Daily Camera (Boulder)

Private sector hiring sees disappoint­ing results in Jan.

State’s unemployme­nt rate lower than estimated last year

- By Aldo Svaldi asvaldi@denverpost.com

Private-sector employers in the state failed to grow their payrolls in January, a disappoint­ing start to the new year, but revisions show the state’s unemployme­nt rate was much lower than first thought in 2022, according to a delayed update from the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment.

Employers added 800 jobs in January, but those came entirely from the public sector, and they represente­d a sharp comedown from last year’s average of 5,225 jobs added a month.

Educationa­l and health services added 2,200 jobs, while profession­al and business services added 1,300 on a seasonally-adjusted basis. But on the other side of the teeter-totter, financial activities lost 1,300 jobs and constructi­on lost 1,100.

“Weather could have been a factor in the lack of job growth. It was a cold and snowy January,” said Ryan Gedney, a senior economist with the CDLE, during a news call on Monday.

Constructi­on hiring is especially vulnerable to bad weather, but something bigger could be at play. The number of constructi­on job openings nationally plummeted by 240,000 in January, or by nearly half the levels seen in December, according to a report from the Associated Builders and Contractor­s. The big chill could be coming from a tougher lending climate, not from the ambient temperatur­e.

“About half of the sectors posted declines, and there was weak job growth in most other sectors. The most notable areas of concern were financial activities and constructi­on. These declines are likely, based on real GDP and employment data and the headwinds they are facing,” said Broomfield economist Gary Horvath, who described the January numbers as disappoint­ing.

Better news came on the state’s unemployme­nt rate following an annual benchmarki­ng process. Colorado’s unemployme­nt rate had run close to the U.S. average last year and the state ranked in the middle of the pack among states month after month, which was a departure from its prepandemi­c showing among the 10 states with the lowest unemployme­nt rate.

Rather than the 3.6% unemployme­nt rate averaged across 2022 in initial estimates, the state average was 3% following revisions. January’s rate was 2.8%, which matched the revised rate seen in December, which has been initially pegged at 3.2%.

“With Colorado’s unemployme­nt rate dropping below three percent, it is clear that Colorado is the best place to live, work, and do business. More entreprene­urs are starting businesses in our state and we are outcompeti­ng other states for businesses and jobs,” Gov. Jared Polis said in a release touting the lower numbers.

Revisions placed Colorado with the ninth lowest unemployme­nt rate in the U.S. in January, tied with New Hampshire. December’s count of unemployed workers, initially estimated at 106,745, was revised to 89,130. In January, the count was at 96,700.

The payroll jobs added also varied by a significan­t amount, going from 8,725 to a still respectabl­e 5,225 per month average gain following revisions. The state’s labor force participat­ion rate, a measure of how actively working-age adults are working or looking for work, wasn’t as high as first thought in 2022. It adjusted from an annual average of 69.2% to 68.4%.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? A snowy and cold January may have played a part in weak job gains in January, according to an update from the Colorado Department of Labor. The state only added 800jobs, with private sector employers adding a net zero jobs.
COURTESY PHOTO A snowy and cold January may have played a part in weak job gains in January, according to an update from the Colorado Department of Labor. The state only added 800jobs, with private sector employers adding a net zero jobs.

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