DailyFinance Toolbar

Small state, big problems: Rhode Island hits the skids

Posted 5:30 PM 03/17/09
Print Text Size A A A
Rhode Island may be the smallest U.S. state, but it's in big economic trouble. At 10.3 percent, its unemployment rate is the second-highest in the country, trailing only embattled Michigan. It is at the epicenter of a nationwide surge in mortgage fraud. And, new research shows, its companies are increasingly seeing the businesses they sell to falling behind on payments.

On average, more than 16 percent of money owed to Ocean State businesses from sales to corporate customers is past due, according to Cortera, a consulting firm that tracks such data. That's well above the national average of 12.4 percent. And it suggests Rhode Island's economy is still a long way from turning around.



The late-payment data is a bad sign for at least two reasons. First, it's headed in the wrong direction. Rhode Island's percentage of business accounts payable debt past due, as it's known, lept 18 percent last month. Meanwhile, the national average fell slightly.

Second, Cortera's Alex Coté notes that the late-payment data seems to move in the same direction as unemployment. That's also been rising in Rhode Island.

Massachusetts and Connecticut, beware. Rhode Island's economy is highly intertwined with its bigger neighbors -- some 32,000 more Rhode Islanders work out of state than non-residents work in Rhode Island, according to the most recent Census data -- and their businesses are starting to see the percentage of overdue payments from corporate buyers edge up as well.
Tim Catts

Tim Catts

View all Articles »
Banking Reporter

Tim Catts is the banking reporter for DailyFinance. He has reported on corporate finance, taxes, the retail industry, small business and the economy for BusinessWeek, the New York Daily News and Bloomberg News, among other publications. He shared awards from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers and American Business Media with colleagues at Financial Week for coverage of the credit crisis and was a finalist in the "Best Scoop" category for the World Leadership Forum's 2008 Business Journalist of the Year Award.

Read More
SUBSCRIBE TO:
RSS
COMMENTS ( 0 )
GOT SOMETHING TO SAY?
YOU'LL BE ASKED TO REGISTER OR SIGN IN BEFORE POSTING A COMMENT.
Make a Comment
Comment
 
Follow Us
Follow Our Writers
Pallavi Gogoi Pallavi Gogoi Financial Writer
Peter Cohan Peter Cohan Financial Columnist
Sarah Gilbert Sarah Gilbert Features Writer
Gene Marcial Gene Marcial Financial Columnist
Jeff Bercovici Jeff Bercovici Media Columnist
James Altucher James Altucher Financial Columnist
Mercedes M. Cardona Mercedes M. Cardona Retail Reporter
Nikhil Hutheesing Nikhil Hutheesing Assistant Managing Editor
Latif Lewis Latif Lewis Business News Editor
More Writers

Headlines From DailyFinance Partners

CNN Money
CNBC
Smart Money
Fox Business
Engadget
BloggingStocks
 WalletPop
AOL Small Business
Luxist
Housing Watch
AOL News
Business NewsInvesting and Real EstatePersonal Finance at WalletPopSmall Business

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Trademarks | HELP

© 2010 AOL Inc. All Rights Reserved