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Jelly Belly Coming to South Carolina

Ferrara Candy Company has announced plans to build a 750,000 square foot production facility and associated administrative offices in Orangeburg County, South Carolina. In addition, the Chicago-based company has pledged to hire 1,000 of the state’s residents over the next ten years. For its part, the state has agreed to spend $85 million on site prep, and to provide some tax breaks for the company. The facility is expected to start pumping out Jelly Belly, Nerds, SweeTARTS, and Laffy Taffy in the first quarter of 2029.  

Op-Ed: Midwestern Cities Making a Comeback

Here’s a link to an interesting Op-Ed by the always equally interesting Alan Ehrenhalt about the revival of Midwestern cities. Ehrenhalt uses recent population statistics to illustrate that cities like Des Moines and Grand Rapids are now growing at a faster rate than that of both other US cities, and of the country as a whole. While Ehrenhalt offers a few possible explanations for this trend, housing affordability appears to be a significant factor. 

Philly Fed Indexes Move Lower in January

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The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s State Coincident Indexes declined notably in January. The three-month diffusion index fell to 48 from a revised 68 in December. This is the lowest reading for the three-month index since the Covid era. The more volatile one-month diffusion index also fell in January to 42 from a revised 84 in December, but it’s still higher than the revised 24 level posted in November. Similar to December, the states with the most significant three-month declines were West Virginia, Delaware, and Montana, while California and Kentucky posted the largest increases. The exhibit below is reproduced from the press release.

New Report Calculates State Migration Down to the Minute

The National Taxpayers Union Foundation has come up with a unique and attention-getting way to look at domestic migration data. Its report, Migration in Minutes , calculates state domestic migration rates in terms of relocations per minute. It’s admittedly a lot more fun to read than the gimmicky annual moving company studies or the dry-as-dust Census migration tables, despite the fact that it uses somewhat stale 2022 IRS data. Similar to the Rich States, Poor States report this blog commented on a few days ago, the analysis in the report reflects the Foundation’s views on state tax policy. Not surprisingly the report finds Florida and Texas as the top net domestic migration states and estimates that each state welcomed a new resident about every 4.5 minutes in 2022. California and New York brought up the rear, with California losing a resident about every 2 minutes and New York about every 3 minutes, according to the calculations. The report also breaks down domestic migration by age...

Iowa: Study Estimates $231 Million Economic Hit From Weakening Demographics

In a new report , the group Common Sense Institute Iowa has estimated that the state’s weakening rate of natural population growth and historic domestic outmigration, together with a recent decline in foreign immigration, will result in a reduction in Iowa’s GDP of almost $330 million this year. Using US Census Bureau data, the report analyzes Iowa’s declining trend of net births and its long term trend of domestic outmigration and concludes that the state’s economy is highly dependent on foreign immigration. However, current federal immigration policy has caused a significant decline in foreign immigration to Iowa over the last year, resulting in an estimated $231 million loss of economic activity in 2025. The study projects the potential impact to the state’s GDP to increase to -$329 million in 2026, -$321 in 2027 and -$299 million in 2028.

NJ Labor Commissioner Says State’s Economy Strong But Residents Disagree

New Jersey’s acting commissioner of the Department of Labor and Workforce Development told a state legislative committee this week that the state’s economy was “strong and stable”. The state’s residents however, have a different view. The latest Rutgers-Eagleton Poll indicates that “three-quarters of residents rate the state’s economy negatively, with 29% rating it as “poor” and 46% as “only fair”. According to Rutgers, this negativity rating is six points higher than it was when the last poll was taken in October.

Utah Retains “Rich States, Poor States” Title - Is this still a thing?

It’s hard to believe that this is still a thing, but the Arthur Laffer-affiliated think tank, American Legislative Exchange Council, is out with another edition of its Rich States, Poor States publication. The report ranks the states in terms of economic competitiveness using an index of 15 variables, most of which are related to tax policy. For the 19th year in a row, Utah came out on top, with Tennessee, Idaho, North Carolina, and Arizona rounding out the top five. Connecticut, California, Vermont, New Jersey, and New York make up the bottom five. Presumably, a high ranking gives the “top tier” states some bragging rights and marketing material to leverage, but once one realizes that this is essentially a Reaganomics/supply side exercise, it starts to look more like a tax policy race to the bottom than an informative analytical study.