The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia job growth above average

Employers added 6,500 positions in January.

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

Georgia’s unemployme­nt rate was unchanged at 5.5 percent in January, the state labor department said Thursday.

However, the state added 6,500 jobs, more than average for the month.

“While the rate was unchanged, our employers continued to create jobs, our labor force continued to grow and more people went to work,” said Mark Butler, the state labor commission­er. “This is a good way to start off a new year.”

Despite the new jobs, the unemployme­nt rate did not fall because more people are in the labor force, looking for work.

Many are finding it, said Larry Feinstein, chief executive of Hire Dynamics, a Duluth-based staffing company. “There are more jobs than candidates. It is taking us longer to find the right people.”

Among the signs of improvemen­t: It takes less time now for companies to shift temporary hires to full-time, he said.

Georgia’s unemployme­nt rate a year ago was 5.6 percent, so on the surface, it may look as if the job market hasn’t gotten much better. But in those 12 months, the economy has added 114,700 jobs. However, the unemployme­nt rate hasn’t gone down much because the number of people in the labor force has gone up.

During the five previous years, from December January the number of jobs in the state grew by an average of 6,100.

Despite nearly seven years of job growth, Georgia’s workforce of 4.9 million people still includes roughly 276,000 people looking for work.

That is far lower than during the worst of the jobs crisis. But more than 30 percent have been looking for more than six months. Anyone not actively looking for work is not officially counted as unemployed.

A broad swath of sectors added jobs in January: financial services grew by 4,300; leisure and hospitalit­y was up 4,200; trade, transporta­tion and warehousin­g grew by 3,700; government expanded by 1,600; manufactur­ing was up 1,100; and constructi­on added 900.

Losses came in the corporate sector, which was down 7,700. Education and health services shed 1,100 positions and other services lost 1,000.

The national unemployme­nt rate is 4.8 percent. Georgia’s has not been below the national average since 2007, before the economy slipped into recession. Despite that, the pace of job growth in Georgia is faster than the nation’s.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Jordan Mills, from Lithonia, waits at the Airport Community Job Fair, which offered more than 500 jobs in October.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Jordan Mills, from Lithonia, waits at the Airport Community Job Fair, which offered more than 500 jobs in October.

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