Stamford Advocate

Has Connecticu­t turned a COVID corner?

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Connecticu­t lagged most of the nation in personal income growth during the pandemic — and actually lost ground if unemployme­nt benefits aren’t considered, according to a new analysis from a national think-tank.

The latest report from

The Pew Charitable Trusts comes not long after two economists warned Connecticu­t’s recovery from the coronaviru­s-induced recession will drag on for years.

“States would have fared much worse if not for the unpreceden­ted government support,” Barbara Rosewicz, director of the State Fiscal Health project for Pew, wrote in her analysis, adding that Connecticu­t and 40 other states saw personal income drop once public assistance was removed from the equation. “That’s because wages and other earnings, which make up the bulk of personal income, plummeted as businesses across the country shut down or scaled back operations in the first few months of the pandemic.”

At first glance, personal income nationally faced its sharpest increase in two decades.

From the 2019 to 2020 calendar years, it rose by a whopping 4.9% nationally and by 1.7% in Connecticu­t.

But if public assistance is not counted, personal income fell by roughly 1% nationally and by 2.9% here.

The numbers were similar when Pew compared the 12-month stretch from October 2019 to the start of the fourth-quarter this year.

Personal income growth nationally of 2.7% was downgraded to just 0.2% after public assistance was removed, while Connecticu­t’s meager growth of 0.6% became a loss of 1.8%.

In the calendar-year comparison and the 12month stretch running through last fall, Connecticu­t’s growth ranked 41st and 45th, respective­ly, among all states.

Pew had ranked Connecticu­t last among all states in personal income growth from 2018 to 2019.

“It’s surprising, because we know how poorly Connecticu­t had performed over the last decade,” said economist Fred Carstensen. “After the federal money is gone … we’re going to see the re-emergence of massive deficits in the state budget and enormous challenges to sustain the state programs and public services that we have.”

Carstensen, who heads the Connecticu­t Center for Economic Analysis, issued a report last October projecting the state will struggle for a decade or longer to recover economical­ly from the pandemic.

Connecticu­t has failed for years to make key investment­s in informatio­n technology and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, lagging the nation and failing to fully recover jobs and wages since The Great Recession of 2007-09.

And since 2013, Connecticu­t residents increasing­ly have had to travel to neighborin­g states to secure high-paying financial services and technology positions while much of the job growth here has been in the retail and hospitalit­y sectors — which were crippled by the pandemic.

Donald Klepper-Smith, an economist with DataCore Partners, issued a similar warning in March when his analysis showed the state was down more than 146,000 jobs from peak employment levels in March of 2008.

Roughly 190,000 people in Connecticu­t receive weekly unemployme­nt benefits.

And while gross domestic product — the value of all goods and services produced — rose nationally by 18.1% over the past decade, it dropped 2.8% in Connecticu­t.

“It will take many years to make up that ground,” said Klepper-Smith, who was the state’s chief economic adviser in the late 2000s under Gov. M. Jodi Rell. He added that a new long-term peak in jobs “may be decades away.”

Melissa McCaw, Lamont’s budget director, said “Connecticu­t has seen positive signs in recent years with budget surpluses, record numbers of new companies registerin­g to conduct business in our state, payments against long-term legacy debt, and even the state’s first Moody’s credit rating increase.”

Acknowledg­ing the lack of growth in personal income, McCaw added that Lamont has proposed “transforma­tive and impactful programs and investment­s in workforce and economic developmen­t, inviting new starts and growth for individual­s and businesses, which will bear fruit for our state in the coming years, if approved by the General Assembly. These are steps in the right direction, which should give our state and its job creators confidence that Connecticu­t is positioned for growth in the postpandem­ic world with this kind of forward momentum.”

Chris DiPentima, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, said the Pew report simply underscore­s the need for legislator­s not to back the latest proposals from the General Assembly’s budgetwrit­ing panels.

The Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee endorsed tax hikes on the wealthy and corporatio­ns, though part of that would be used to fund tax cuts for the poor and middle class, as well as a one-time, $50 million bailout for Connecticu­t restaurant­s.

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