
Established in 1993, The Puget Sound Economic Forecaster is a quarterly report published by the Center for Economic and Business Research at Western Washington University which acquired the publication in 2017 from its founders, Conway Pedersen Economics, Inc.
The report and website are designed for business executives, marketing directors, investors, government managers, and researchers who need a professional and objective view on the economic prospects for the Puget Sound region (King County, Kitsap County, Pierce County, and Snohomish County).
Our goal is to provide accurate and well-reasoned forecasts for the region as well as clear and insightful observations on important developments in the economy.
Each report contains a summary forecast, in-depth discussion of the regional outlook, forecasts and analyses of retail sales and construction and real estate, a special topic (e.g., China and Population Change), a detailed forecast table, and the Puget Sound Index of Leading Economic Indicators.
To facilitate research and analysis on the regional economy, every issue of the regional economic report is archived as a downloadable PDF file in the Subscriber Area. A comprehensive Subject Index of the archived reports has been developed to aid in the retrieval of information.
Reports are posted to the web site one to two weeks before the printed copy is mailed.
With thoughts of the long warm days of summer on our minds, we have found ourselves interrupted pondering about the price of avocados and how the latest round of tariff threats that may impact retail sales and the general economy overall. Thoughts of spending time at the lake or river have found us considering stream flows and how the change in our climate may impact all of the people and businesses that rely on water in one way or another. Daydreams of patio and deck BBQs have caused us to reflect on changes in house prices and the sudden growth in sales outside of the King County – is it more commuters or are jobs moving? Will the Seattle to Everett corridor retain its worst traffic in the nation ranking? Evidently, economists are bad at not thinking about things. All of the above is ahead in this edition of the Forecaster plus a better understanding of workforce participation and the state forecast. We will just call it the beach edition.
Oman is said to have told European officials there’s no way of going back to the status quo with the Strait of Hormuz, and that transiting ships may have to be charged some fees. If so, it would cement suspicions that the surprise war by the US and Israel on Iran has permanently changed the global energy landscape for the worse. Any fees for vessels could cost commodity traders and shippers tens of billions of dollars annually. They would also break maritime laws, governments including the US, UK, France, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have warned. https://buff.ly/ytdFyxx
From the Financial Times' Opinion pages: Data shows that a growing number of countries have long since decoupled economic growth and the consumption that goes with it from their material footprint, and pollution levels are now falling worldwide. It’s one of a number of ways that research supports the arguments against so-called degrowth. https://buff.ly/qpPv2vH
The US-Iran deal reached earlier this month and the subsequent drop in energy prices since have “reduced upside risks to inflation,” Goldman Sachs says, but the bank’s US economists still see the Fed’s preferred core gauge rising at a 3.2% year-on-year pace in December — still above policymakers’ 2% target.
We receive a wide-range of questions every day and would love to hear yours. Questions lead to data and data should lead to better questions.
Past topics include regional growth, labor productivity, demographic trends, inflation, multipliers, entrepreneurs, and state and local taxes.
Web site subscribers currently have access to more than fifty special topics. Here are four examples drawn from the Special Topic Archive: