Source: Wells Fargo Securities Economics Group
Unemployment Remains High but is Improving
After tumbling 0.4 percentage points in September, California’s
unemployment rate declined another 0.1 percentage point in October,
falling to 10.1 percent. The improvement stems from a 56,000-person rise
in civilian employment and just a 27,000-person rise in the civilian labor
force. The number of unemployed persons fell by the difference, or 29,000.
From this perspective the improvement in California’s unemployment rate
looks more genuine than if it were to have occurred primarily due to a drop
in the labor force. That said, the additional 0.1 percentage point dip in the
jobless rate puts an exclamation point on September’s larger decline.
On a year-to-year basis California’s unemployment rate has fallen
1.4 percentage points, compared to a 1.0 percentage point drop nationwide.
California civilian employment has risen by 200,000, while the number of
unemployed has fallen by 274,000. The labor force has shrunk by the
difference, declining by 74,000 persons. The drop in the labor force over
the past few years is hardly unique to California. The labor force
participation rate has fallen 2.8 percentage points in California since the
recession ended. The slide in the labor force likely reflects the growing
frustration of job seekers who are having difficulty finding well-paying jobs.
Long-term unemployment remains a major problem nationwide and in
California. The latest figures show that 34.7 percent of the 1.9 million
unemployed workers in California have been without a job for a year or
more. The comparable figure for the nation is 30.4 percent.
Nonfarm employment rose by 45,800 in October and has risen by
295,300 jobs over the past year. Just over half of October’s rise was in
trade, transportation and utilities industry, which added 24,700 jobs
during the month. Most of that increase likely occurred in retail trade.
Growth has also been evident in wholesale trade and distribution,
particularly in southern California. Construction employment has also
turned up recently, reflecting some improvement in homebuilding.
Professional and business services have added the largest number of jobs
on a year-to-year basis, adding 86,000 jobs, with some of the strongest
gains coming in the IT sector. California’s information sector, which
includes software publishing, data processing as well as motion picture and
sound studios, remains the state’s fastest growing sector, with employment
climbing 5.3 percent over the past year.
Among California’s major metro areas, the Bay Area continues to post the
strongest gains. Employment has risen 3.5 percent over the past year in San
Jose and is up 3.4 percent in San Francisco. By contrast, employment is up
just 1.5 percent year over year in greater Los Angeles and 1.9 percent over
the past year in San Diego.