These Are 10 U.S. Cities With the Highest Inflation
- Posted on October 24, 2011 at 6:30pm by
Becket Adams
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Inflation has not been a serious economic problem in the United States since the start of The Great Recession. Despite this, pockets of sharp increases in inflation have developed in several cities around the country. In some, the rate of inflation was three times 2010′s national average of 1.75 percent. There are several common causes for the high inflation.
The primary reasons for high inflation in some of the cities are improvements in unemployment rates and substantial population increases. Unlike the rest of the nation, in those cities more people have entered the workforce. This has allowed more residents to put the additional disposable income back into the economy. Population growth has also increased consumer demand in these same cities.
Using a report produced by Moody’s Analytics, 24/7 Wall St. identified the cities with the highest inflation rates for 2010. To illustrate the impact inflation can have on local economies, they also examined changes in consumer prices, home vacancy rates, unemployment, population change, and median income for the nation’s 395 metropolitan statistical areas.
Data for home vacancies, population, and median income came from the Census Bureau. Unemployment data was mined from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. For each of these statistics, they also looked at the change from 2009 to 2010. The researchers at 24/7 Wall St. found that in eight of the cities with the highest inflation, there was also an improvement in the jobless rate. Population grew in nine.
Housing vacancy was examined by city because it is considered the most important component of inflation. As a rule, vacancy rates should decrease in markets experiencing inflation. However, in the cities with the highest inflation, there was little correlation between the two. Vacancy rates fell in only in half of the cities that were examined.
There is no ready explanation for this. It may be that an increase in foreclosures or residents abandoning their homes could increase the vacancy rate, despite the high inflation. Home values have dropped by more than half in several of the cities, and by much more than that in parts of California, Nevada, and Florida.
Rochester, Minnesota
2010 Inflation rate: 3.46 percent
Population: 186,302 (up 0.37 percent)
2010 Median income: $59,702 (down 5.4 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 5.6 percent (down 13.8 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 7.1 percent (down 11.2 percent)
Rochester is one of the fastest growing cities in Minnesota. From 2000 to 2010 the city’s population increased by 24 percent. The population growth has been driven primarily by the promise of jobs in the city’s health care and education sectors. Between 2000 and 2009, the city added 11,000 jobs. From December 2009 to 2010 alone, unemployment decreased from 6.5 percent to 5.6 percent. This is largely a result of the area’s Mayo Clinic, which has spurred the city’s nickname “Med City.”
Tallahassee, Florida
2010 Inflation: 3.48 percent
Population: 368,117 (up 2.14 percent)
2010 Median income: $41,511 (up 3.7 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 8.9 percent (up 12.7 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 13 percent (unchanged)
Tallahassee, Florida has seen a net increase in median income since 2009 of 3.7 percent. The metropolitan area has the state’s second fastest growing economy. It is home to Florida State University and is a major center for trade and agriculture. In December 2010, the metropolitan area’s unemployment rate was at 8.9 percent. As of this past August, it declined to 8.8 percent, while the overall rate for Florida stood at 10.7 percent.
Bloomington-Normal, Illinois
2010 Inflation: 3.53 percent
Population: 192,696 (up 14.91 percent)
2010 Median income: $59,588 (up 6.3 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 6.8 percent (down 11.7 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 11.7 percent (up 67 percent)
Bloomington is one of the fastest growing metropolitan areas in Illinois. It is one of the most productive agricultural areas in the country. It is home to two colleges: Illinois State University and Illinois Wesleyan University. State Farm Insurance is also headquartered in Bloomington. Median income has increased 6.3 percent from 2009 and the unemployment rate fell from 7.7 percent to 6.8 percent.
Lincoln, Nebraska
2010 Inflation: 3.53 percent
Population: 303,151 (up 1.8 percent)
2010 Median income: $50,091 (up 4.5 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 3.6 percent (down 16.3 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 5.7 percent (down 5 percent)
From 2009 to 2010, Lincoln, Nebraska’s median household income increased 4.5 percent, its unemployment decreased 0.7 percentage points, and its home vacancy rate dropped 5 percent. City planners expect Lincoln, which ranks No.5 on Forbes’ list of Best Places for Business and Careers, will have double the population it does today by 2060. The metropolitan area’s robust manufacturing industry, which includes Goodyear and Runza National, has kept the economy strong in recent years.
Columbia, Missouri
2010 Inflation: 3.81 percent
Population: 172,319 (up 3.51 percent)
2010 Median income: $40,853 (down 11.9 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 6.2 percent (up 1.6 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 7.7 percent (up 10 percent)
Columbia is one of the fastest growing metro areas in Missouri. Between 2009 and 2010, its population has increased by 3.51 percent. The city’s economy has historically been supported by the insurance, health care, and education sectors. Major employers include the University of Missouri and MBS Textbook Exchange.
