The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia has first back-to-back job losses since 2010

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

After a pretty good start to the year, Georgia’s economy lost 2,800 jobs in April, according to a report Thursday from the state Department of Labor.

The disappoint­ing news follows a job loss in March.

Monthly data is notoriousl­y uneven, and even two months do not make a trend, but the back-to-back monthly downers are the first in nearly eight years. So far in 2018, the state has added 11,300 jobs, which is less than half the average job growth during the same period during the previous five years.

Yet most other indicators in the report were upbeat, as was the state’s labor commission­er.

“The state really is prospering,” Mark Butler said. “We continue to see our current businesses expanding and companies moving to Georgia to take advantage of our low taxes, great transporta­tion system and excellent labor force.”

Unemployme­nt — which is calculated from a separate survey — edged down to 4.3 percent in April.

A year ago, the state’s jobless rate was 4.9 percent. That compares to a high of 10.6 percent in 2010.

Jobless claims, a signal of layoffs, were not up. And there was hiring in many sectors, including constructi­on and

various services. The largest gain came in leisure and hospitalit­y, which grows when people have money to spend on restaurant­s, bars, hotels and entertainm­ent.

But those are not typically high-paying jobs, and the corporate sector — which does pay well — was the big loser in April, down nearly 10,000 jobs all by itself.

There was no particular reason to think the economy has hit an inflection point, so the causes of the slowdown are not clear: Perhaps hiring was chilled by the cold, weather or the threats of a trade war. And perhaps climbing gas prices had an impact.

The state has added 67,100 jobs since last April — good, but slower expansion than the five previous years.

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