Nearly four years into the tepid economic recovery, Main Street is finally starting to see some of the rebound that mostly has only blessed Wall Street since the stock market was cut in half and taxpayers bailed out the financial kingpins.
At his family-owned hardware store in a working-class Minneapolis neighborhood, Mark Welna said sales are up 5 percent over last year and he's expecting one of his best years. Between his store, founded in 1954, and brother Jim's Welna Hardware, about 2 miles away, employment is at a best-ever 25 full-and-part-time workers.
About a half-hour north in Anoka County, Aggressive Hydraulics is heading toward completion of a $5 million plant this spring that will replace three small antiquated facilities. With credit for small businesses still tight, it took President Paul Johnson and his partners two years, 20 percent down and several different lenders, including the city of East Bethel, to expand his 50-employee facility.
The maker of hydraulic pistons for heavy equipment is competing successfully against Asian manufacturers even as it pays Minnesotans $20 an hour-plus-benefits.
"The orders on our books for 2013 are higher than we've ever seen," said Johnson, who expects to add another five workers in the new plant.
At Butter Bakery & Cafe, on Nicollet Avenue and 37th Street, owner Dan Swenson-Klatt is growing more confident. He employs 22 people at his new ground-floor restaurant, which sits on a resurrected corner long occupied by a shuttered mortuary. Swenson-Klatt is betting he'll do 20 percent more business this year than he did last year at his smaller location a few blocks away.
"Another week and another batch of positive economic news on the U.S. economy," Scott Anderson, chief economist of Bank of the West, wrote customers on Friday. "Retail sales, initial jobless claims and business inventories all exceeded economists' modest expectations. U.S. [economic] growth is now on track to rise at a much improved 2.7 percent annualized pace in the first quarter as consumer spending and inventory building add a bit more to economic growth than previously expected."
Earlier this month, economist Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management, sounded a bit vindicated. Criticized for four years by the economic bears for his measured optimism, Paulsen took on those who have said the 120 percent return of the stock market since March 2009 was due solely to the easy-money policy of Ben Bernanke's Federal Reserve.