That meant a net 69,000 fewer jobs were added in the first quarter of 2015, making the first -
quarter average jobs growth per month only 197,000 — much slower than the 324,000 in the previous quarter.
Not exact matches
Dealogic recorded an
average of 33 I.P.O.'s per
quarter in the year before the
JOBS Act versus 31 I.P.O.'s per
quarter in the year after.
During the worst stretch, the first
quarter of 2009, the U.S. economy was shedding 750,000
jobs a month on
average.
The data showed a rebound from March's softer - than - expected
jobs number, and minor revisions left the first -
quarter average at 176,000, only a small dip from the
average seen over 2016.
In contrast, the ABS
job vacancies measure has fallen in each of the past two
quarters, although it remains above the
average seen since 1990.
«But in past six years upstate
job growth is 2.7 % - only ONE
QUARTER of national
average.
There are more
job vacancies, with an
average of 529,000 unfulfilled vacancies in April - June 2013, up 24,000 on the previous
quarter and 56,000 on a year ago
The
jobs picture was gloomier upstate, where employment grew by an
average of only 2.7 percent — a
quarter of the national
average.
That series showed that
job growth upstate under Cuomo is one -
quarter the national
average, despite massive government subsidies.
There, less than a
quarter of full - time staff leave their
job each year, on
average, versus more than 80 percent of part - timers.
In fact, though the numbers fluctuated somewhat month to month in 2013, each
quarter averaged a higher
job count than the previous one.
Nashville's stellar annual
job growth (3.44 percent, seventh - highest in the U.S.), moderately low vacancy rate (4.80 percent, almost 30 percent lower than the national
average), and even lower median age of housing inventory (a mere 42 days, 33 percent lower than the national
average) also highlight how exceptionally strong the demand for Nashville housing currently is and will likely continue to be for many
quarters to come.
Washington, D.C.'s low median age of housing inventory (54 days, nine days less than the national
average), even lower vacancy rate (5.20 percent, about 23 percent less than the national
average), and moderately high annual
job growth rate of 2.19 percent indicate that demand for housing there is and will likely remain quite strong, making D.C. a profitable market for rental real estate investors for
quarters to come.