Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, has been quoted as saying that the reason the country hasn't
seen more job growth is due to fiscal policy.
An HIS Global Insight report predicts that 2015 will see
even more job growth, with about 2.6 million new positions.
That said, economic fundamentals remain decent: Annual growth in gross domestic product is expected to be in the 2 percent range, and unemployment could push down toward 4 percent,
meaning more job growth.
«Younger population plus
more job growth tends to equal more mobility, which in turn means higher turnover or lower retention.»
We're focused mostly on markets that are
seeing more job growth — tech cities in particular like Austin, Raleigh, N.C., San Francisco and Seattle.