Business & Tech

SLP's Unemployment Remains Below County, National Rates

The city's unemployment rate was 4.5 percent in May.

St. Louis Park's unemployment rate increased slightly over the last month, but it is still below county and national averages.

The city’s unemployment rate was 4.5 percent in May, while the county's was 5.1 percent, according to Minnesota’s Department of Employment and Economic Development.

St. Louis Park has consistently been below 5 percent since last fall. The city did hit 5.2 percent in September.

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The county's unemployment level remains 0.9 percent less than the 6 percent reported in May 2011. But it’s still higher than the 4.8 percent reported in April 2012, which had been the lowest unemployment level for the county since May 2008. 

St. Louis Park was at 4.2 percent in April.

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TwinWest Chamber President Bruce Nustad said a rate that stable is “somewhat encouraging.” But he expects the unemployment number to stay relatively steady through the election as parties try to convince voters that something is wrong that they need to fix.

“The economy is so driven by confidence that even just a little erosion is enough for an employer to say, ‘Well, I’ll wait another 30 days (to hire),” Nustad said.

Nustad added that county and national numbers don't necessarily reflect the positive signs in the west metro. Like St. Louis Park, Edina and Minnetonka saw gains comparable to the county average, but their rates remained lower than the county—4.6 and 4.5 percent, respectively.

“From an employment perspective, the west metro is a little bit of a shining star,” Nustad said.

Hennepin County’s unemployment rate was just less than the statewide rate of 5.2 percent. Nationwide the rate was 7.9 percent. These figures are not seasonally adjusted.

Minnesota’s unemployment rate shrunk 0.1 percent from April to May while the nationwide rate grew 0.2 percent.

Overall Minnesota lost 900 jobs in May and 155,362 Minnesotans remain unemployed.

“May’s economic situation for Minnesota showed a further decline in jobs as employment fell 900,” said Rachel Vilsack, coordinator of special projects for the Labor Market Information Office at the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development. “There are positive indicators of our economic conditions, including seasonally adjusted new claims for unemployment are at a post-recessionary low, and online job postings as measured by the Conference Board’s HWOL (Help Wanted Online) index remain high relative to pre-recessionary levels.”


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