Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama are more recession proof than most of America

- STAFF REPORT

A new study suggests Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama are all among the top 10 states best positioned for a possible recession as more businesses and economists talk about the end of the longest economic growth period in modern history.

A decade after the worst economic downturn since before Word War II, the online informatio­n service FitSmallBu­sinesss analyzed the 50 states for their vulnerabil­ity to another downturn and found the best states were scattered across the South and Midwest.

“To determine which states are the most recessionp­roof in this revised study, we considered a wealth of data, including product exports, housing costs, individual debt averages, average deposits per capita, and trade,” said Kelly Main of FitSmallBu­siness.com. “The states best equipped to survive a recession in 2020 boast business diversity and minimal per-capita debt.”

Tennessee, which was ranked No. 18 in a similar study in 2017, moved up to the No. 10 position due to its improved personal debt burden and business diversity.

Tennessee’s average debt-to-income ratio of 1.285 in 2019 was down from the 1.5 ratio in 2017. The Volunteer State also enjoys more economic diversity than most states with its biggest industries — finance, insurance and real estate — comprising 16.4% of the state’s GDP, or about 4 percentage points below the national average of 20% of GDP

for the biggest industry.

Tennessee’s average jobless rate of 3.5% last year also was below the U.S. jobless rate of 3.9%, and Tennessee’s exports per capita reached $4,832 last year — a bit above the national average of $4,299.

Georgia fares even better at No. 9 in the new study, up from No. 35 in 2017. Georgia boasts the fifth-lowest average debt-to-income ratio in the nation at 1.46, down from 1.66 in 2017. It also has 10% of total spending available as stabilizat­ion funds—the sixth best in the nation.

Georgia’s unemployme­nt rate dropped from 4.8% in 2017 to 3.6% in 2019, and its deposits per capita increased from $22,000 to $24,000 per year. The state also managed to create a well-diversifie­d exports portfolio with products shipped to China, Mexico and Japan, among other nations.

Alabama lands as the fifth-best state to survive a recession, up 15 positions from 2017 when it was ranked at No. 20. Its low debt-to-income ratio of 1.37 is the fourth best in the nation along with solid economic diversity; the top industry’s share of GDP is just 16.5%—about 5% lower than the national average. Over the past decade, the state’s GDP also rose from $173 billion in 2008 to $221 billion in 2018.

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