1/22/2018 12:00:00 PM
Minnesota’s 3.1 unemployment rate for December is now at its lowest level in 17 years. But even more noteworthy this month was the unemployment rate for Black Minnesotans, a measure DEED has tracked since 2001. The 12-month average unemployment rate for Minnesota’s black population fell to 7.5 percent, its lowest rate on record. The unemployment rate for the state’s black population was 8.0 in November 2017.
You can examine the unemployment rate by race, age and gender and look at alternative measures of unemployment, which provides a more complete picture of the labor market.
As of December 2017, Minnesota’s over-the-year changes in unemployment rate by race or ethnicity includes:
As of December 2017, Minnesota’s over-the-year changes in unemployment rate by age and gender includes:
This year DEED will continue its work connecting people of color, indigenous communities and people with disabilities, to employment and training opportunities to ensure their success.
The state gained 8,900 jobs in December. Over the past year, Minnesota gained 44,200 jobs, a growth rate of 1.5 percent, matching the US rate of growth last year. Read the numbers.
Job gains in three MSAs – Minneapolis-St. Paul, Duluth-Superior, and Mankato – outpace the state as a whole in annual rate of growth (1.6 percent), yet all MSAs show job gains in the past 12 months:
Minneapolis-St. Paul has the fourth lowest commute time (25.2 minutes), ranks 10th in per capita personal income ($56,723), and tops the 30 largest US metro areas in number of Fortune 500 headquarters per 1 million people.
Compare Minneapolis-St. Paul shows how the metro compares with other major metropolitan areas in business climate, major industries, economic performance, labor, innovation, energy, and quality of life. To see more, go to Compare Minneapolis-St. Paul.
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