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Saturday, November 16, 2024

COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT: Colorado Employment Situation – October 2020

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Colorado Department of Labor and Employment issued the following announcement on Nov. 20.

Household survey data 

According to the survey of households, Colorado’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was unchanged in October at 6.4 percent. The national unemployment rate declined one percentage point from September to 6.9 percent.

Other highlights from the household survey:

  • Colorado’s labor force grew by 17,600 in October to 3,138,700. The labor force participation rate rose by three-tenths of a percentage point to 67.6 percent, but is still below the February ratio of 69.4 percent.
  • The number of individuals employed in Colorado increased by 15,800 in October to 2,937,200, which represents 63.3 percent of the state’s 16+ population. While Colorado’s employment-to-population ratio continues to improve since April, when it was 58.3 percent, it still falls well below the February level of 67.7 percent.
  • The Colorado counties with the highest unemployment rates in October were:

    San Miguel (8.0%), Huerfano (7.9%), Summit (7.9%), Pueblo (7.8%), and Pitkin (7.6%). County-level unemployment rates are not seasonally adjusted and are directly comparable to Colorado’s October unadjusted rate of 6.2 percent.

Establishment survey data 

Employers in Colorado added 21,100 nonfarm payroll jobs from September to October for a total of 2,688,100 jobs, according to the survey of business establishments. Private sector payroll jobs increased by 22,000. Government shed 900 jobs in October, with the majority of those losses attributable to the end of the 2020 Census campaign and related temporary jobs. Since May, Colorado has gained back 217,000 of the 342,300 nonfarm payroll jobs lost between February and April. That translates to a job recovery rate of 63.4 percent, which exceeds the U.S. rate of 54.5 percent.

Other highlights from the establishment survey: 

  • September estimates were revised up to 2,667,000, and the over the month change from August to September was a gain of 15,200 rather than the originally estimated increase of 13,400 (monthly revisions are based on additional responses from businesses and government agencies since the last published estimates).
  • Private industry sectors with significant job gains in October were: trade, transportation, and utilities (~7,600), leisure and hospitality (~5,800), financial activities (~2,800), construction (~2,500), professional and business services (~1,600), and education and health services (~1,300). There were no significant private sector over the month declines.
  • Since October 2019, nonfarm payroll jobs have decreased 111,600, with losses totaling 80,600 in the private sector and 31,000 in government. The largest private sector job losses were in leisure and hospitality (~49,500), other services (~9,600), and education and health services (~9,400). Colorado’s rate of job loss over the past year is -4.0 percent, compared to the U.S. rate of -6.1 percent.
  • Over the year, the average workweek for all Colorado employees on private nonfarm payrolls increased from 33.1 to 33.6 hours, while average hourly earnings rose from $30.53 to $30.84, over a dollar and thirty cents more than the national average hourly earnings of $29.50.
Original source can be found here.

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