Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Walker still shy of jobs promise

Job growth expected to be central election issue

- John Schmid and Craig Gilbert

In his first seven years in office, Gov. Scott Walker presided over an increase of 213,000 private-sector jobs in Wisconsin, short of the 250,000 new jobs the Republican promised in his first four years.

Walker is up for re-election in 2018 and job growth is expected to be a central issue, as it was in his previous races. Wisconsin’s inability to add jobs as quickly as Walker predicted as a candidate in the 2010 general election didn’t stop him from winning an unusual 2012 recall election. Walker also won re-election to a full second term in 2014.

The figures released Thursday are from the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, a data set overseen by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The Quarterly Census data are considered the gold standard of employment numbers. Unlike monthly jobs numbers, which are extrapolat­ed from a survey with sparse sample sizes, the Quarterly Census data count jobs at nearly every employer.

Comparing the census job count in the final quarter of 2010, immediatel­y before Walker took office in January 2011, through the final quarter of 2017, which is the latest available Quarterly Census data, the number of private sector jobs increased by 213,426 to 2.48 million, an increase of 9.4 percent.

Wisconsin lagged the nation in the pace of job creation in the seven-year period, when the nation added privatesec­tor jobs at a 15.2 percent rate. Wisconsin ranks 34th out of the 50 states in the percentage increase (9.4 percent) of total private sector employment from end of 2010 to end of 2017.

Like the rest of the nation, the state’s economy has added jobs since 2010, the low point of the last recession, when the state’s unemployme­nt index peaked at 9.3 percent.

Wisconsin’s unemployme­nt rate, which is calculated under a separate monthly survey, dropped in April to a record low of 2.8 percent.

In a separate statement on Thursday’s data, the Walker administra­tion noted that wages have ticked higher. In 2017, wages in Wisconsin’s constructi­on sector grew 7.5 percent, and wages in the state’s manufactur­ing sector grew 5.5 percent, according to the state Department of Workforce Developmen­t.

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