Fewer San Diegans were out of work in August despite the usual drop in tourism jobs, state officials reported Friday to the San Diego Union Tribune.
Fewer San Diegans were out of work in August despite the usual drop in tourism jobs, state officials reported Friday to the San Diego Union Tribune.
Just like the weather over the last few days, San Diego has seen economic markets heating up.
San Diego County continued to create jobs in February, keeping the unemployment rate unchanged from January at 4.7 percent, state officials reported Friday.
U.S. hiring swelled in October by the largest amount all year, and unemployment dropped another notch to 5 percent.
San Diego County’s economy has hit a three-month slump, a study from University of San Diego shows.
Californians can expect continued job growth and lower unemployment over the next three years, but housing costs are expected to continue to rise, according to the UCLA Anderson Forecast released Monday.
State unemployment rates dropped in 29 states and Puerto Rico in August.
San Diego County’s unemployment rate closed in on pre-recession levels in February, dropping to a nearly seven-year low of 5.3 percent.
The nation’s economy will expand at its fastest pace since the end of the Great Recession, and California is going to have a lot to do with that success.
San Diego County’s unemployment rate dropped to 6 percent in April.