of him as a governor, too. He dismantled everything good about California and then took his bobble-head self to Washington and bobbled through another eight years there. Herbert Hoover didn't do any worse. Yuk!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 PM on 11/02/2009

No. You still have the large deficits, massive immigration problems, a disastrous health care system, high taxes, and public employee unions that break budgets. It's all the things Democrats love because it is who they are.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 11/03/2009
- grasyknol I'm a Fan of grasyknol 22 fans permalink
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Ronnie Reagan was asleep at the switch. He did was he was told to do when awake. Hence, here we sit in economic calamity.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 PM on 11/02/2009
- laucarlson I'm a Fan of laucarlson 6 fans permalink

You mean the spokesman for General Electric?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 PM on 11/02/2009
- ladyvader I'm a Fan of ladyvader 86 fans permalink
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Are you taking Nancy's pills?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 11/02/2009
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