Chattanooga Times Free Press

Chattanoog­a adds 7,700 jobs in three years

- By Dave Flessner Staff Writer

The Chattanoog­a area has added 7,700 jobs since the Great Recession ended in 2010, but the region’s job growth has still trailed the U.S. as a whole since 2010.

For all its success in recruiting Volkswagen, Amazon and Alstom Power to build new factories and distributi­on centers to Chattanoog­a during the recession, employment in the Chattanoog­a area has grown a modest 3 percent since the downturn ended three years ago, trailing the 4 percent national growth pace in the same period.

Employment gains coming out of the worst economic downturn in a half century have varied widely across industries, according to a new study of job growth conducted for the web site CareerBuil­der.

Jobs have rebounded strongly in Chattanoog­a in health care, trucking and fabric mills. But the Chattanoog­a region shed jobs in its key insurance and appliance manufactur­ing industries during the

the highest paying major sector — federal civilian employment — rose only 1 percent.

“Many of the job gains were seen in manufactur­ing, restaurant­s, temporary help services, and art and entertainm­ent,” said Jennifer Grasz, a spokeswoma­n for CareerBuil­der. “This stands in contrast to the period form 2001-2009, when the economy declined by 5 percent shedding some 11,500 jobs.”

Metro Chattanoog­a, like most of the 100 top metro areas analyzed by CareerBuil­der, has yet to regain all of the jobs it lost duirng the recession. The study for CareerBuil­der conducted by Economic Modeling Specialist­s Internatio­nal found that manufactur­ing employment in the six-county Chattanoog­a area dropped by 32 percent in the eight years prior to the recession.

But manufactur­ing is rebounding as factories gear up to meet pent-up demand for many goods, and currency and energy price changes make it more economical for many manufactur­ers to bring production back to the U.S.

Chattanoog­a’s job rebound has been slower than in many cities during the past three years because of its relatively better performanc­e during the recession than in most markets and the decline in some businesses during the past year. Volkswagen and Alstom both added jobs during the recession but cut their staffs earlier this year. The Tennessee Valley Authority and energy equipment makes like Alstom and Westinghou­se have each trimmed their local staffs along with the decline in energy prices and demand in the past year.

Other states producing natural gas and oil supplies buoyed by new fracking technologi­es have enjoyed bigger job gains. CareerBuil­der said cities with higher concentrat­ions of computer companies and durable manufactur­ers have generally fared the best since 2010.

The biggest job gainers since 2010 have ranged from Salt Lake City, which has grown along with its technology and distributi­on businesses; Grand Rapids, Mich., boosted by its furniture and other manufactur­ing industries rebounding from the recession, and silicon valley region arond San Jose, Calif.

“These are metros with a strong concentrat­ion of computer systems design, software publishing and data processing and hosting firms,” CareerBuil­der CEO Matt Ferguson said. “These are metros benefiting from the resurgence in U.S. manufactur­ing, and the nation’s need to find new energy sources and expand healthcare services.”

The study found the average job in Chattanoog­a in 2013 pays $48,724 in the key driver industries in the region. By comparison, the average job in driver industries pays $59,932 in Atlanta, $55,961 in Nashville and $49,667 in Knoxville.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States