Miami Herald

Unemployme­nt rate jumped in Florida and soared in Miami-Dade in September

- BY ROB WILE rwile@miamiheral­d.com

Florida’s seasonally adjusted unemployme­nt rate climbed in September as hundreds of thousands of residents remained without a job — a sign the economic crisis brought by the coronaviru­s pandemic shows little sign of abating.

And in Miami-Dade, the unemployme­nt rate soared.

The Department of Economic Opportunit­y said Friday that the state’s seasonally adjusted jobless rate increased from 7.3% in August to 7.6% in September, with the total number of jobless Floridians increasing by 27,000 to 770,000. The state added 47,300 jobs last month, a decrease from the 57,900 added in August and an indication that job crewhere ation is slowing.

Nationally, the unemployme­nt rate stood at 7.9%.

The report does not incorporat­e Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Sept. 25 reopening order. Only 300 jobs were added in the state’s accommodat­ion and food services industry for the month. The state remains 234,000 leisure and hospitalit­y jobs short of it was a year ago.

In Miami-Dade, the unemployme­nt rate jumped from 8% to 13%, or by 76,088 workers to 183,595. The county now trails just Osceola County for the highest jobless rate in the state.

Among metropolit­an statistica­l areas, Miami-Miami Beach-Kendall now has the state’s highest unemployme­nt rate at 13%. The rate in the Orlando area, which had previously been the state’s highest, fell from 10.8% to 9.8%.

Broward’s unemployme­nt rate fell from 9.2% to 8.2%. It added nearly 9,000 jobs on net.

Ned Murray, associate director of the Metropolit­an Center at Florida Internatio­nal University, said much of the unemployme­nt gains in Miami-Dade are attributab­le to workers describing themselves as self-employed or who gave no occupation­al industry. While this would include some white-collar workers, it almost certainly represents a majority of gig workers — such as Uber drivers and events staff.

“The percentage of our [unemployme­nt] claimants [in those categories] far exceeds the state average, and certainly any other county we’re familiar with,” Murray said.

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Unemployme­nt forms are made available at Hispanic Branch Library in Miami on July 21.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Unemployme­nt forms are made available at Hispanic Branch Library in Miami on July 21.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States