Los Angeles Times

JOBLESS RATE FALLS TO NEW LOW

California employers add 23,600 positions in the state’s longest expansion on record.

- BY MARGOT ROOSEVELT

California’s job market powered ahead in October as the unemployme­nt rate dropped to a new low and payrolls continued to grow in the state’s longest expansion on record.

At 3.9%, the jobless rate was the lowest since 1976, when the state changed its statistica­l methodolog­y, adding new data to its calculatio­ns, state officials reported Friday. That was down from 4% in September, and 4.1% a year earlier.

“Each month we think we can’t get any lower in the unemployme­nt rate, but we do,” said Michael Bernick, a former director of the California Employment Developmen­t Department. “This is comparable to the rates we had in the 1950s.”

Nationwide, the jobless rate stood at 3.6% in October, also near a half-century low.

Golden State employers added a net 23,600 jobs in October, for a total of 17.56 million, and a year-over-year growth rate of 1.8%. U.S. payrolls grew by 1.4% year overyear.

The state’s monthly gain was “healthy,” said Scott Anderson, chief economist of the San Francisco-based Bank of the West. “California’s labor market has been surprising­ly resilient this year, despite the head winds from the U.S.-China trade war and global manufactur­ing recession.”

Since the Great Recession ended in February 2010, the state has added more than 3.37 million payroll jobs. That 116-month growth surpassed the long expansion of the 1960s, Employment Developmen­t Department officials said, accounting for more than 15% of the nation’s job gains over the same period.

California’s economy “appears to be bucking the national trend of slower growth this year,” Anderson said. In January, the state’s payrolls rose year over year by 1.5%, compared with last month’s 1.8% growth. Over

the same period, U.S. nonfarm job growth slowed from 1.9% to 1.4%.

Sectors adding the most jobs over the year were education and health services (90,800); profession­al and business services (62,600); leisure and hospitalit­y (48,800); and government (36,700).

But the expansion was broad-based: Every sector grew except mining and logging, which remained flat. Other expanding categories included constructi­on (34,400); manufactur­ing (11,600); financial activities (13,500); trade, transporta­tion and utilities (7,100); other services (1,300); and informatio­n (1,200).

Economists look not just to job growth and unemployme­nt rates as key indicators of economic health but also to the size of the labor force, and California’s labor force grew substantia­lly for the second month in a row.

The addition of 40,800 more workers and job seekers in October “could indicate that people are finally becoming confident enough to enter or reenter the workforce to find jobs,” said Lynn Reaser, an economist at San Diego’s Point Loma Nazarene University.

The longer-term trend seems less encouragin­g. California’s labor force peaked in February this year. Year over year, it has shrunk by 57,400 workers, said Taner Osman, a researcher at the L.A. consultanc­y Beacon Economics.

However, he added, “It’s too early to read too much into these numbers. Generally, the supply of housing and the cost of living in the state constrain the growth of the labor force.”

Among Southern California counties, Los Angeles had the highest unemployme­nt rate in October, at 4.5%, followed by Riverside (3.9%), San Bernardino (3.5%) Ventura (3.3%), San Diego (2.8%) and Orange (2.5%).

Over the last year, the Inland Empire and San Diego County experience­d 2% job growth, the fastest in Southern California, followed by Los Angeles County (1.3%) and Orange County (1.2%).

The booming Bay Area technology scene is driving an ever-tighter job market. Unemployme­nt in the region is below 2.6%, and is as low as 1.7% in San Mateo County. San Francisco had 3.5% job growth, followed by San Jose (3%), San Rafael (2.8%) and the East Bay (2.2%).

 ?? FRANCINE ORR Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA’S LABOR market has been surprising­ly resilient despite the U.S.-China trade war and global manufactur­ing recession, one economist says. Above, a job fair at Los Angeles Trade-Tech College in March.
FRANCINE ORR Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA’S LABOR market has been surprising­ly resilient despite the U.S.-China trade war and global manufactur­ing recession, one economist says. Above, a job fair at Los Angeles Trade-Tech College in March.

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