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Jobless rate on track for record

Figures show many in state quit looking

As the state's jobless rate sped toward a record in March, thousands of Nevadans gave up on finding jobs and left the work force, new numbers revealed Friday.

It's the first month since the recession's December 2007 start in which state economists observed a noticeable number of residents quitting the job hunt. Nearly 14,000 Nevadans dropped out of the labor force from February to March, according to the state Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation. The trend helped cap work force expansion: The labor pool grew 2.8 percent year-over-year in March, down from year-over-year growth of 4.5 percent in February.


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People who opt out of the work force don't count in unemployment tabulations, so the rising ranks of the discouraged should ease growth in joblessness. But even with the decline in job seekers, the Silver State's unemployment rate jumped nearly half a percentage point from February to March, going from 10 percent to 10.4 percent. Nevada's unemployment rate was almost double the level of March 2008, when the share of residents without work came in at 5.8 percent.

Unemployment in Las Vegas rose from 5.6 percent to 10.4 percent year-over-year in March.

March's joblessness was the highest the state has seen since March 1983, and it's nearly two percentage points above the national rate of 8.5 percent.

The record for joblessness in Nevada hit 10.7 percent in December 1982. The low of 4.2 percent came in March 2006.

Experts said Friday that Nevada's unemployment will almost certainly beat the historical high.

"Over the next several months, we're likely to see the worst of this downturn," said Bill Anderson, chief economist for the department of employment. "I fully expect us to surpass that 10.7 percent mark in the near term, though not necessarily next month or the month after."

Keith Schwer, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said he "wouldn't at all be surprised" if unemployment in Nevada reached 11 percent. He said he expects joblessness to continue upward into 2010 even if the recession eases before 2009's end. Improvements in unemployment typically lag economic revival, partly because companies stay cautious about hiring in the earliest phases of recovery, and partly because discouraged workers who left the labor force return and boost a market's share of unemployed.

Job loss visited virtually every sector of the state's economy in March, sparing only mining and the combined category of education and health services. In Las Vegas, the construction sector dropped 13,500 jobs, or 14.3 percent of its work force, year-over-year in March. Manufacturing lost 1,600 positions, or 6.2 percent of its base. Employers in leisure and hospitality sliced 15,900 jobs from their payrolls, for a reduction of 5.8 percent. Finance had 2,500 fewer workers, for a job loss of 5.2 percent. The jobs base declined 8.9 percent, or 10,200 positions, among professional and business services such as accounting firms and architecture studios. And government employment shrank by 0.4 percent, or 400 jobs.

Joblessness wasn't so evenly distributed regionally.

Anderson divided Nevada into three geographic categories with differing levels of unemployment.

Counties heavy on suburban bedroom communities have suffered the most, because they relied the most on new-home construction. Unemployment in Nye County, home to Pahrump, reached 13 percent in March. In Lyon County, near Reno, joblessness skyrocketed to 15.3 percent.

Metropolitan areas such as Las Vegas and Reno-Sparks, which rely on consumer spending to drive economic growth, posted the second-worst overall performance, Anderson said. Joblessness in Reno-Sparks was 11.2 percent in March.

The recession has largely spared rural counties, where mining prevails. In Elko, unemployment actually fell from February to March, dropping from 6.4 percent to 6.2 percent, though Elko's unemployment was below 5 percent a year earlier.

Still, as bleak as Friday's report looked, long-term job formation in Nevada remains positive.

The Silver State lost 67,400 jobs year-over-year in March, but that figure tracks well below the 250,000 or so jobs Nevada added from 2002 to 2007. The jobs base in Las Vegas grew 27 percent between 2002 and 2007; subtract the 5.2 percent of positions it dropped in the 12 months prior to March, and the city can still claim a jobs gain of more than 20 percent since 2002.

Nevada held onto its position in the top 10 states for unemployment nationally, ranking No. 7. California ranked No. 4, with a jobless rate of 11.2 percent. Michigan led the nation in unemployment, at 12.6 percent.

The employment department's analysis also shows the current recession has hurt the Silver State more substantially than did the recession of 1981 and 1982.

In the 15 months following a July 1981 peak in the business cycle, the number of jobs in Nevada declined 2.7 percent. In the 15 months following the current cycle's high point of December 2007, the state's job count has dropped by more than 7 percent.

Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512.

