- In its preliminary estimates, the Bureau of Labor Statistics suggests that Massachusetts added 3,900 jobs in April. The job gains over the previous month (March 2017) occurred in Professional, Scientific, and Business Services; Education and Health Services; Trade, Transportation, and Utilities; Other Services; Information; and Manufacturing.
- The state’s labor force participation rate increased to 66.5 percent from 65.9 percent with an increase of 33,000 entrants into the job market.
- Government lost 1,000 jobs in April but since last year the sector has added 7,700 jobs or 1.7 percent.
ANALYSIS
- More workers are coming off the sidelines to enter the job market. The state’s unemployment rate for April 2017 increased only because the labor force saw an increase of 33,000 workers or 1.5 percent since last year. This represents a healthier view of full employment. The unemployment rate of 3.9 percent is still lower than the national rate of 4.4 percent. Since April 2016, the Administrative & Support, Waste Management, and Remediation sector added 7,000 jobs, the percentage leader at 3.9 percent. The Health Care and Social Assistance subsector continues to grow adding 18,300 jobs — at a 3.0 percent clip. Education Services has remained flat adding zero jobs while the Arts, Entertainment and Recreation subsector lost 1,300 jobs. Local government remains a strong jobs generator with 5,800 jobs. Despite well-known struggles, the Retail sector added 4,100 since last April.