U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index Update
[Pages:13]ANALYSIS
U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index Update
BY CHRIS LAFAKIS & STEVEN G. COCHRANE
R egional living costs are closely related to quality of life, migration patterns, and, by extension, long-term economic potential. For example, both Ames IA and Wichita Falls TX have per capita incomes that are below the U.S. average. After adjusting for living costs, however, both metro areas have above-average living standards, at least as measured by relative cost. By contrast, the Santa Rosa and San Diego metro areas in California have above-average per capita income, yet relative living costs remain high.
Higher living costs discourage people from migrating to a given area while simultaneously encouraging residents to leave. Empirical evidence suggests there is a negative correlation between population growth, of which migration flows are the key determinant, and living costs (see Chart 1). Los Angeles and New York have experienced persistent net domestic migration outflows even during expanding business cycles. On the other hand, southern areas with low living costs have benefited from substantial migration inflows. Along with labor force productivity growth, population growth determines an area's economic potential. Thus, an area's cost structure is critically important to its long-term performance.
This article presents the most recent update of the Moody's Analytics metro area cost of living index, which considers the costs of energy, retail goods, housing, insurance and transportation. The article also examines alternate measures of living costs.
Methodology
The Moody's Analytics cost of living index is a nationally indexed composite average of five key cost of living components. The weight of each component of the index varies depending on the metropolitan area, and in various metro areas, some components make up a larger portion of the total cost of living. For example, housing costs constitute 42% of the overall cost of liv-
ing in Victoria TX as compared with 65% in San Jose CA. Energy costs constitute 3% of the overall cost of living in San Francisco as compared with 15% in Laredo TX.
Annual expenditures are calculated for each of the five index components in every metro area and subsequently indexed to their respective national benchmark. These ratios are applied to the various components of U.S. living costs. The results are summed and indexed to the annual national expenditure average. The cost of living index does not incorporate a moving average, a technique used to reduce volatility. By using unadjusted and unbiased data, the cost of living index accurately depicts living costs in any given metro area at a specific point in time. National expenditure patterns are derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics' annual consumer expenditure survey.
One of the largest inputs into living costs is retail expenditure. This category includes expenditures on a wide variety of goods such as food, apparel, entertainment and household furnishings. The cost index for this expenditure category is equal to national expenditures on these items adjusted for the difference between retail wages and salaries per employee in the metro area and in the nation. If wages and salaries per employee are higher and rising more quickly in a metro area than in the rest of the nation, producers must pass through price increases to compensate for elevated unit labor costs.
Retail expenditures constitute between 20% and 34% of a metro area's living costs, depending on the area.
Notwithstanding the recent severe downturn in house prices, housing expenditures are the single greatest component of household expenditure and are represented as such in the cost of living index. On average, the cost of housing accounts for 52% of total living costs as estimated in the Moody's Analytics cost of living index. Because of its large weight, the cost of housing is the cause of most of the annual variation in the cost of living index. Housing costs are also the most volatile component of the cost of living index, varying widely depending on region.
Housing costs are estimated by considering both mortgage payments and rent outlays. Monthly mortgage payments are estimated for each metro area using house price data from the National Association of Realtors. This house price metric is preferred because, unlike other price measures, it reflects actual prices paid. A five-year average of the house price data is used to counteract price biases that might arise from the mix of homes sold in any one year. The base value is extended using price growth in the Federal Housing Finance Authority's repeat-sales house price index, which, unlike the NAR data, is not subject to a mix bias. Annual homeowner expenditures are also calculated by assuming a 30-year mortgage with an 80% loan-to-value ratio.
26
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
Rental expenditures are estimated by extending monthly rental payments reported in the decennial census with the growth in the FHFA home price indices. Over sufficiently long periods of time, there exists a strong correlation between rental rates and house prices, which underpins the rental expenditure estimation methodology. The rental price for New York incorporates data from the Census Bureau's New York City housing and vacancy survey as well; since the decennial census value covers only a small portion of the market, it does not meaningfully represent the rental market in New York.
Moody's Analytics estimates of metro area homeownership rates are then used to reconcile the costs of owning and renting. The composite average is compared with the national average.
