Laura Kalambokidis has the kind of job at the Capitol where many in the building absorb her every word in a way that even a governor would envy.
The new state economist's most high-profile work is helping create the state's twice-annual economic and budget snapshot, an 80-page report that dissects and analyzes every arcane nook of the state economy, from agriculture to housing starts to the latest political kerfuffle in Washington.
Kalambokidis is the first new state economist in nearly three decades, replacing the now-retired Tom Stinson.
Her work serves as the underpinnings of the state budget forecast, which locks in the state surplus or a deficit for the rest of the budget cycle. That number becomes gospel around the Capitol.
Figuring out the state's economic landscape requires an obsessive attention to myriad details.
"I am trying to pay attention in the real economy and what actual taxpayers are doing," said Kalambokidis, 50, who lives in Stillwater. "This position has pushed me more in the direction of not just what the theoretical models tell us. What are the workers saying? What are the families saying? What are the businesses saying?"
With so much at stake in her analysis, Kalambokidis has to be painfully careful in what she says or how she characterizes things. In the weeks leading up to the economic forecast, she goes into what Minnesota Management and Budget officials call the "cone of silence." That means no talking to legislators, journalists — not even to the governor.
There's a lot at stake in the accuracy of the forecasts. Wild swings in deficits or surpluses can create political havoc, forcing state leaders to cut too deeply or sit on too much taxpayer money. That can make consumers, voters and businesses uneasy.