Oroville Mercury-Register

California adds 141,000 jobs during February

- By Adam Beam

Hopeful signs emerge as mor businesses reopen amid loosening of virus restrictio­ns and more vaccinatio­ns.

California added 141,000 jobs in February as more than a quarter of a million people returned to the workforce, state officials announced Friday, a reflection of loosening virus restrictio­ns on businesses as more people get vaccinated.

Employment in restaurant­s and hotels surged by more than 102,000 people, welcome news for an industry hit hard by the onagain, off- again restrictio­ns imposed by the government at the whims of an unpredicta­ble virus.

Regaining jobs

The state lost 155,400 jobs in December and January when Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered a sweeping lockdown amid frightenin­g increases of cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths. But California gained 91% of those jobs back in a single month, dropping the unemployme­nt rate to 8.5%, according to new data from the California Employment Developmen­t Department.

That’s the lowest rate since the pandemic began.

“The California job machine has been turned back on after a dismal two months,” said Sung Won Sohn, a professor of finance and economics at Loyola Marymount University.

But California’s recovery appears to lag the rest of the country. Its unemployme­nt rate is more than 2 percentage points higher than the U. S. as a whole, tying Connecticu­t for the third highest rate among states behind Hawaii and New York.

California has regained just 39% of the 2.7 million jobs lost in March and April of last year when the bottom fell out of the economy. Meanwhile, Sohn said the U.S. as a whole has regained 56% of jobs lost.

Overall, California had 1.2 million fewer jobs in February than it did a year ago. The state processed more than 108,000 unemployme­nt claims last week, the second week in a row that new claims have surpassed 100,000 after a decline in February.

“Today’s numbers are not consistent with the other employment indicators that we’ve seen in the last couple of weeks,” said Michael Bernick, a former director of the California Employment Developmen­t Department now an attorney with Duane Morris. “I think these numbers need to be balanced with, as I say, other employment indicators.”

More good news?

Still, declines in the numbers of new coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations point to improved job numbers in the coming weeks. More than 94% of the state’s population now live in counties free from the state’s most severe virus restrictio­ns.

California has been receiving about 1.8 million vaccine doses per week. But that’s expected to jump to 3 million doses per week by mid April — enough that Newsom announced on Tuesday all adults will be eligible to get the vaccine starting April 15.

“There is a growing confidence that the bottom is definitely behind us,” Sohn said.

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