The third component of the cost of living index is household utility expenditure. Utility expenditures cover outlays on electricity and heating fuels. Expenditures are calculated by multiplying demand for a particular energy fuel by the price of that fuel. Data from the Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration is used to calculate the specific demand for each fuel type in a metro area. This approach is taken because calculating utility costs based on a fixed amount of electricity and other fuels would bias the cost of living index for this component, since demand for heating and cooling varies considerably by region, as do the type of fuels used.
For natural gas and heating oil, the appropriate state-level prices were used at the metro area level, as the primary variation in these prices is due to state-level taxes. For electricity, however, the price per kilowatthour for each metro area was obtained from the EIA, which publishes prices for specific energy providers. Metro areas are mapped every year to their primary energy provider to determine the cost of electricity in each area. Price data from the primary cooperative or publicly owned utility are used for those few areas not served by a privately owned utility. Household utility expenditures account for approximately 8% of the cost of living index.
Automobile insurance expenditures are a small portion of living costs, accounting for
just 6% of the cost of living index. The expenditure data come from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, which estimates a policy-adjusted average expenditure for each state. The state average is used for all metro areas within a state, as no finer regional breakdown of the data is available.
Public transportation expenditures are generally not an appreciable portion of overall living expenses in most regions, accounting for only 1% of total consumer expenditures nationally. In those areas where it is important, public transportation is a substitute for private transportation. Thus, no separate estimate of public transportation expenditures is included in the cost of living index. The relative cost of private transportation is used as a proxy for all commuting-related costs.
Transportation expenditures are the smallest and most consistent component of the cost of living index across metro areas. This component uses gasoline outlays to determine the variable-cost portion of consumer transportation spending. Vehicle prices are not used because they vary little across regions. To accurately estimate gasoline consumption at the metro level, commuting distance, traffic congestion, and retail gasoline prices must be considered. Metro area transportation costs are estimated by multiplying local retail gasoline prices, which are obtained from the Oil Price Information Service, by an estimate of the necessary number of gallons purchased per household for work and normal travel. The number of gallons purchased is determined by dividing the estimated number of miles driven by the estimated vehicle efficiency in each census division. This census division estimate of gallons per household is adjusted to the metro area level by incorporating actual metro area and census division commuting times obtained from the decennial census. The use of actual commuting times allows Moody's Analytics to more accurately reflect the varied traffic conditions faced by residents within each metro area.
Results
Consistent with prior years' results, areas with the highest housing costs are also the
areas with the most expensive living costs (see Table 1). These areas include the Northeast Corridor, southern Florida and coastal California (see Chart 2). For the third consecutive year, San Jose has the nation's highest cost of living, with costs 50% greater than the national average. This, however, is an improvement from 64% greater in 2007 and is back in line with its relative costs of the earlier years of this past decade. All five metropolitan areas and divisions with the highest living costs are in California.
Housing costs, which were the primary catalyst for rises in the cost of living index for many metro areas through much of the past decade, have now become the primary reason for relative costs to falter in 2008, narrowing some of the historical differences (see Chart 3). The national house price correction began in early 2006 and was in full swing by 2008, particularly in Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada, and parts of the Northeast (see Chart 4). Housing costs in 2008 accounted for 51.8% of total living costs as estimated by the Moody's Analytics cost of living index, compared with a peak of 53.0% in 2006. Housing costs have accounted for an average of 52.1% of total living costs since 2000.
California still has the highest-cost metropolitan areas, with San Jose and San Francisco ranking first and second. Similarly, two New York metro divisions--Bridgeport CT and Nassau-Suffolk NY--still rank among the top 10.
But some changes are appearing in the rankings. First, California metro areas are now less dominant among the top 10 high-cost areas. Whereas nine of the top 10 were in California in 2005--Bridgeport was the only exception--only five of the top 10 were California metro areas in 2008, largely reflecting rapidly falling house prices at that time. Honolulu HI, Naples FL and Newark NJ now are among the highest ranking. Naples ultimately faced house price declines of similar magnitude to the California metro areas, but its price decline was slower to appear.
Aside from California metro areas, the top quintile among the 384 metro areas and divisions in the U.S. is dominated by
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
27
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
Chart 1: Costs, Growth Negatively Correlated
Based on top 50 metro areas
5
Average annual population growth, %
4
1998-2008
3
2
1
0
-1 85
Cost of living, 2008, U.S.=100
95
105
115
125
135
145
155
Sources: Moody's Analytics, Census Bureau
FROM MOODY'S 1
Chart 3: The Largest Declines in Living Costs...
