The Columbus Dispatch

9 years later, some states yet to revcover

- By Jeff Amy

MERIDIAN, Miss. — Call them the unrecovere­d — a handful of states where job markets, nine years later, are still struggling back to where they were before the recession.

That’s true in Mississipp­i, where job numbers and the overall size of the economy remain below 2008 levels. Unlike states that have long since sprinted ahead, Mississipp­i is struggling with slow economic growth and slipping population in a place that’s rarely at peak economic health.

Miguel Brown, despite family ties to his hometown near the Alabama border, is working on oil rigs off the shore of Texas, chasing higher wages.

“It’s rough,” said the 49-year-old Brown. “There’s not a whole lot of jobs in Meridian, especially that pay anything.”

Workers made an average of $669 a week in Meridian and surroundin­g Lauderdale County in late 2016, compared with $739 statewide and $1,027 nationwide.

Good wages are the reason that Brown says he has left his hometown of Meridian.

“These are my roots,” Brown said. “Meridian will always be home, without a doubt, but you’ve got to make ends meet and you can’t do it here.”

Not only Mississipp­i, but also Alabama, Michigan, New Mexico, and West Virginia are still short of pre-recession job levels by multiple measures. That contrasts with states including Colorado, North Dakota, Texas and Utah, where employment numbers have soared.

Nationwide, job numbers surpassed pre-recession peaks in the middle of 2014, about the same time Mississipp­i was saddled with the nation’s highest unemployme­nt rate.

Emilia Istrate, who produces a yearly report on how local economies are faring for the National Associatio­n of Counties, said the recovery has been widespread but “uneven.”

“It explains why so many Americans don’t feel the national economic numbers. It’s because they live in one of these places that is still in recovery or struggling,” Istrate said.

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