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Nebraska Leading Economic Indicator Improves in January

State's Economy Should Avoid Recession in First Half of 2023
Nebraska Leading Economic Indicator Improves in January
The University of Nebraska–Lincoln Leading Economic Indicator (LEI), used to predict economic activity six months into the future, rose by 1.29% in January. Eric Thompson, department chair, K.H. Nelson College Professor of Economics and director of the Bureau of Business Research, indicated the increase infers that the Nebraska economy will avoid recession and grow slowly in the first half of 2023.

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Nebraska’s Leading Economic Indicator rose in January, according to the most recent report from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. Designed to predict economic activity six months into the future, the Leading Economic Indicator rose by 1.29%.

“The leading indicator has been mixed in recent months, declining in some months but rising in others,” said economist Eric Thompson, department chair, K.H. Nelson College Professor of Economics and director of Bureau of Business Research. “This pattern suggests slow growth in the state economy during the first half of 2023.”

The six components of Nebraska’s Leading Economic Indicator include business expectations, building permits for single-family homes, airline passenger counts, initial claims for unemployment insurance, the value of the U.S. dollar and manufacturing hours worked.

Most components of the leading indicator improved during January.

Manufacturing hours worked expanded. “There has been sustained growth in Nebraska manufacturing, given its ties to food markets and agriculture," according to Thompson.

The value of the U.S. dollar also declined in January for the third consecutive month. “A declining dollar improves the position of manufacturers, agricultural producers and other Nebraska businesses that compete in international markets,” said Thompson.

Given areas of strength in the state economy, initial claims for unemployment insurance fell in Nebraska during the month.

Airline passenger counts and building permits for single-family homes also grew in January. “These improvements, however, primarily reflect a rebound from a weak December rather than a sustained expansion,” said Thompson.

The full report and a technical report describing the indicators are available at the Bureau of Business Research website, https://bbr.unl.edu.

 
Published: March 8, 2023