May 29, 2015

Some Analysts Say Not All Is Well With Indiana's Economy, Despite Low Unemployment

stock photo

stock photo

State leaders celebrated last week over news that Indiana’s unemployment rate is at its lowest level in seven years, while the total number of jobs surged to a near-record high.  But some analysts say it’s not time to pop the champagne yet.

Indiana’s unemployment rate dropped to 5.4 percent in April, reaching its lowest level since May of 2008.  But, Indiana Institute for Working Families Senior Policy Director Derek Thomas says he’s concerned that over the last three months the private sector added about 16,000 jobs, while 18,000 people left the state’s labor force.

He says a decrease in the labor force means Hoosiers are either retiring, going back to school, or giving up on the job search altogether.

“As a percent of the labor force, we find that that was the second largest exodus in the U.S. from the labor market, just behind Wisconsin,” Thomas said.

Senate Tax and Fiscal Policy Committee Chairman Brandt Hershman says while there’s always room for improvement, the labor force decline doesn’t dampen his enthusiasm.

“More people are working and that more aggressive labor market typically means higher wages for people as well,” Hershman said.

Indiana was just 7,800 hundred jobs away from what’s called peak employment, the most Hoosiers employed at once, a record set in the summer of 2000.

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