Economy

All Alaska economy and business news, including the Alaska Economic Report.

LISTEN: Alaska’s small businesses face financial winter as pandemic drags on

Jon Bittner, with the Alaska Small Business Development Center, says without a second round of relief money, businesses will continue to suffer.
Signs in a window announce covid closures

LISTEN: Alaska jobs expected to slowly return in 2021

Alaska is expected to add jobs in 2021, but at a slow pace.

To face 2020 head-on, one Anchorage tour company branched out

In the last year, employees at Salmon Berry Tours delivered groceries, plants and Christmas Trees. They also took on a new role in Hatcher Pass.

LISTEN: What another summer without cruise ships could mean for Alaska’s economy

Alaska lost 27,000 jobs in 2020. And, while the whole state suffered, regions that depend on tourism were hit especially hard.
A for sale sign in front of a white house.

Alaska’s pandemic housing boom driven by interest rates, tight inventory and shifting attitudes

The housing market’s upswing doesn’t account for thousands of Alaskans who are struggling to make ends meet.

LISTEN: Economic Impact Payments are beginning to hit bank accounts. Here’s what you need to know.

The American Rescue Plan, which includes another round of federal relief money for Americans impacted by the pandemic.
buildings stand in front of a snowy mountain range

Alaska marked a year of deflation in 2020 — for the first time ever

The change is small -- a 1.1% decline in prices.

Financial needs linger among Alaskans, a year after the start of the pandemic shocked the state’s economy

Needs have settled down after the early spike, but many Alaskans are still dealing with the financial impacts of the pandemic, which are expected to linger in the months ahead.
The bow of a white cruise ship

LISTEN: As summer approaches, Alaska leaders are making continued efforts to salvage cruise tourism

Hope for big ships at some point this summer is not lost yet, but the outlook is bleak. Leaders in Alaska and Washington D.C. are attempting to find solutions.
Two people stand in front of a pizza oven, smiling.

In Anchorage’s COVID-19 economy, social media skills are essential for small business — but not everyone has them

Familia opened in May 2020. Their food has gained a strong following despite the pandemic.
A for sale sign in front of a white house.

Is Alaska’s pandemic housing market burning out or getting hotter?

It's a seller's market: homes are going fast and at high prices. But experts say they're not seeing the warning signs of a housing bubble.

How an Alaska fiber mill survived the pandemic, despite plummeting sales and low supply

Kate Wattum began operating her fiber mill business in Fairbanks in 2016. But it wasn't until 2020 that she felt like she'd hit her stride, turning raw animal fibers into yarn. Then came the pandemic.

Steep job losses in Alaska plus historic federal aid led to a ‘very different recession’ in 2020

As federal aid poured in, personal income in Alaska actually rose in 2020.

Independent travelers pour into Anchorage as summer tourism season begins

Big cruise ships recently got the green light to sail to the state again. At the same time, independent travelers are showing up in force in Southcentral.
A shelf with a few bozes of ammo

Ammo shortage leaves Alaska businesses shooting blanks

Alaska and the rest of the U.S. are deep in an ammunition shortage, likely due to a confluence of current events and production setbacks.
A dog stands with its paws on a counter. A glass of beer sits on the counter.

Alaska’s brewing industry continues to grow, despite pandemic challenges

New breweries have been popping up in Alaska for years, and, despite earlier predictions that growth would plateau, it hasn’t let up yet. vv

At Anchorage farm, refugees in Alaska gain training and economic opportunity

The Mountain View farm took the place of a vacant parking lot. Today it’s tended by more than 20 immigrant and refugee farmers who live in Anchorage.
A woman in a black Tlingit-patterned robe beats on a drum and sings

‘Cruise ships are back, baby’: Alaska’s first large cruise ship in 21 months visits Ketchikan

The first large cruise ship to visit Alaska since 2019 arrived in Ketchikan early on the morning of July 9. The federally mandated test voyage is the symbolic start of the Alaska cruise season.

Consumer prices spiked more than 6 percent in urban Alaska over the last year

Anchorage has seen a consumer price increase of more than 6% in the last year, with some sectors rising by nearly 50%.

US House bill would add tribal seats to North Pacific Fisheries Management Council

A bill to renew the Magnuson Stevens Act would also focus on climate change impacts on marine resources and would recognize the importance of subsistence.