Chattanooga Times Free Press

State adds 45,000 jobs in past year

Jobless rate near historic lows

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STGAFF WRITER

Tennessee employers added 45,000 jobs across the state in the past year, lowering the state’s seasonally-adjusted jobless rate from 4 percent a year ago to 3.4 percent last month.

The Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Developmen­t said Thursday that unemployme­nt in the Volunteer State during April was a half percentage point below the U.S. rate of 3.9 percent last month and, not adjusted for seasonal factors, was the lowest monthly rate for unemployme­nt in Tennesse in modern history.

“With the economy being so far into the recovery as it is, it’s getting increasing­ly difficult to have really high growth rates,” said Bill Fox, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. “But we continue to see solid growth in our state, and labor force participat­ion rates continue to improve as more workers come back into the labor market and employers continue to add to their staffs.”

Fox said he expects the

economy to remain strong for at least the rest of this year in Tennessee.

A household surey by the U. S. Bureua of Labor Statistics showed the number of Tennessean­s on the job rose by 2.2 percent in the past year, or more than 50 percent faster than the U.S. growth pace in jobs of 1.4 percent.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam, who released the jobs report Thursday, said he expects the economy to continue to generate more jobs as evidenced by announceme­nts of major job additions in the past month from AllianceBe­rnstein in Nashville, Coil Design Corp., in Dayton, and Chemring in Hardeman County.

“For more than a year now, Tennessee continues to see unemployme­nt rates lower than ever before,” Haslam said. “In just the past three weeks, we have announced more than 2,000 new jobs coming to our state, which sets the path for unemployme­nt to remain low and for Tennessean­s to benefit from that job growth.”

April 2018 marks one year since Tennessee’s unemployme­nt rate dropped to 4 percent for the first time in recent history. The state recorded an all- time low unemployme­nt rate of 3.3 percent in September of last year. That figure is just 0.1 of a percentage point lower than the latest rate.

Despite the relatively low rate of unemployme­nt, average manufactur­ing wages in Tennesee last month were still 63 cents per hour less than a year ago due to the changing compostion of factory jobs and the lack of any major increase in hourly rates. BLS reported the average manufactur­ing wage in Tennessee last month was $ 19.23 an hour, compared with $19.86 an hour a year ago.

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