Change in relative living costs, 2007-2008
Chart 2: Living Costs Are Highest on the Coasts
Living cost by metro area
U.S. metro average=95
Source: Moody's Analytics
Low, below 90 Average, 90 to 100 High, 100 to 110 Very high, above 115
FROM MOODY'S 2
Chart 4: ...Occurred in Housing Bust Areas
Change in housing costs, %, 2007-2008
Source: Moody's Analytics
Average=-0.7
Decrease Modest increase, 0 to 1.8 Large increase, above 1.8
FROM MOODY'S 3
U.S. metro average=2.6% increase
Source: Moody's Analytics
Greater than 5% decline 0% to 5% decline 0% to 7% increase Greater than 7% increase
FROM MOODY'S 4
areas in Connecticut, Florida, Massachusetts, New Jersey, the New York City area, and the coastal metro areas of Washington State. Within this quintile, costs have fallen over the past 10 years in the California and Massachusetts metro areas. Massachusetts house prices were among the first to falter at middecade, followed closely by many of the southern California metro areas. In all others that make up this top 20%, relative living costs rose over this period, no more so than in Honolulu and Naples. Rising costs through 2008 in Florida are also exemplified by a shift into the top quintile of Jacksonville and Orlando since 2002. Among others, Dallas, Fort Worth, Austin and Salt Lake City can be found in the top 20%. Salt Lake City is a newcomer to this top ranking because of its rise in house prices and because it was among the last of the major metro areas to suffer a downturn in prices.
The lowest quintile of metro areas remains dominated by the Midwest, mostly concentrated in Illinois (excluding Chicago), Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. These are joined by areas of western Pennsylvania and upstate New York. Other small areas in the mid-South and Southeast are among these lowest-cost areas. Danville IL is holding firm to its bottom ranking among all metro areas with costs 22% below average. Significantly, every metro area in the lowest quintile saw its relative costs continue to fall from 2002 to 2008. Thus, their comparative cost advantage continued to improve. Many of these areas, particularly in the industrial Midwest, have suffered from the deindustrialization of their economies, and their ever-falling relative costs offer them some potential for revitalization as the U.S. economy strives to become more cost competitive within the global economy.
The distribution of the cost of living across metro areas has changed since the early years of this past decade with a slightly more even distribution around the U.S. index today (see Table 2). In 2008, 101 of the 384 metro areas had a COLI greater than 100, or above the U.S. norm. In 2005 this figure was 96; in 2002 it was 82. As during the years following the 2001 recession, two factors led to this change. First, through the expansion that ended in late 2007, many midsize metro areas experienced rapid growth, particularly if they were peripheral to large metro areas. Much of this growth was fueled by homebuilding and the rapid rise in housing values. Also, businesses followed the population movement outward from the metro area centers, often to be closer to their workforces.
But within this trend, the average and median of the COLIs across all the metro
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MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
TABLE 1
2008 Cost of Living Index
Index: U.S. = 100
