Chattanooga Times Free Press

Jobless rate drops by 60% since April

Tennessee economy bouncing back, but jobless claims still grow

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Unemployme­nt fell across Tennessee last month to its lowest level in six months, but the number of working Tennessean­s was still down by 131,500 from a year ago and initial jobless claims from newly laid- off workers rose again last week.

In neighborin­g Georgia, where the jobless rate plunged in August to one of the lowest rates in the South, unemployme­nt edged higher last month, rising 0.7 percentage points over August to 6.4% in September. Initial jobless claims in Georgia and across the country also rose last week, suggesting that the pace of the economic expansion may be slowing.

“We continue to make progress, but job growth is slowing and it’s going to be a long time until we regain all of the jobs that we lost during this pandemic,” said Bill Fox, director of the Boyd Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Tennessee. “Some of the declines we’re seeing in the unemployme­nt rate reflects the fact that more people have just dropped out of the labor force and a lower share of the population is now working.”

“Further recovery looks to have stalled out. Holiday hiring is sluggish, and many businesses need to make significan­t changes to ride out the colder months.”

– ANNELIZABE­TH KONKEL, AN ECONOMIST AT INDEED

The jobless rate in Tennessee dropped to 6.3% in September, down from the 8.6% rate in August and less than half the 15.5% peak unemployme­nt rate reached in April when the COVID-19 shutdowns were at their worst.

The Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Developmen­t said employers across the state created 11,100 new nonfarm jobs between August and September. Many of the hardest-hit sectors of the economy hurt by the pandemic earlier this year showed the biggest job gains last month with employment up last month in the leisure and hospitalit­y sector by 9,300 jobs, retail trade by 4,700 jobs and manufactur­ing by 1,500 jobs.

Tennessee’s jobless rate remained below the U.S. average in August. The seasonally adjusted rate for the United States last month was 7.9%, down from August’s revised rate of 8.4%.

But unemployme­nt in Tennessee is still more than double the 3.5% rate a year ago in August 2019 and employment is down by 4.3% in the past 12 months. Due to shorter workweeks, the average manufactur­ing worker in Tennessee was paid only $840.49 per week last month, or $30.59 per week less than a year ago.

Unemployed Tennessean­s are faring even worse as benefit checks have shrunk for many — and ended for others. Last week, the average jobless benefit paid to unemployed workers in Tennessee was $ 313.56 — or only about 40% of what was being paid to jobless workers in July. The number of jobless recipients last week also fell by more than 30% as new job search requiremen­ts were restored in order to qualify for benefits and more persons reached the end of their 26-week period for state unemployme­nt insurance benefits.

Through July, the federal government provided a $600 weekly supplement on top of the state jobless benefits paid in each week.

“That provided a great economic boost for many and, combined with the $ 1,200 per person stimulus checks and people shifting their purchases away from vacations, travel and elective surgeries, kept a lot of Tennessean­s buying taxable goods in the state,” Fox said.

That helped push up sales tax collection­s for Tennessee in each of the first three months of the new fiscal year, surpassing budget projection­s.

But Fox cautions that those sales tax gains could stall now that jobless benefits are being cut and other stimulus and Paycheck Protection Program loans are ending.

The job search website Indeed said its job postings were unchanged last week, remaining about 17% below last year’s levels. Many employers still aren’t confident enough in their businesses or in their view of the economy to ramp up hiring. Job postings had rebounded steadily over the summer, but the gains have slowed in the past two months.

“Further recovery looks to have stalled out,” said AnnElizabe­th Konkel, an economist at Indeed. “Holiday hiring is sluggish, and many businesses need to make significan­t changes to ride out the colder months.”

Mark Hamrick, the senior economic analyst for Bankrate.com, said the latest jobless claims data suggest the economy remains sluggish with 898,000 Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits last week.

“Some 30 weeks since the pandemic-caused downturn began, we see a disappoint­ing increase in the number of new seasonally adjusted claims,” he said. “There is a risk of stagnation in the coming months as layoffs mount, and more businesses struggle or fail.”

The Federal Reserve forecasts that the U. S. economy won’t reach so-called full employment again until 2023.

But in an announceme­nt of the September jobless figures, Chris Cannon of the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Developmen­t noted that “businesses across the state are ready to reemploy Tennessean­s.”

The Georgia Department of Labor said employment grew in the Peach State by 20,200 jobs in September, but unemployme­nt grew because the workforce grew even faster.

“Over the past five months, 340,900 jobs ( 65% ) have been gained back from the massive job loss we saw in April,” said Georgia Labor Commission­er Mark Butler.

Tennessee’s workforce developmen­t website, Jobs4TN.gov, currently lists more than 210,000 open positions for job seekers.

Besides current job openings, Jobs4TN.gov also provides online assistance with writing a resume that will catch the attention of employers, advice on how to engage and impress during job interviews, and details about potential job training opportunit­ies, Cannon said.

 ?? JOSEPH RUSHMORE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People wait to file unemployme­nt insurance claims at the River Spirit Expo center in Tulsa, Okla., on July 24. The Labor Department reported Thursday that the number of Americans seeking unemployme­nt benefits rose last week by the most in two months, to 898,000, a historical­ly high number.
JOSEPH RUSHMORE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES People wait to file unemployme­nt insurance claims at the River Spirit Expo center in Tulsa, Okla., on July 24. The Labor Department reported Thursday that the number of Americans seeking unemployme­nt benefits rose last week by the most in two months, to 898,000, a historical­ly high number.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States