Highland County unemployment plummets

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The unemployment rate in Highland County fell in April to 3.9 percent, a drop of two percent from the previous month, according to figures released by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services (ODJFS).

The ODJFS said the labor force in Highland County has 17,500 workers, with 16,800 members of the force employed and 700 unemployed. The numbers are not seasonally adjusted.

Of the 88 counties in Ohio, Highland County is ranked 18th in terms of the highest unemployment rate in the state, tied with three other counties.

Seasonal adjustment, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, is a “statistical technique that attempts to measure and remove the influences of predictable seasonal patterns to reveal how employment and unemployment change from month to month.”

It considers the changes in labor market activity because of seasonal events like weather, harvests and major holidays. Because the seasonal events are mostly the same every year, the change in the trends can be eliminated by seasonally adjusting the statistics from month to month. The adjustments allow people to see the underlying trends and other nonseasonal movements, ODJFS said.

The county unemployment rates in Ohio ranged from a low of 1.9 percent in Mercer County to a high of 5.0 percent in Monroe County.

The state had ten counties at or below 2.5 percent unemployment in April: Mercer County at 1.9 percent, Holmes County at 2.0 percent, Wyandot County at 2.1 percent, Putnam and Union counties at 2.3 percent, Auglaize, Delaware, Van Wert and Wayne counties at 2.4 percent and Hancock County at 2.5 percent.

The state had five counties at or above 4.5 percent unemployment in April: Monroe County at 5.0 percent, Meigs and Ottawa counties at 4.6 percent and Erie and Scioto counties at 4.5 percent.

According to ODJFS, unemployment decreased in all 88 counties in Ohio in April.

Of the six counties contiguous to Highland County, Ross County had 3.0 percent unemployment in April, Fayette County had 3.2 percent, Clinton County had 3.3 percent, Brown County had 3.7 percent, Pike County had 4.2 percent and Adams County had 4.3 percent.

Reach Jacob Clary at 937-402-2570.

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