Los Angeles Times

State payrolls grow in August

The state accounted for 42% of all U.S. job growth last month. The unemployme­nt rate remains at 5.5%.

- By Natalie Kitroeff natalie.kitroeff@latimes.com Twitter: @NatalieKit­ro

California added a net 63,100 jobs last month and the unemployme­nt rate remained at 5.5%.

California employers quieted any lingering doubts about the state’s economy in August, as an uptick in hiring helped absorb hordes of new job seekers.

The state added a net 63,100 jobs last month and the unemployme­nt rate remained at 5.5%, according to data released by the Employment Developmen­t Department on Friday.

Across the nation in August, employers added a net total of 151,000 new positions, meaning that California accounted for 42% of all U.S. job growth last month.

“These are astounding numbers,” said Michael Bernick, an attorney at Sedgwick, a San Francisco firm, who directed the EDD from 1999 to 2004. “Each time we think growth has to slow down, it just continues.”

The report brought the state good news in the wake of two consecutiv­e months of a rising unemployme­nt rate, up from 5.2% in May to 5.5% in July.

Since last August, the state has boosted payrolls by 378,000 workers — a 2.3% gain.

Despite new paid-leave mandates, a rising minimum wage and strict environmen­tal regulation­s, California has managed to grow faster than the rest of the country for several months.

In Los Angeles, unemployme­nt rose to 4.9%, from a seasonally adjusted 4.8% in July.

The county piled on another 20,000 jobs in August, for a yearly gain of 73,900 jobs. Motion picture and sound recording registered the largest gains, adding 5,500 new people.

California’s strongest industries were government, profession­al services and trade, transporta­tion and utilities, which together recorded a net hiring gain of 51,300 positions.

Manufactur­ing, long the bulwark of California’s economy, shrank again in August as 3,400 net jobs were cut. Since the depths of the recession in 2009, the state’s manufactur­ers added jobs at a rate of 2.5%.

The nation as a whole has seen the sector grow twice as fast.

The loss of factory jobs is particular­ly harsh for the state’s poorer regions, such as the Inland Empire, that depend more on blue-collar jobs.

In San Bernardino and Riverside counties, unemployme­nt stood above 6% in August. In Imperial County, unemployme­nt reached 23% — the highest rate in the state.

“Job numbers like this would make you think ‘Gee, anyone should be able to get a job.’ But it remains highly competitiv­e,” Bernick said.

“It reflects what we have seen for some time — the disconnect between our urban areas and the Central Valley and other inland areas,” he said.

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