Yuma Sun

Arizona companies lose workers

Jobless rate drops; Yuma level rises to 20.9%

- BY HOWARD FISCHER CAPITOL MEDIA SERVICES

PHOENIX — Arizona companies shed workers last month but the state’s jobless rate still dropped a tenth of a point.

New figures from the State Office of Economic Opportunit­y put the seasonally adjusted unemployme­nt rate for July at 4.6 percent. That compares with the U.S. rate of 3.9 percent, which also is down by a tenth of a point.

But the total number of people working, as reported by employers, dropped 17,500.

Part of what’s behind that apparent disparity is that phrase “seasonally adjusted.’’

Put simply, it’s not unusual for Arizona to lose workers in July.

Most of the change is from people in

education like custodians and food service who are technicall­y “unemployed’’ when the school year ends. But hotels, bars and restaurant­s also shed jobs as tourism dries up, particular­ly in the state’s two largest metro areas.

But here’s the thing: That month-over-month drop of 17,500 jobs overall and 4,400 in the private sector is less than what Arizona has been experienci­ng since the end of the recess. So fewer jobs lost than normal translates out to a lower unemployme­nt rate.

And there’s something else: The number of jobs gained or lost is based on surveys of employers; the unemployme­nt rate is based on a survey of people, whether they’re working and, if not, whether they’re looking for work. And the two surveys don’t always align.

In Yuma County, the seasonally unadjusted unemployme­nt rate for July was reported at 20.9 percent, slightly below the 21.6 percent from July 2017. The county’s jobless numbers have historical­ly been significan­tly higher than the state or national average, with the figure frequently crossing the 20 percent line in summer.

The accompanyi­ng employer survey said 200 jobs were dropped between June and July, for a total of 52,600 positions. There was no change to the 5,800 jobs in the leisure and hospitalit­y sector, while 400 positions lost in the manufactur­ing and state and local government sectors were partially offset by small gains in business and profession­al services as well as transporta­tion and utilities.

Statistica­l issues aside, there are other signs of an improving state economy.

One is a separate figure kept by the state of the percentage of people who have part-time jobs — meaning they’re counted as “employed’’ — but are looking for full-time work.

That figure peaked in Arizona as 18.7 percent in 2011. By a year ago it had dropped to 10.5 percent and now is at 9.1 percent.

Doug Walls, the agency’s research administra­tor, said that means more of these people are finding those full-time jobs they want.

Looking at individual sectors of the Arizona economy, Walls said jobs in leisure and hospitalit­y — those hotel, restaurant and bar workers — dropped by 3,600 between June and July. But that pattern is not statewide.

“There are some gains around the state, primarily in our northern metro areas,’’ Walls said, saying it comes as “individual­s from the lower half of the state escape up north to beat the heat.’’

Coconino County, for example, added 300 employees in this sector, with similar gains in Mohave County. Even Cochise County picked up a few new jobs.

But in Yavapai County, hotels, bars and restaurant­s actually saw employment drop by 200 between June and July.

Elsewhere in the economy, manufactur­ing continues to add jobs, growing 5.1 percent in the past year led largely by sharp gains in hiring by companies that make computers and electronic parts. Still, Walls said the industry has not fully recovered from the job losses of the recession.

Overall, Walls said Arizona is outperform­ing the national economy, not just in pure numbers but also in the breadth of the state’s recovery.

For example, that 5.1 percent year-over-year growth in manufactur­ing compares to 2.6 for the rest of the country. And constructi­on employment in Arizona is up 10 percent in the past year, versus 4.2 percent for the nation as a whole.

Still, the state’s unemployme­nt rate continues to run higher than the national average, with the recovery rates an indication of how far the state had fallen during the recession and how big a hole it has had from which to dig out.

At the Yuma County locations for the Arizona@ Work workforce developmen­t network, 4,788 job seekers visited during the month of July compared to 3,205 last year at the same time, Employer Engagement Officer Patrick Goetz said. The trend upward is due to the co-location of the Arizona@Work Unemployme­nt Insurance and Employment Service offices.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States