Iowa’s Economy Sees Gains, But Worsening Supply Chain Issues Loom In ’22

Statewide Iowa — Iowa’s economy made healthy gains during December and mirrored strong growth for the nine-state Midwest region, according to a monthly survey from Creighton University.

Despite climbing manufacturing numbers, Creighton economist Ernie Goss says supply chain delays worsened during the last month of the year, and the picture for the months ahead isn’t very bright.

The Midwest’s GDP, or gross domestic product, rose during December, although hiring numbers fell during what’s typically one of the strongest months of the year for jobs.

In the latest figures from Iowa Workforce Development, the state’s unemployment rate fell during November to three-point-seven percent from three-point-nine percent in October. The Creighton survey’s wholesale inflation gauge for December dropped, but Goss says inflation in Iowa and the region remains at its highest levels in more than a quarter of a century of conducting the survey. Looking forward, Goss says several key challenges are emerging.

Since the start of the pandemic, Goss says Iowa’s average hourly wages advanced by only eight-tenths of one-percent.

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