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nick wrote on April 19, 2009 02:09 PM: well i opose the amenesty for millions of undocument workers but i think we schold all suport the dream act b/c its for students....for education....and its not their fault being here illegaly.....so i fully suport the DREAM ACT 2009 but opose the any kind of amenesty for any illegal workers they are law breakers.....


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Unemployment Is For What?? wrote on April 18, 2009 04:17 PM: So this is just to say the jobless rate is probably higher than that considering that ALOT of people did not qualify for the State Extended benefits like myself just because all my EUC funds had run out 1 day before the State Extended took place..With the unemployment rate like it is and not EVERYONE giving up I think they at this time should not deny ANYBODY!! What is wrong with this state...Everyone else I talk to in other states that are not feeling the recession like Nevada and other BIG Cities are getting extended benefits no matter what. Tell me what is wrong with this?? I have filed an appeal for my benefits and am hoping to win this because I worked for years for this money and I look everyday for a job and submitt paperwork showing I look and still the government doesn't want to help anymore when they are the reason and also Bush to why America is in this mess.


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Joe Bama wrote on April 18, 2009 03:12 PM: What the hell is a "diversity stimulus career fair"? Is that like the one at Palace station where they had Avon reps and Marine Corps recruiters? Is that diverse enough for you? Maybe they hoped the job seekers would cash their unemployment checks at the cage and head for the dice tables.


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Only in Vegas wrote on April 18, 2009 01:01 PM: There are four kinds of people in this world … Leaders, followers, mentally impeded, and Illegal Immigrants. (latter two can be combined)
Instead of bailing out mentally impeded /greedy corporations with all them tax dollars, why not use the money to hire legal Americans to be part of the ICE Team and clean-up the very problem that is putting this once great country in the downward spiral?
You can eliminate the 10+% State unemployment overnight, because it will take every darn one of them to clean this town up!

I’m frikking tired of living in Tijuajuna!
I can’t spell because they can’t speak the language.
Remember if the “West Coast” goes down the whole country goes down!


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outtahere wrote on April 18, 2009 11:56 AM: There's ONLY one thing left to do: HEAD FOR THE BORDER! Of NV that is. I'm outta here. The negativity continues to seethe through this community like the bubonic plague. At least where I'm going the grass is greener literally and figurativly. Good luck to those of you who stick it out and stay. I'll be back someday and transform into one of touristas that we all love to hate. Viva Lost Wages.


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jm0405 wrote on April 18, 2009 10:41 AM: Mexican doesn't like being unemployed? Go home!!! Return to your sorry country!

No one is hiring. If they were, the frequent job fairs would be putting people to work. Every job has hundreds of applicants, but the company doesn't hire anyone. Maybe because it's costly to run a business in NV and they cannot afford to hire people??

Reid is in the Senate,has power/clout, why isn't he doing anything for the educational system here? He has been MIA since all the teachers/professors started getting fired. Where is he to get taxes lowered so people can afford to run a business here? Instead, community is left with corrupt judges, crooked cops and Governor Jim. Woohoo!! Nice.


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Unfair tax system wrote on April 18, 2009 10:15 AM: Why does this government unfairly punish those with the ability to make money and create private sector jobs? If we, the People, can ever get rid of this current immoral tax code, then things will brighten up in a hurry. The Fair Tax is the best way to generate government revenue, not the taxing (theft) of people's wages and earnings. Let the people determine how and when to pay a tax by their consumption. Leave the producers alone. But alas, it's an uphill struggle to cut free from the enslaving fascist tentacles that bind us, an alledgely "free" peoples.


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Go outta State for jobs wrote on April 18, 2009 10:08 AM: Why are the "unemployed" hanging around in Nevada when there are plenty of jobs outside the State? Doesn't make sense. If you want to work there is plenty of work elsewhere. Good paying jobs, too... if you've got some kind of edumacation. Perhaps that may be the show stopper.


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winston wrote on April 18, 2009 09:59 AM: The answer is give a 100% tax break to those who make over $ 250,000 then we can raise the taxes on those people who will be getting all the new jobs the these tax breaks create? Did it not work the past 8 years?


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Sanjoy wrote on April 18, 2009 09:47 AM: You IDIOTS that voted for the IDIOT in the White House that selected ONE city to personally attack, you got exactly what you voted for...try your best to think about your vote next time. If you can't think aboutit, ask someone with intelligence.


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