6 takeaways from Minnesota's June jobs report

Unemployment held at 3.8 percent for the fourth straight month.

July 22, 2016 at 4:09AM
Ed Forde, 77, finished filling out a job application at the job fair Wednesday afternoon. He was seated at a table with Keyara Clardy, 18, and Carter Vitelli, 16, who were also working on their applications. ] JEFF WHEELER ï jeff.wheeler@startribune.com With 600 jobs to fill, the Minnesota State Fair held a job fair for the first time Wednesday afternoon, June 29, 2016 in the Progress Center on the fairgrounds in Falcon Heights.
Ed Forde, center, finished filling out an application in June while at a job fair in Falcon Heights with Keyara Clardy, left, and Carter Vitelli. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Minnesota employers added 7,300 jobs in June, the state reported Thursday, a gain mostly erased by a revision to May's figures showing the state lost 8,400 jobs, far more than initially reported.

The job market remains in slow-growth mode, according to figures released Thursday by the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development.

The trend is explained in part by slow growth in the labor force — the number of people either working or looking for work — which has declined by an estimated 25,000 in the past two months.

Minnesota's unemployment rate held steady at 3.8 percent for the fourth straight month. The U.S. unemployment rate in June was 4.9 percent.

Over the past year, the state has added 34,246 jobs, a gain of 1.2 percent. U.S. jobs were up 1.8 percent during that period.

Among Minnesota's major metropolitan areas, the Twin Cities, Rochester, St. Cloud and Mankato have all added jobs in the past 12 months. Duluth and Superior, Wis., have lost jobs.

Estimates of unemployment among black Minnesotans have dropped dramatically since last June, from 15.2 percent to 9.7 percent. Hispanic or Latino unemployment is estimated up over that period from 3.8 percent to 4.7 percent. White unemployment has ticked downward from 2.9 percent to 2.8 percent.

Here are six takeaways from the latest figures:

1. The slow-growth pattern continues.

Hiring would be flat in Minnesota so far in 2016 if it weren't for a banner April. Year-over-year hiring in June was the lowest since 2010, when the state had just lost jobs over the previous 12 months.

2. Some silver lining: Hiring for lower-paid jobs is slowing, while hiring for higher-paid jobs accelerates.

The regional economists at Wells Fargo analyzed Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages data in their useful monthly analysis of the Minnesota jobs report, and found that "Minnesota's job growth has been concentrated toward the higher-end of the pay spectrum" and "job growth in lower-wage industries decelerated." Take for instance health care. Hospital and outpatient centers need workers, but "hiring has slowed to a crawl" in nursing homes and personal care services.

3. Minnesota workers are still difficult to find for some companies despite the slow job growth.

The labor force has shrunk the past two months by about 25,000 since a record-setting May, when 3.069 million Minnesotans were either working or looking for work. Now there are 3.044 million in the labor force, according to estimates that come from a different set of data than the employment numbers that came out Thursday. The labor force participation rate fell by half a percentage point in June, to 70.5 percent, a low level common after the Great Recession but last reached before that in the early 1980s. A big part of the reason for the recent decline is the exodus of baby boomers from the job market via retirement.

4. Manufacturing hiring stayed flat.

Manufacturing employed 316,600 people in Minnesota in June, a number that's been basically flat since the end of 2014. Durable goods hiring has been weaker than nondurable goods.

5. Take the monthly shifts with a grain of salt.

These monthly figures are subject to big revisions, as we saw with May. A lot of economists don't even like talking about them for that reason.

6. Health care is the engine of job growth in Minnesota since the recession.

Over the past five years, health care has added 58,200 jobs, more than a quarter of the new hiring since June 2011. Construction comes second with 29,100 jobs added over that period, then lodging and food service; professional, scientific and technical industries; retail trade; and manufacturing. Mining and logging, and information (which includes publishing and broadcasting) have shed jobs over that period.

Adam Belz • 612-673-4405 Twitter: @adambelz

Tyler Craven cleans up the cattle barn at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds in Falcon Heights on Thursday, August 20, 2015. Craven, of St. Croix Falls, Wis., works in the cattle barn and coliseum doing different jobs for the Minnesota State Fair. The cows will arrive next week for the State Fair. ] LEILA NAVIDI leila.navidi@startribune.com /
A man cleaned the cattle barn at the State Fair in August. In the last 12 months, Minnesota has added 34,246 jobs. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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about the writer

Adam Belz

Reporter

Adam Belz was the agriculture reporter for the Star Tribune.

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