Rural economy is down for 10th straight month
OMAHA — High interest rates, along with weak farm commodity prices and equipment sales, helped push a regional “rural mainstreet” economic index tracked by Omaha’s Creighton University to below growth neutral for the loth month in a row.
The Rural Mainstreet Index is based on a monthly survey of bank chief executives in 10 states including Nebraska, targeting about 200 rural communities with an average population of 1,300.
Ernie Goss, Creighton University professor and Jack MacAllister Chair in Regional Economics. (Courtesy of Creighton University) It is intended to provide a “real- time” economic analysis of rural agriculturally- and energy-dependent parts of the nation, said Ernie Goss, a Creighton University economist who created and launched the survey in 2006 with Bill McQuillan, former chair of the Independent Community Banks of America.
Besides Nebraska, other states involved in the survey are Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota and Wyoming.
According to the most recent survey, the overall Rural Mainstreet Index reading sank in June to 41.7, from 44.2 the month before. The index ranges between zero and 100 so a reading of 50 indicates no growth, or growth neutral.
Looking at Nebraska only, the Cornhusker State’s overall index dropped to 39.5 from May’s 41.8 reading. More narrowly, Nebraska’s new-hire index sank to 46.0 from 48.2.
Nebraska’s farmland price index rose to 48.5 from 46.7. According to trade data from the International Trade Association, exports of agriculture goods and livestock for 2024 year-to-date were up 33.8% over the same period in 2023.
Goss said rural bankers remain pessimistic about economic growth for their areas over the next six months. As a region, he said, the June confidence index increased slightly to a still “very weak” 29.2 compared to 28.8 the month before.
“Weak agriculture commodity prices and farm exports, combined with downturns in farm equipment sales over the past several months, continued to constrain banker confidence,” said Goss.