Applicants' market: High employment rates in state lift teens, seniors, non-college-degree job seekers

California Globe reports that August employment numbers suggest that 114 straight months of job growth is lifting all boats.

"According to a report by the California Employment Development Department, 34,500 non-farm jobs were created in August, greatly outpacing the 8,000-9,000 new jobs needed per month to match growth. Unemployment held steady at 4.1%, the same rate for over a year now.

'What’s happening now is that those people who are going for minimum wage jobs in wealthier cities are becoming fewer and fewer,' says Anna Pollard, an organizer for job fairs in several central California counties. 'In many cities we’re back to teenagers and the elderly taking the bulk out of those jobs. It’s different in places like LA or around the Bay, but it’s starting to normalize out here.'

'The normalization is thanks to the 114 months straight of job growth. The post recession boom has broke the previous record set during the administration of former Governor Ronald Reagan during the 1960’s. While aerospace and manufacturing helped fuel the growth in the 60’s, the post recession boom has been largely due to educational, health, and hospitality sector jobs. College education has also been a major driving force.

'Poland also mentioned that in higher population areas, where high paying and minimum wage jobs are sought, lower paying jobs that require a college education or advanced training are having a hard time placing people.

“It’s an applicant’s market right now. We have more and more younger candidates demanding better pay, working from home, more benefits, and yes, we have some who want free food and daycare at work. They’re scrambling to get people, especially in situations where they want someone with experience, with a college degree, and the pay is low. It’s huge in cities on the coast and it’s starting to reach places like Fresno and Modesto.”

'15% of the nations job growth since February of 2010 has come from California, which gained 3,330,100 jobs in the same time period."

Read the whole thing here.


Simon Gilbert