Georgia Battles Back from the Great Recession

Georgia’s economy has struggled mightily with the recession and continues to deal with a rising tide of layoffs, foreclosures and bank failures. Weakness is evident throughout the state with the bulk of the problems related to the housing collapse, cutbacks in consumer spending and a slowdown in international trade. Nonfarm employment has tumbled 7.3 percent since peaking in September 2007, and the unemployment rate has surged and more than doubled to 10.2 percent. The deterioration in employment conditions has led to a 2.8 percent drop in private wages and salaries over the past year, which has put considerable strain on the state’s finances. Revenues fell 10.5 percent in fiscal year 2009, with personal tax receipts tumbling 12.2 percent and corporate tax receipts plunging 26.3 percent.

The recession has had a disproportionate impact on Georgia, because its economy was more closely tied to the housing boom than many other states. The Atlanta metro area was the number one market for single-family construction every year from 1998 to 2005, which marked the height of the housing boom. During this period, more than 416,000 single-family permits were issued in the Atlanta area. The construction boom reached nearly every corner of the metropolitan area, particularly long slumbering areas to the south, east and west of the city. The nation’s housing boom also fueled growth in Georgia’s important forest products and carpet industries. The collapse in new home construction sent the region reeling ahead of the rest of the country. Construction employment has plunged 27 percent since March 2007. Employment in building products industries fell 24.3 percent over the past two years, and Georgia’s carpet industry has seen employment decline 18.3 percent.