New England Bangor ME Barnstable Town MA Boston MA Bridgeport CT Burlington VT Cambridge MA Hartford CT Lewiston ME Manchester NH New Haven CT Norwich CT Peabody MA Pittsfield MA Portland ME Providence RI Rockingham County NH Springfield MA Worcester MA
Middle Atlantic Albany NY Allentown PA Altoona PA Atlantic City NJ Binghamton NY Buffalo NY Camden NJ Edison NJ Elmira NY Erie PA Glens Falls NY Harrisburg PA Ithaca NY Johnstown PA Kingston NY Lancaster PA Lebanon PA Nassau NY New York NY Newark NJ Ocean City NJ Philadelphia PA Pittsburgh PA Poughkeepsie NY Reading PA Rochester NY Scranton PA State College PA Syracuse NY Trenton NJ
2002 Index
Rank
87.7
315
115.8
21
120.8
14
133.2
5
97.4
109
122.0
11
105.2
46
89.3
274
105.8
41
107.0
36
102.7
60
113.0
25
95.6
129
98.9
93
101.2
71
105.2
45
95.2
137
105.3
44
93.8
160
97.4
107
85.4
362
105.7
42
85.9
356
87.5
322
100.4
78
115.7
22
84.8
371
86.5
346
89.9
255
90.3
243
90.0
253
83.4
379
98.3
99
91.8
202
88.9
285
124.4
10
118.5
17
121.9
12
101.3
70
101.4
67
91.1
229
100.4
80
91.3
221
89.0
281
86.4
350
89.2
279
88.3
295
104.7
50
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
2005 Index
Rank
88.6
247
118.2
27
118.4
26
131.2
8
97.9
106
119
25
105.6
58
90.1
203
107.4
48
107.3
49
104.6
62
112.1
38
95.3
135
100.3
94
103.4
70
105.9
54
96.7
118
105.8
55
93.4
153
99.1
100
84.2
347
108.8
42
83.3
358
83.7
352
103.8
66
119.5
24
81.9
372
83.5
355
89.6
216
89.4
220
89.1
230
82
369
101.2
81
91.8
175
87.5
269
127.7
14
121.7
20
122.6
18
107.6
46
102.3
76
88.5
251
103.9
64
92.3
165
85.2
318
85.4
305
87.4
271
85.4
305
106.9
50
2008 Index
Rank
90.1
231
117.9
23
118.2
22
136.7
5
101
91
119.3
20
109.7
37
91.8
197
107.5
46
112.6
32
107.7
44
111.6
35
99.2
109
101.5
86
103.7
68
105.1
61
99
113
103.5
70
97.3
127
101.8
83
84
348
111.7
34
85
325
84.9
327
107.8
43
124
13
81.5
374
83.4
357
92.2
192
91.3
207
91.1
209
82
371
104
67
93.8
173
89.8
237
130.1
9
126.8
12
127.8
10
109.7
37
106.2
57
90.6
222
104.9
62
95.2
152
86
309
87.5
278
89.9
235
87.3
281
113.3
29
2002-2008 Change in living cost
2.4 2.1 -2.6 3.5 3.6 -2.7 4.5 2.5 1.7 5.6 5.0 -1.4 3.6 2.6 2.5 -0.1 3.8 -1.8
3.5 4.4 -1.4 6.0 -0.8 -2.6 7.4 8.3 -3.3 -3.1 2.3 1.0 1.1 -1.3 5.7 2.0 1.0 5.7 8.3 5.9 8.4 4.8 -0.5 4.6 3.9 -3.0 1.1 0.7 -1.0 8.6
29
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
TABLE 1 (cont.)
2008 Cost of Living Index
Index: U.S. = 100
Utica NY Vineland NJ Williamsport PA York PA East North Central Akron OH Anderson IN Ann Arbor MI Appleton WI Battle Creek MI Bay City MI Bloomington IL Bloomington IN Canton OH Champaign IL Chicago IL Cincinnati OH Cleveland OH Columbus IN Columbus OH Danville IL Davenport IL Dayton OH Decatur IL Detroit MI Eau Claire WI Elkhart IN Evansville IN Flint MI Fond du Lac WI Fort Wayne IN Gary IN Grand Rapids MI Green Bay WI Holland MI Indianapolis IN Jackson MI Janesville WI Kalamazoo MI Kankakee IL Kokomo IN La Crosse WI Lafayette IN Lake County IL Lansing MI Lima OH Madison WI Mansfield OH Michigan City IN Milwaukee WI
2002 Index
86.8 95.4 85.1 89.6
Rank 335 134 366 267
92.7
176
85.9
354
101.7
66
88.9
284
87.2
329
88.0
307
89.6
266
86.5
345
88.2
300
86.4
349
103.1
57
92.9
173
95.4
134
87.6
320
95.2
137
79.6
384
85.5
360
88.7
288
83.8
376
94.0
155
86.7
338
91.7
206
88.0
308
89.4
272
86.6
342
87.3
326
93.5
164
93.9
157
91.1
226
94.9
146
92.4
187
91.0
232
88.3
297
93.5
165
87.6
319
86.5
346
85.2
363
87.2
330
109.0
32
92.2
194
83.5
378
99.6
87
85.1
367
86.7
339
96.9
114
30
2005 Index
84.9 97.4 83.8 90.4
Rank 325 110 350 199
88.8
244
83.5
355
97.5
109
85.3
312
84.3
346
84.6
335
85.9
301
84.6
335
84.5
340
83.3
358
101.3
