Posts Tagged ‘unemployment’

Texas Adds More Than 100k Jobs

October 3rd, 2010

Unemployment Graph Texas and USAccording to the Real Estate Center at College Station, Texas added 133,100 jobs to its economy from August 2009 to August 2010.  This resulted in an annual growth rate of 1.3 percent.   Though the United States also saw an increase in jobs over this same period, adding 278,000 jobs, it did not keep pace with Texas’ growth, posting only a 0.2 percent increase.  Twenty-four Texas metro areas saw a positive employment growth rate from August 2009 to August 2010.  This was up from only 19 metro areas for the July 2009 to July 2010 period.

The metro area of Sherman-Denison (an area just north of Dallas) led the state with a 3.6 percent growth rate.  This was followed by San Angelo, the Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos area, Odessa, Tyler, the Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood area, and College Station/Bryan which all saw a percent growth rate of at least 2.0 percent.  Dallas ranked twelfth showing a 1.2 percent growth rate with the San Antonio-New Braunfels area posting only a 0.1 percent increase.  The Houston area showed no growth.

Despite the increase in jobs, Texas’ unemployment rate still rose, posting a 0.3 percent gain over last August.  The unemployment rate for the state rose from 8 percent in August 2009 to 8.3 percent in August 2010 while the country’s unemployment rate actually decreased from 9.7 to 9.6 percent for the same period of time.

Overall, employment rates are beginning to creep up, with Texas ahead of the nations’ curve as far as job production.  Despite the data, many Americans are still unemployed, facing foreclosure and are struggling to manage in a continued weak economy.  An unemployment rate over 8 percent still ushers in many desperate people without work or a true vision of employment in the near future.  It will be many years before the country, including Texas, will be able to recover from these faintly optimistic yet rather gloomy employment numbers.

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Texas’ Economy Continues to Strengthen

September 5th, 2010

State of Texas with FlagAfter suffering through a weak economy with double-digit months of  unemployment, Texas appears to be near the top of the heap in the country and on an economic upswing.  According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the District of Colombia and five states reported statistically significant increases.  Texas posted the largest statistically significant year-over-the-year employment increases adding 134,600 jobs.  The other states which saw increases were Indiana, up 47,600 jobs, Massachusetts, up 36,600, New Hampshire up 8,700 and North Dakota up 6,200.   Four states saw statistically significant job losses, overcoming the positive gains from the states with increases, thus causing a countrywide stagnation.  States with the most job losses included California realizing a 103,900 loss, New York with a loss of 51,400, Georgia with a loss of 39,100 and New Jersey with a loss of 34,000.

According to recent information released by the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University, Texas has had three months of positive annual employment growth after 16 months of job losses.   The growth rate from July 2009 to July 2010 was 1.3 percent for the entire state, compared with a rate close to zero percent for the nation.   Nineteen Texas metro areas had positive employment growth rates with San Angelo leading the state with a percent growth rate of 3% followed by College Station at 2.9% and the Austin area with 2.5% growth.  Other metro areas such as Dallas, Corpus Christi, and El Paso saw a positive growth rate in employment also.  San Antonio and Houston had a slight decline in employment.

Texas Metropolitan Areas Ranked by Employment Growth Rate,

July 2009 to July 2010 (Rank Metro Area Percent Growth Rate)

1.            San Angelo (3.0)

2.            College Station-Bryan (2.9)

3.            Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos (2.5)

4.            McAllen-Edinburg-Mission (2.0)

5.            Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood (1.9)

6.            Dallas-Plano-Irving (1.3)

Texas  (1.3)

7.            Corpus Christi (1.0)

8.            Sherman-Denison (0.7)

8.            Lubbock (0.7)

8.            Odessa (0.7)

8.            El Paso (0.7)

Source: Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University

In addition, all Texas industries except the construction and information industries had more jobs in July 2010 compared with July 2009 numbers.

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