Orlando had the third - highest
job growth rate among the 40 biggest metro areas, with non-farm payroll jobs increasing 3.5 % between February 2017 and February 2018.
Not exact matches
Detroit's February 2018 unemployment
rate of 4.6 % was tied for eighth - highest
among the 40 biggest metro areas, and its non-farm payroll
job growth rate of 0.9 % between February 2017 and February 2018 was tied for eighth - lowest.
While Riverside's Q3 2017 average weekly wage of $ 848 was the lowest
among the 40 largest metro areas, its non-farm payroll
job growth rate of 3.9 % between February 2017 and February 2018 was the highest.
Jacksonville's non-farm payroll
job growth rate of 2.7 % between February 2017 and February 2018 was tied for seventh - best
among the 40 largest metro areas, but its 2016 GDP per capita of $ 48,406 was the fourth - lowest.
Phoenix's non-farm payroll
job growth rate of 3.0 % between February 2017 and 2018 was the fifth - highest
among the 40 largest metro areas, but its 2016 GDP per capita of $ 49,493 was the fifth - lowest.
Minneapolis» February 2018 unemployment
rate of 3.3 % was the seventh - lowest
among the 40 largest metro areas, but the non-farm payroll
job growth rate of 0.8 % was the sixth - slowest.
Cleveland had the highest February 2017 unemployment
rate of 5.7 %
among the 40 biggest metro areas, and the city's
job growth was the second - lowest, with non-farm payroll employment rising just 0.3 % between February 2016 and February 2017.
Austin had the second - highest
rate of
job growth among the 40 largest metro areas, with non-farm payroll employment increasing 3.7 % between February 2017 and February 2018.
Kansas City's 2016 GDP per capita of $ 61,320 was just below the average of $ 65,391
among the 40 largest metro areas, and its
job growth rate of 1.6 % between February 2017 and February 2018 was just below the average
rate of 1.8 %.
The number of nonfarm payroll
jobs in Utah went up 3.6 % between November 2014 and November 2015, the second - highest
growth rate among the states and DC.
Combining this with poor sales
growth results in a dismal outlook for earnings 3) the pressure on earnings will continue to hurt capital spending, which is usually just a magnified image of earnings, 4) the same factors will continue to raise default
rates, causing earnings problems and debt downgrades
among banks and financial companies, 5) earnings shortfalls will also lead to continued
job cutbacks, with the unemployment
rate rising to at least 5.5 % (indeed, once the unemployment
rate has advanced by 0.5 % from its lows, it has never reversed until rising by least 1.5 % off those lows).
Data tell another story:
Job growth in Erie and Niagara counties last year lagged behind the nation and rest of the state, the downtown office vacancy
rate rose last year and poverty in the city of Buffalo — like its sister city Rochester — is climbing and ranks
among the worst in the United States.
He's declared Buffalo «a national success story» while ignoring
job growth that's only half the national average and a poverty
rate that ranks
among the highest in the country.
Nowhere has that been more acute than the Southern Tier, where private - sector
job growth is
among the lowest in the state, and according to five - year figures provided by the state's Budget Division, almost one - seventh the
rate of the Big Apple.
Utah unemployment
rates are
among the lowest in the nation and
job growth rates are
among the highest.
The U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts a 13 %
job growth rate for accountants through 2022; an above average
rate for all
jobs and a positive
job outlook for prospective accountants, no wonder an accounting degree is very popular
among undergraduates as it ranks ninth most popular college degree in the U.S out of 200 others as published by Matchcollege.
According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation, Utah
rated extremely high for short - term
job growth, research and development funding and high - tech
job growth among other positive indicators.