Los Angeles County’s unemployment rate dropped to 10.1% in August from 10.4% in July as many schools started their academic year, according to data released Sept. 17.
A year ago, the county’s unemployment rate was a stratospheric 17.2% as the region was only just starting to open up after the initial pandemic lockdown.
EDD also released a breakdown of unemployment rates for cities within the county. The two largest cities, Los Angeles and Long Beach, posted rates of 9.7% and 10.2%, respectively. Among cities with at least 10,000 people in the labor force, Compton had the highest unemployment rate of 13.6% while Lomita had the lowest at 5.2%.
Meanwhile, employers in L.A. County reported a net 55,500 more jobs on their payrolls in August than in July.
EDD releases another payroll jobs figure that adjusts for seasonal factors, especially in the education sector. That seasonally adjusted figure for August showed payroll job growth from July of 78,000, the largest number of jobs added in roughly a year.
Outside of the education sector, the motion picture and sound recording sector added 6,000 jobs to reach 107,000, the biggest gain for the entertainment content industry since last October and a sign that film and television production is gaining momentum. But the industry has only recovered about 22% of the jobs lost in the pandemic shutdown.
Only one sector reported job losses in August compared to July: real estate, which shed 1,500 jobs to just under 80,000.
The 4.25 million total payroll jobs for August reflected a gain of about 400,000 jobs since the worst of the pandemic lockdown in April 2020. But it’s down about 370,000 jobs from February 2020, the peak month before the lockdown, and down 380,000 from August 2019, showing the county still has a long way to go to reach pre-pandemic payroll job levels.
And since the EDD survey was taken in the second week of August, a resurgence of the pandemic took hold; anecdotally at least, that appears to have reversed some of the hiring trends of previous months. That slowdown may show up in the September numbers to be released next month.
Since August of last year, the county gained a net 275,000 payroll jobs for an increase of 6.9%, a faster growth rate than the 6.1% reported between July 2020 and this past July.
The accommodation/food services sector gained the most payroll jobs over the past year at 71,000, followed by arts/entertainment/recreation (up 37,000 jobs) and professional and business services (up 32,000 jobs). The motion picture and sound recording industry gained 19,000 payroll jobs over the past year.
Manufacturing was the only sector to report a drop in payroll jobs over the past 12 months, shedding about 1,100 jobs. This marks a return to pre-pandemic trends as manufacturing was frequently the only major job sector to record consistent year-over-year declines in payroll jobs.