80
88.6
247
90.1
203
84.6
335
90.7
191
78
384
83
363
85.1
321
79.8
383
89.3
225
83.8
350
88.6
247
85.4
305
86.8
284
85.3
312
83.7
352
91.2
183
90.3
200
87.4
271
90.6
194
88.9
239
87
280
88.1
259
88.2
256
85.4
305
83.1
361
83.5
355
84
349
104.9
60
88.7
245
81.2
379
97.3
112
81.6
376
84.7
332
95.6
132
2008 Index
86.4 99.4 84.6 92.7
Rank 305 107 332 184
86.7
294
82.4
367
95.7
146
86.1
308
84.5
338
84.3
342
87.9
265
85.7
316
83.4
357
85.4
321
103.6
69
89.1
242
87
288
84.9
327
90.3
226
77.7
384
81.1
377
84.2
345
81.7
373
87
288
84.3
342
88.3
254
84.8
329
85.8
313
85.7
316
82.5
366
91.6
201
88.2
257
87.7
271
90.6
222
87.9
265
86.3
307
87.6
275
88.5
249
87.2
284
81.8
372
84.2
345
84
348
107.6
45
86.5
301
80.3
381
100.5
94
80.9
378
85.3
323
95.8
143
2002-2008 Change in living cost
-0.4 4.0 -0.5 3.1
-6.0 -3.5 -6.0 -2.8 -2.7 -3.7 -1.7 -0.8 -4.8 -1.0 0.5 -3.8 -8.4 -2.7 -4.9 -1.9 -4.4 -4.5 -2.1 -7.0 -2.4 -3.4 -3.2 -3.6 -0.9 -4.8 -1.9 -5.7 -3.4 -4.3 -4.5 -4.7 -0.7 -5.0 -0.4 -4.7 -1.0 -3.2 -1.4 -5.7 -3.2 0.9 -4.2 -1.4 -1.0
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
TABLE 1 (cont.)
2008 Cost of Living Index
Index: U.S. = 100
Monroe MI Muncie IN Muskegon MI Niles MI Oshkosh WI Peoria IL Racine WI Rockford IL Saginaw MI Sandusky OH Sheboygan WI South Bend IN Springfield IL Springfield OH Steubenville OH Terre Haute IN Toledo OH Warren MI Wausau WI Youngstown OH West North Central Ames IA Bismarck ND Cape Girardeau MO Cedar Rapids IA Columbia MO Des Moines IA Dubuque IA Duluth MN Fargo ND Grand Forks ND Iowa City IA Jefferson City MO Joplin MO Kansas City MO Lawrence KS Lincoln NE Manhattan KS Mankato MN Minneapolis MN Omaha NE Rapid City SD Rochester MN Sioux City IA Sioux Falls SD Springfield MO St. Cloud MN St. Joseph MO St. Louis MO Topeka KS
2002 Index
95.5 83.3 88.6 87.4 86.0 85.0 89.9 86.3 87.0 90.3 87.2 87.7 85.6 87.8 82.3 84.1 91.2 104.5 87.6 88.7
Rank 131 380 293 324 352 368 257 351 333 242 327 315 359 314 382 374 225 52 321 289
89.1
280
88.3
299
86.6
341
91.7
205
89.8
262
94.3
150
86.8
336
85.9
355
89.7
264
85.8
357
90.5
238
88.0
305
85.7
358
96.5
119
88.2
303
89.5
270
83.8
377
88.0
310
103.2
56
91.3
223
89.5
268
91.0
231
85.2
364
92.2
193
89.3
276
90.5
237
86.5
344
93.2
168
88.0
309
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
2005 Index
91.9 80.8 84.7 85.4 84.4 82.5 89.5 85.1 85.3 86.1 86.2 84.8
82 84.8
80 81.9 86.7 97.3 84.5 84.4
Rank 171 380 332 305 342 367 219 321 312 298 295 327 369 327 381 372 285 112 340 342
87.9
265
86.9
283
81.9
372
89.9
208
85
323
89.8
210
85.2
318
84.6
335
89.3
225
85.9
301
89.2
228
83.1
361
84.1
348
92.3
165
85.3
312
86.5
290
81.4
378
85.3
312
99.7
97
88.3
254
86.7
285
86.6
289
83.7
352
88.9
239
88.2
256
87.8
266
86.7
285
88.6
247
82.7
366
2008 Index
90 79.4 84.2
86 84.8
85 88.9 86.6 81.2 84.3 86.6 83.1 83.2 82.9 80.7 81.2 84.8 95.2 85.8 82.4
Rank 233 383 345 309 329 325 247 297 375 342 297 362 361 363 379 375 329 152 313 367
87.7
271
91
211
84
348
90.3
226
87.3
281
90.4
225
84.6
332
84.6
332
91.4
205
87.8
269
89.7
238
84.5
338
84.6
332
93
181
86.9
291
86.5
301
85.8
313
85.4
321
99.3
108
88.6
248
87.6
275
86.6
297
83.4
357
91
211
89.1
242
87.4
279
86
309
90.1
231
84.4
341
2002-2008 Change in living cost
-5.5 -3.8 -4.4 -1.4 -1.2 -0.0 -1.0 0.3 -5.8 -6.0 -0.6 -4.6 -2.4 -4.9 -1.6 -2.9 -6.4 -9.3 -1.8 -6.3
-1.4 2.8 -2.6 -1.4 -2.5 -3.9 -2.2 -1.3 1.7 2.0 -0.8 -3.5 -1.1 -3.5 -1.3 -3.0 2.0 -2.5 -3.9 -2.7 -1.9 -4.4 -1.8 -1.2 -0.2 -3.1 -0.5 -3.1 -3.6
31
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
TABLE 1 (cont.)
