Posts Tagged ‘municipal economy’
Top 10 Cities Primed for Recovery
10. Tulsa (projected vacancy rate in 2010: 19.2 percent, up 2.2 percentage points from 2008). The oil and gas sector was an albatross in the 1980s, when Tulsa suffered from a severe energy bust. But in recent years energy (along with healthcare, aerospace, and government) has helped sustain Tulsa’s economy. Employment and economic growth are much better than national averages, and unlike in other cities, most big construction projects have stayed on track. With new buildings coming online, the overall vacancy rate will stay high until the economy fully rebounds. But it will worsen only slightly in 2010 and probably start to improve by 2011.
9. Pittsburgh (17.3 percent, up 2.4 points). This once industrial city wriggled out of the Rust Belt years ago, and the economy now revolves around medicine, technology, and higher ed. At 7.7 percent, the unemployment rate is nearly 2 percentage points lower than the national average. Few people got rich in Pittsburgh during the real estate boom, which seemed to pass the city by. But the bust has spared Pittsburgh as well, with home prices remaining more stable than in most other markets. That leaves the Steel City primed for a recovery. Read the rest of this entry »
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