Minnesota jobless rate at
3 1/2-year low
Mike Meyers, Star Tribune National
Economics Correspondent
Published May 18, 2005 JOBS0518 in the Star
Tribune
Minnesota's unemployment rate fell to 4
percent in April, the lowest it's been since September 2001,
as the state gained 5,000 jobs.
Only twice in the past two years have more
jobs been created in the state in a single month.
A top jobs tracker called the news "definitely
positive," but she said Minnesota needs to string together
a number of good months to escape the drag of what was a dismal
first quarter on the hiring front.
For the first four months of 2005, the state
has created jobs at less than half the national pace. Minnesota
remains 4,900 jobs short of its peak employment level in March
2001, trailing the nation and 25 other states that already
have exceeded their pre-recession peaks.
The fall in Minnesota's jobless rate from
4.4 percent in March puts the state well ahead of the national
figure -- 5.2 percent -- but April's movement was the first
real progress in months.
"Had we grown at the national rate
in the first four months of this year, Minnesota would have
created 16,000 jobs. Instead, Minnesota generated 6,200,"
said Oriane Casale, assistant director of labor market information
at the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development.
Minnesota businesses "really have a lot of catching up
to do."
Gov. Tim Pawlenty, in a statement, was more
upbeat, saying the April job news shows that the state's economic
development and job-creation strategies are paying off.
"We're clearly moving in the right
direction," the governor said. "This news should
remind us that we must continue to stay focused on making
Minnesota a more competitive place to do business and create
good jobs."
Steve Hine, labor market information director,
said the best aspect of the April number is that it raises
the hope of a stronger quarter, although state officials are
unable to make any projections on that front.
"The first quarter was a weak one,"
said Hines, referring to the three-month winter stretch, when
only about 1,000 jobs were created. "April's employment
gain was a much stronger start to the second quarter. That
raises hope that last quarter was a temporary pause, probably
brought on by high oil prices and shaken consumer confidence."
Job prospects for the unemployed have improved,
but only marginally, in recent months, said Jane Samargia,
executive director of HIRED, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit
agency that looks for jobs for 8,000 to 9,000 unemployed people
every year.
"We see a little change but not a lot,"
she said. "It's still really tough out there for a lot
of workers at a lot of levels."
Both seasoned workers and newcomers to the
job market still can spend months looking for a position,
Samargia said.
"It's a very competitive job market,
both at the beginning level and experienced level," she
said. "For youth and unskilled adults, it's still very
tough."
Part of the explanation for a lower unemployment
in the face of modest job growth is that fewer people are
looking for work, Hine said. The number of people in the state's
workforce -- people either working or actively looking for
work -- is down 30,000 from pre-recession levels.
(Unemployment figures count only those workers
who are actively searching for a position, not those who have
given up temporarily.)
Some 148,000 Minnesotans were out of work
and actively looking when the state's jobless rate hit a high
of 5 percent in January 2004. Last month, about 118,000 people
fit that category.
The unemployment rate would be higher if
an additional 30,000 people who have stopped looking for work
were to resume seeking jobs, so the jobless rate could stay
steady or even rise in coming months if increased hiring means
more people start looking again for work.
For April, job gains were strongest in professional
and business services (up 2,700 jobs), leisure and hospitality
(up 2,600) and construction (up 1,600). Manufacturing was
the biggest loser, shedding 1,900 jobs, and the education
and health services industries dropped 900 jobs.
Government added 1,000 jobs, while information
services lost 400 jobs in Minnesota. Trade, transportation
and utilities employment remained flat.
The Ford Motor Co. plant in St. Paul announced
temporary layoffs last month, contributing to themanufacturing
jobs decline.
Mike Meyers is at meyers@startribune.com.
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