2008 Cost of Living Index
Index: U.S. = 100
Waterloo IA Wichita KS South Atlantic Albany GA Anderson SC Asheville NC Athens GA Atlanta GA Augusta GA Baltimore MD Bethesda MD Blacksburg VA Brunswick GA Burlington NC Cape Coral FL Charleston SC Charleston WV Charlotte NC Charlottesville VA Columbia SC Columbus GA Crestview FL Cumberland MD Dalton GA Danville VA Deltona FL Dover DE Durham NC Fayetteville NC Florence SC Fort Lauderdale FL Gainesville FL Gainesville GA Goldsboro NC Greensboro NC Greenville NC Greenville SC Hagerstown MD Harrisonburg VA Hickory NC Hinesville GA Huntington WV Jacksonville FL Jacksonville NC Lakeland FL Lynchburg VA Macon GA Miami FL Morgantown WV Myrtle Beach SC
2002 Index
84.9 88.1
Rank 370 304
87.7
317
91.4
218
95.6
128
93.0
170
101.3
69
91.5
212
99.6
85
117.9
19
87.0
331
91.8
202
92.6
178
100.7
76
99.6
86
89.9
254
98.8
95
99.3
89
96.1
122
89.5
268
96.0
123
82.1
383
92.4
188
86.9
334
93.4
166
95.0
144
96.5
120
91.5
215
94.2
151
109.3
31
95.0
144
98.6
96
87.8
312
96.6
116
89.9
259
94.7
148
91.2
224
92.5
183
91.9
200
86.4
348
84.3
373
97.2
110
88.8
287
91.6
209
87.6
318
89.9
257
105.0
47
89.4
271
98.1
102
32
2005 Index
84.4 84.7
Rank 342 332
86.2
295
89.4
220
93.6
151
90.6
194
99.2
99
89
234
105
59
124.9
16
85.2
318
91.3
180
88
261
110.3
41
100.3
94
86
299
96.4
124
101.1
82
94.8
140
88
261
102.5
75
81.5
377
90.5
196
85
323
100.9
84
97.1
116
93.3
156
88.5
251
91.1
185
120
23
97.3
112
96.2
125
84.8
327
93.8
148
87.5
269
93
158
96.1
127
92.6
161
88.5
251
86.5
290
82
369
101
83
87.8
266
96.6
121
86
299
87.6
268
115.9
31
86.7
285
96.5
122
2008 Index
84.6 86.5
Rank 332 301
86.5
301
89.1
242
95.5
148
91.4
205
99.2
109
90.3
226
113
30
122.9
15
87.1
286
94
170
85.7
316
101.7
85
104.5
64
88.5
249
98.7
114
102.7
76
97
130
88.2
257
101.3
88
82.6
365
89.7
238
83.8
354
99.8
105
103.5
70
95.4
149
88.4
252
90.5
224
116.4
27
100.3
95
96.8
131
84
348
93
181
86.7
294
94.3
166
95
157
93.9
172
86.9
291
88
263
83.4
357
103.2
74
88.1
262
97.2
128
88.2
257
87.7
271
116.6
26
86.6
297
98.6
115
2002-2008 Change in living cost
-0.3 -1.6
-1.2 -2.3 -0.1 -1.6 -2.1 -1.2 13.4 5.0
0.1 2.2 -6.9 1.0 4.9 -1.4 -0.0 3.4 0.9 -1.3 5.3 0.5 -2.7 -3.1 6.4 8.5 -1.1 -3.1 -3.7 7.1 5.3 -1.8 -3.8 -3.6 -3.2 -0.4 3.8 1.4 -5.0 1.6 -0.9 6.0 -0.7 5.6 0.6 -2.2 11.6 -2.8 0.5
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
ANALYSIS U.S. Metro Area Cost of Living Index
TABLE 1 (cont.)
