The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Employers rank high in filling positions; job concerns remain

- By J. D. Davidson

Ohio businesses are faring better than those in most other states when it comes to hiring, according to a new report, but some call the state’s mostrecent job growth numbers sluggish and believe steps should be taken to stabilize the economy.

WalletHub, a personal finance website, ranked Ohio 13th in terms of states struggling the least when it comes to hiring.

“The labor market could swoon in the coming months, but even so people with the requisite skills are rethinking how they wish to work, and indeed (especially if they are older) the role of work in their lives overall,” said Evan W. Osborne, a professor of economics at Wright State University. “In my view, this red-hot market for many but not all employees cannot last forever. But it is in fact a new world, and we are all grappling with it.”

Ohio had a job openings rate in May of 7.1%, which was higher than the 6.67% over and over the last 12 months. Those numbers placed it well ahead of all its neighbors, other than Pennsylvan­ia.

In May, Ohio’s unemployme­nt rate fell to 3.9% from 4% in April, which remained higher than the national average of 3.6%. At the same time, the state’s labor participat­ion rate moved from 61.8% in April to 62% in May, also lower than the national average.

The number of jobs created in Ohio fell significan­tly from 9,000 in April to 1,600 new jobs in May, and the state remains 90,000 jobs below prepandemi­c levels in February 2020.

The states where employers are struggling the most include Alaska, Kentucky, Georgia, Montana and Iowa.

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