1/4/2018 1:00:00 PM
In November, the Minnesota unemployment rate fell to 3.1 percent. The U.S. unemployment rate was 4.1 percent.
The state lost 4,000 jobs in November. Over the past year, Minnesota gained 34,566 jobs, an increase of 1.2 percent, while U.S. jobs grew 1.4 percent.
Through two consecutive months of employment declines, Minnesota’s labor markets are surprisingly strong. We’re seeing a decline in our unemployment rate to levels last seen before the 2001 recession, as our labor force participation rate (70.6 percent) increases to six year highs – and with an aging population. The decline in the number of unemployed to below 100,000 suggests a continued tightening. How long can these recent job gains be sustained?
Although the Twin Cities continues to outpace the smaller Metropolitan Statistical Areas, sizable job gains continue in all MSAs, in the past 12 months:
Alternative measures of unemployment provides a more complete picture of the labor market. The numbers taken from the Current Population Survey are averages over the past 12 months; thus, they do not fully reflect recent trends.
As of November 2017, Minnesota’s over-the-year changes in unemployment rate by race or ethnicity includes:
As of November 2017, Minnesota’s over-the-year changes in unemployment rate by age and gender includes:
The statistical snapshot for November reports that 57.4 percent of all new businesses that started in Minnesota in 2012 were still operating five years later – that’s the highest nationwide. The national rate was 50.2 percent. Many Midwestern and Plains states landed in the top 10 business 5-year survival rate, including:
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