Minnesota gained 4,200 jobs in September, up 0.1%, according to numbers released Thursday by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED). Minnesota's September unemployment rate remains historically low at 2%, one-tenth of a point higher than August and 1.5 points better than the national rate of 3.5%. Minnesota's labor force participation rate ticked down one-tenth of point to 68.1%, compared to the national rate of 62.3%.
Minnesota's job growth in September follows the addition of 1,200 jobs (revised up from a loss of 3,100) in August. Minnesota's private sector gained 8,500 jobs in September, up 0.3%, with Government losing 4,300 jobs, down 1%. The U.S. gained 578,000 jobs in September, up 0.4% from August, with the private sector adding 563,000 jobs, up 0.4% on a seasonally adjusted basis.
The trend toward job growth has remained strong coming out of the pandemic. Minnesota employment has grown 2.4% since January 2022 while the U.S. has grown 2.2%. For 12 straight months, Minnesota has gained jobs.
"Minnesota's economy is strong and continues to grow, with a new milestone today of 12 straight months of job growth," said DEED Commissioner Steve Grove. "Our nation-leading unemployment rate continues to reveal a market full of opportunity -- we're committed to driving innovative approaches to help Minnesota businesses find the workers they need."
Minnesota remained at the top of the list of states with the tightest labor markets with 4.1 job openings for every unemployed worker based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data from July, the latest such information available. With 226,000 job openings in July, Minnesota had a vacancy rate of 7.2%, 15th highest tied with Idaho and Illinois. The number of involuntary parttime workers in Minnesota ticked down to 28,100 in September, another all-time low. These low numbers indicate that workers don't need to settle for parttime jobs when they prefer fulltime jobs and are another sign of the very tight labor market.
Wages grew even faster in Minnesota in September than in August, up 5.7% overall, although still slower than inflation, with the CPI at 8.2% in September.
Looking at unemployment and labor force participation by race and ethnicity in Minnesota, the labor force participation rate rose to 67.7% up nine-tenths of a point for Black workers, declined by two-tenths of a percent for white workers to 68.4% and fell 1.3 points to 79.1% for Hispanic workers, based on 12-month moving average. Unemployment rates also vary by racial and ethnic groups, based on 12-month moving averages, with Black Minnesotans seeing a continued decline in unemployment.
Categories: Minnesota, Business