2008 Cost of Living Index
Index: U.S. = 100
Naples FL North Port FL Ocala FL Orlando FL Palm Bay FL Palm Coast FL Panama City FL Parkersburg WV Pensacola FL Port St. Lucie FL Punta Gorda FL Raleigh NC Richmond VA Roanoke VA Rocky Mount NC Rome GA Salisbury MD Savannah GA Sebastian FL Spartanburg SC Sumter SC Tallahassee FL Tampa FL Valdosta GA Virginia Beach VA Warner Robins GA Washington DC West Palm Beach FL Wheeling WV Wilmington DE Wilmington NC Winchester VA Winston NC East South Central Anniston AL Auburn AL Birmingham AL Bowling Green KY Chattanooga TN Clarksville TN Cleveland TN Decatur AL Dothan AL Elizabethtown KY Florence AL Gadsden AL Gulfport MS Hattiesburg MS Huntsville AL Jackson MS
2002 Index 115.2 106.0
91.7 99.9 94.1 98.0 92.9 86.0 92.3 97.5 95.2 100.4 95.6 92.0 87.2 90.4 90.8 94.1 96.7 92.9 89.7 95.4 100.8 88.3 93.2 91.3 112.4 107.5 83.0 102.9 97.1 93.5 96.0
Rank 24 40 207 83 154 103 175 353 190 106 139 78 130 198 327 240 235 153 115 173 263 133 75 296 169 222 27 35 381 59 112 163 125
89.3
273
92.6
179
97.9
104
87.0
332
97.0
113
89.2
277
91.3
220
88.9
283
87.9
311
89.7
265
90.0
251
88.6
292
92.4
184
91.6
209
92.1
197
93.6
162
MOODY'S ANALYTICS / Regional Financial Review / May 2010
2005 Index 129.7
117.2 96
106.7 102.7 104.3 99.7 81.8 95.9 108.7 103.5
97.3 96.5 90.7 84.8 88.1 91.4 95.4 103.4 89.9 87.2 95.8 103.4 87.2 96.7
89 121.8 121.3 79.9 103.7 96.7 98.2 93.2
Rank 11 28
128 51 73 63 97
375 129 44 69 112 122 191 327 259 179 134 70 208 276 130 70 276 118 234
19 22 382 68 118 105 157
86.2
295
89.7
213
95.7
131
84.9
325
93.9
146
87.4
271
88.3
254
86.3
294
87
280
87.4
271
86.5
290
87
280
93.4
153
89.1
230
88.9
239
93.9
146
2008 Index 131.2 108.4
96.2 106.6
97.8 100.2 99.9 80.7 96.8 100.7
96.1 101.2 99.8 90.8 84.5 87.8
95.1 95.6 98.3 90.2 87.2
98 102.6
87.6 100.3
89 119.5 117.1 79.6
108 98.6 95.2 91.6
Rank 8 40
138 53 122 98 103 379 131 93 140 90 105 218 338 269 156 147 117 229 284 120 77 275 95 245 18 25 382 41 115 152 201
88.2
257
91.8
197
97.8
122
85.6
319
95
157
87.3
281
87.9
265
87.1
286
88.5
249
86.7
294
88
263
88.3
254
97.2
128
91
211
91.1
209
93.7
174
2002-2008 Change in living cost
16.0 2.4 4.5 6.7 3.7 2.2 7.0 -5.3 4.5 3.2 0.9 0.8 4.2 -1.2 -2.7 -2.5 4.3 1.5 1.6 -2.7 -2.5 2.6 1.8 -0.7 7.1 -2.3 7.1 9.6 -3.4 5.1 1.5 1.7 -4.4
-1.1 -0.8 -0.1 -1.4 -2.0 -1.9 -3.4 -1.8 0.6 -3.0 -2.0 -0.3 4.8 -0.6 -1.0
0.1
33
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