voiceofsandiego.org: Toscano... Employment Goes Positive
an independent nonprofit |
We depend on your donations. Consider joining us today.

Employment Goes Positive



In March, San Diego employment fell on a year-over-year basis -- the first annualized decline for fifteen years.

In April, job growth went positive once again.

The housing boom beneficiary sectors provided their requisite drag, but according to the estimates released today by California's Employment Development Department, job growth outside those sectors was strong enough to drag the region as a whole into positive territory.

The accompanying graph displays the number of jobs added or lost by the three housing boom sectors in addition to jobs gained outside those sectors and overall. Construction was hardest hit with a loss of 7,900 jobs or 9.0 percent, followed by finance and real estate with a loss of 5,300 jobs or 6.5 percent and then by retail with a loss of 1,600 jobs or 1.1 percent.

Things were much brighter in the region's other economic sectors, which grew by a total of 17,500 jobs or 1.8 percent. Overall employment growth was 2,700 jobs or .2 percent -- not great, but at least lacking a minus sign.

Please note that the graph displays the data a bit differently than in the past. Now, each data point represents that month's change from a year prior. This method provides a better picture of the trends at work by automatically accounting for seasonal effects. I have also switched from graphing percent declines to showing the actual number of jobs gained or lost in order to represent each sector's relative influence on the overall employment picture. (Thanks to reader JP for the suggestions on how to better visualize this data.)

The graph shows that while everything but retail bounced last month, job growth in the construction, finance, and retail sectors appear to be in somewhat of a longer-term downtrend. The same could be said for overall job growth. However, employment outside the housing boom sectors appears to have been quite steady, oscillating around the 15,000 jobs-per-year mark as far back as the graph goes. We aren't seeing much in the way of second-order effects from the housing bust.

As I wrote in February and revisited in March, these preliminary estimates involve some pretty heavy guesswork and are subject to substantial revision. Assuming that they are correct, however, it looks like San Diego's comparatively robust non-housing economy prevailed in April.

-- RICH TOSCANO



A Nerd's Eye View

Rich Toscano is a financial advisor with Pacific Capital Associates*;
he also writes about San Diego real estate at Piggington's Econo-Almanac.
Contact him at rtoscano@pcasd.com.

A Quick Fix:

 

If you checked out the list of school bond projects last week, check again.

Monday, July 7 -- 3:50 pm

Angry Over La Raza:

 

City Hall flooded with e-mails, calls protesting San Diego's honoring of Latino rights group

Monday, July 7 -- 3:47 pm

SD Dives into Private Equity:

 

NY Times looks at San Diego's latest pension bet.

Monday, July 7 -- 5:56 pm


Sponsored By

MOST POPULAR STORIES:

SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

Survival Gone Fishin' -- Really :

 

My dad caught some salmon, my sister's getting hitched and the Great White North beckons.

Friday, June 27 -- 5:42 pm

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

No Love for Lindbergh:

 

Why has San Diego fallen off of the Los Angeles Times’ radar?

Monday, July 7 -- 4:11 pm

CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

How'd You Get on This Story? :

 

And how did you get Susan Golding to talk? More reader questions on the George Gorton profile.

Wednesday, June 25 -- 1:28 pm

COMMENTARY: SLOP

And Now, the Port :

 

The agency joins a long list of San Diego governments willing to spend the public's money telling them how to vote.

Sunday, July 6 -- 6:57 pm

COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Silent Spring :

 

The spring selling season has come and gone with no hint of the the typical seasonal rally in home prices.

Friday, July 4 -- 1:35 pm

Sponsored by

This Just In

Pension Investment Chief Retires:

 The fund has been hit hard by investment losses. » Nov. 20 -- 3:55 pm



Another Take on Small High Schools:

 Forbes on whether carving up big schools worked.

Nov. 20 -- 10:21 am


The Fix's Reasoning:

 Why CCDC limited its new audit practice to its president.

Nov. 19 -- 6:06 pm


SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGO

'Maybe Renting Isn't Such a Bad Thing':

 More thoughts on homeownership.

Nov. 20 -- 5:21 pm



LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Where's the Beef?:

 Time to pony up.

Nov. 20 -- 7:20 pm



CAFÉ SAN DIEGO

Holslin Back:

 Follow up to your responses and questions.

Nov. 20 -- 7:07 pm



COMMENTARY: SLOP

The Stench of Renting, Cont.:

 Readers snap, but let's keep a few things in mind.

Nov. 20 -- 10:27 am



COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANO

Homes Sales Up Big in October:

 Sales rose and inventory declined, but as always there are caveats.

Nov. 17 -- 1:40 pm


Copyright © 2008 voiceofsandiego.org. All Rights Reserved.