Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia State University study: Metro Atlanta’s economy will continue to progress next year

- MICHAEL E. KANELL THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

AFTER AMAZON REJECTION

The decision announced last week by Amazon to turn its back on Atlanta, choosing to place its second headquarte­rs in both New York and metro Washington, D.C.. and an operations facility in Nashville, is not necessaril­y a reflection on the region’s economic growth prospects, according to a high-profile forecast from Georgia State University.

Atlanta, which was one of 20 finalist cities for the 50,000-job second headquarte­rs by Amazon, ended up not making the cut.

Both the recent rollercoas­ter of the stock market and the added costs of tariffs are also headwinds for Georgia’s economic growth. But Rajeev Dhawan, director of the Economic Forecastin­g Center at Georgia State., said such threats will not flip the economy off-track.

Job growth in Georgia next year will slow, but remain solid.

Dhawan also predicts that unemployme­nt will stay low and employers will expand by 68,900 jobs in 2019. Atlanta will account for nearly 70 percent of the job growth

“The underlying trend of the economy is healthy,” he said.

The upbeat, if not spectacula­r, prognosis for Atlanta does not take into account the recently approved, $5 billion plan for a developmen­t in downtown, he said.

“I am not factoring any of that in until see some visuals, some work being done,” Dhawan said of the Gulch plan.

He said it wasn’t clear yet whether huge projects would help stimulate growth or just “cannibaliz­e” growth that would have occurred elsewhere in metro Atlanta.

Growth has been steady in Atlanta, despite sluggishne­ss much of the year from the corporate sector. Many of the large companies doing business overseas seemed to pause in their hiring, perhaps partly because of worries about the trade war with China.

And tariffs are a concern, Dhawan said.

They are raising the costs of materials used by American companies and nudging the price of items on shelves higher. Moreover, tens of thousands of workers in Georgia move, warehouse and deliver millions of packages and other goods that are shipped in and out of the country.

Even if they do not reach crippling levels, the direction seems clear, Dhawan said.

“The amount of trade will be less going forward — that is what happens if you put in a tariff,” he said.

Less trade would likely lead to a strengthen­ing dollar, he predicted. “And a strong dollar is not a friend of the stock market.”

U.S. stock markets rose steadily through most of the year, fell hard in mid-autumn, “gyrations” that could rattle companies concerned about raising capital for expansion, he said. But the market came back strong in November.

“Now, if the stock market goes into ‘bear’ territory, if it falls 20 percent down, then it would have an impact on spending,” he said. “But it would also have an impact on the Federal Reserve.”

The Fed has been raising interest rates, slowly, but steadily. That makes borrowing more costly. But a steep stock market decline would almost certainly persuade the Fed to stop tapping the brakes, Dhawan said.

With jobs plentiful, incomes growing and inflation still low, the confidence of consumers and companies like has remained high, he said.

The mixed results of the election figure in that, since now the Democrats will hold one House and the Republican­s the rest of government, Dhawan said. “I think tax cut 2.0 is not going to happen. But even if there’s nothing more, there isn’t going to be a pullback either.”

Atlanta’s unemployme­nt rate now is 3.1 percent. Dhawan predicted a slight uptick to average 3.9 percent next year, still a historical­ly low level.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOHN BAZEMORE ?? A tract of land known to locals as The Gulch is seen in Atlanta in January. For more than a year, cities around the country, including Atlanta, waited in suspense over whether they’d be chosen as Amazon’s second home. On Tuesday Amazon announced that it had chosen Long Island City, Queens, as well as a suburb of Washington in Arlington, Va., as the final locations.
AP PHOTO/JOHN BAZEMORE A tract of land known to locals as The Gulch is seen in Atlanta in January. For more than a year, cities around the country, including Atlanta, waited in suspense over whether they’d be chosen as Amazon’s second home. On Tuesday Amazon announced that it had chosen Long Island City, Queens, as well as a suburb of Washington in Arlington, Va., as the final locations.

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