Champaign-Urbana, Illinois
2010 Inflation: 3.89 percent
Population: 234,445 (up 4.57 percent)
2010 Median income: $45,845 (up 9.7 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 7.8 percent (down 12.4 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 10.4 percent (up 16 percent)
This metropolitan area is home to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign — its largest employer. It also has a significant number of tech companies. Between 2009 and 2010, the population increased by almost 5 percent. Median income increased nearly 10 percent. The unemployment rate fell from 9 percent to 7.8 percent.
Springfield, Illinois
2010 Inflation: 3.97 percent
Population: 210,390 (up 1.26 percent)
2010 Median income: $50,423 (down 4.2 percent)
2010 Unemployment: 7.0 percent (down 13.6 percent)
2010 Home vacancy: 7.6 percent (down 16 percent)
Springfield is the capital of Illinois, making the Illinois state government the city’s largest employer. Other major employers are in the health care sector. Between 2009 and 2010, the metropolitan area’s population has increased 1.26 percent. Over the same period, the unemployment rate decreased from 8.1 percent to 7.0 percent.
See the rest of the list here.
(Charles Stockdale, Michael Sauter, and Douglas A. McIntyre/Becket Adams–24/7 Wall St./The Blaze)



















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mikenleeds
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 4:25pmthey all have liberal ran university’s in them so they are getting billions of tax payers cash
Report Post »eramthgin
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 12:34pmDid you notice that most of the cities have Universities or Colleges.
Report Post »flfshrmn
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 10:06amLots of Liberal cities on that list…….I though they had all the answers?
Report Post »mrsmileyface
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 8:05amObamaland is listed more than once……coincidence??
Report Post »obfuscatenot
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 7:39amInterestingly aren’t they first and foremost- college towns? Good ole Illinois, leading at the wrong end again. Hey, but let’s keep printing and digitizing $. That’ll fix things. Ugh.
Report Post »hoopojoop
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 7:26am“nflation has not been a serious economic problem in the United States since the start of The Great Recession.”
That’s a bigger load of bull than I hear coming out of the White House. Is ‘Becket Adams’ a pseudonym of Joe Biden.
Report Post »Becket Adams
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 11:04amYou caught me. And I would have gotten away with it too, if it weren’t for you meddling kids.
Cordially,
Report Post »T. Becket Adams
CHICAGOTHUGBUCKET
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 1:11amWe are being eaten alive by the progressive cannibals feeding on us and our children pushing the progressive agenda everywhere you go in illinois. If you are a school teacher driving a Subaru with Obama bumper stickers you are an elite educator. University of Chicago is the Socialist capitol of
Report Post »the United States. Policy has come directly from this black hole of stupidity and denial. Home invasions up, scrap theft up and union benefits up as well.
BigMG
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 9:26amGreat analogy. Why eat the rich when lower income chattel are slower and more tasty. Progressives have been successful in circling the herds in these areas. Also, when ‘jobless’ are reported, one need ask how many people are still on the jobless list? How many of those filled jobs are now public sector at a loss to the private? Proggers have blurred that stat to where it has little meaning.
Report Post »lukerw
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 12:38amDear Becket Adams.. did you actually read this article? The greatest cause of Inflation is the Federal Reserve printing Trillions… to support the EU Banks via it’s Open Window policy… to buy Treasureries that no one else wants, holding them as “assets”… digitizing Bank assets, to make them look good on paper, to pass the Stress Tests… and God only knows what else, because we are not allowed to see their Books! Give me a brake!!
Report Post »lukerw
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 12:48amIf you want to know… the Real Inflation Rate… just check the change in Gold!
Report Post »NOTAMUSHROOM
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 6:26amExactly! I kept wondering what in the heck Becket was talking about. These stats look like some progressive’s justification or advertisement for these cities. Absolutely totally f___ing clueless about how this really works!
Report Post »loriann12
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 7:13amNow a dollar is worth 50 cents. I know when the put the Aldi’s in here in Texas (first one – but I’ve been to them in Missouri and Illinois) milk was 99 cents. It’s now $1.99. That’s 100%. I bought my son a pair of cotton men’s pj bottoms almost 2 years ago for $9.99, and now the exact pair is selling for $12.98. Yes, it’s because they are printing more money. We have a couple more (what do they call them, since they can’t say printing more money, quantitative easing) and we’ll be Germany in WWII.
Report Post »Alfred F. Jones
Posted on October 25, 2011 at 12:26amSo don’t live in Illinois. Got it.
Report Post »911Patriot
Posted on October 24, 2011 at 11:56pmJust look at all that hope and change in Illinois cities!
Report Post »Larry Sheldon
Posted on October 24, 2011 at 11:27pmGetting too close. But I guess that is what people like HasBen Nelson are working on.
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