Thirty-one
months into their current employment expansion, New
Jersey’s private-sector employers are crawling
through one of the weakest periods of job growth in
more than half a century, an analysis of State employment
data shows.
Underscoring this trend, private-sector employment
declined by 2,900 jobs in October, dragging down an
already anemic job-growth performance, the New Jersey
Business & Industry Association found in its analysis
of NJ Department of Labor employment data.
For the first ten months of the year , New Jersey’s
private-sector employers have added just 25,800 jobs.
At this rate of growth, New Jersey can expect to add
about as many private-sector jobs as it added in 2004,
which was 31,300, a gain of less than 1 percent. This
is well below the rate of private-sector employment
growth for the nation as a whole. It is also well below
the rate of comparable job growth in New Jersey during
the previous two economic expansions in the 1980s and
1990s. (See Chart 1)
Commenting on the Labor Department’s October
report, NJBIA President Philip Kirschner said this is
disappointing news for the New Jersey economy. He noted,
“We’re seeing a slowdown in an already slow
employment recovery.”
Since hitting a cyclical low in March 2003, private-sector
employment in New Jersey has grown by only 73,600 new
jobs. This works out to an average annual gain of less
than 30,000 jobs, less than half of the annual growth
of nearly 67,000 private sector jobs in the 1990s expansion
and less than a third of nearly 100,000 jobs created
annually in the 1980s boom.
Because employment growth has been so weak, New Jersey’s
private sector hasn’t even recouped all of the
jobs lost in the 2001-2002 recession. As of October,
employment was still 12,800 jobs shy of the peak of
3.43 million jobs achieved in December 2000, the month
before the recession hit. (See
Table 1)
Although New Jersey’s unemployment rate has been
lower than the nation’s for more than two years,
economists say that the rate at which new private-sector
jobs are being created is a more meaningful gauge of
a state’s economic health. From this vantage point,
the performance of the New Jersey economy leaves a lot
to be desired, and it also trails the nation.
The national economy created more than 2 million private-sector
jobs last year, a nearly 2 percent increase, making
2004 a breakout year for the United States as a whole.
By contrast, New Jersey created only 31,300 private-sector
jobs in 2004, a gain of barely 1 percent. This placed
the Garden State 41st in the nation in its rate of employment
growth.
Commenting on this data, Rutgers University economists
James Hughes and Joe Seneca noted in their July 2005
Rutgers Regional Report that New Jersey’s 2002-2005
expansion “has demonstrated unprecedented weakness.”
And they urged the state to put a renewed focus on policies
that would encourage private-sector job growth.
“The State is no longer one of the leaders in
employment growth; instead, it lags the nation,”
Hughes and Seneca wrote.
Even when compared to its historical employment growth
trend, New Jersey is performing poorly. Since World
War II, employment in New Jersey has grown by an average
of about 40,000 new jobs a year, an average that includes
both up years and down years.
“The bottom line is that the current expansion
has had…the weakest private-sector employment
growth of any expansion in the post-World War II era,”
Hughes and Seneca wrote in their report.
The current employment weakness is even more pronounced
when compared to the two previous expansions. Between
1993 and 2000, New Jersey’s private sector employers
added an average of 66,600 new jobs every year. (The
average annual gain in the 1980s, an exceptional period
of growth, was closer to 100,000.)
Underlying the state’s weak employment growth
are a number of factors, among them: 1) a struggling
manufacturing sector that has lost more than 97,000
jobs since December 2000, 2) a weak rate of employment
growth in the normally robust service industries, and
3) exceptionally weak growth in high-paying service
industries that accounted for much of the State’s
growth in the 1990s.
Manufacturing
The biggest factor behind New Jersey’s disappointing
job-growth performance in recent years has been an enormous
slide in manufacturing jobs. Over the last four and
a half years, a quarter of all manufacturing jobs in
this state have disappeared, offsetting employment gains
in other sectors of the economy.
Specifically, between December 2000 (the start of the
recession) and October 2005, total manufacturing employment
fell by 97,100 jobs, falling to 324,900 from 422,000,
a 23 percent decline. (See
Chart 2)
These losses were particularly acute in 2001, when
40,000 positions vanished. In the two years that followed,
the losses moderated, but were still significant, with
a decline of 23,600 jobs in 2002 and 14,000 in 2003.
A reprieve of sorts followed in 2004 with a loss of
only 7,300 manufacturing jobs. Hopes that this reprieve
would carry into 2005 did not materialize. The first
ten months of 2005 brought a loss of 12,100 jobs.
New Jersey’s manufacturing employment losses
have been nearly universal, affecting every major industry
group. Between 2000 and 2004, all major groups except
pharmaceuticals sustained losses of between 48 percent
(apparel) and 8 percent (chemicals). (See
Table 2) Pharmaceuticals (a subcategory
of chemicals) managed a small gain of 1,600 jobs over
the period, up 4 percent.
The driving force behind these losses is the exceptionally
high cost of doing business in New Jersey. High costs
make it very difficult for New Jersey manufacturers
to compete with low-cost competitors in other countries
and states. Some of those costs include employee health
coverage, energy, taxation and environmental compliance.
Service Sector
But manufacturing alone is not to blame for New Jersey’s
weak employment picture. In the private sector, poorly
performing service industries have also contributed
to sub-par growth.
The service sector was the workhorse of New Jersey’s
robust 1992-2000 economic expansion, powering the bulk
of the employment gains in that period. The 1990s expansion
produced an average of 66,600 private service jobs annually.
Just as importantly, the bulk of those service-sector
jobs were in high-paying positions in financial, business
and professional services.
But in the current expansion, the service sector is
a powerhouse no longer—not in the number of jobs
it has produced nor in the quality of those jobs.
In 2003 and 2004, the State’s private service-producing
industries created a total of 48,200 new jobs. (The
main service industries are financial, business and
professional, education and health, and leisure and
hospitality.) This produced an annual gain of 24,100,
a mere one third of the sector’s average annual
gain of 67,700 in the 1990s.
Just as worrisome in the current expansion are the
types of new service jobs being created. In an article
entitled: “Hamburger Flippers Come on Strong,”
Hughes and Seneca point out that most of the gains in
the service sector are coming from lower-paying jobs
in retail, education and health, as well as leisure
and hospitality. Far fewer jobs are being created in
the high-paying financial and business and professional
services industries—the very same industries that
provided the bulk of new services jobs in the 1990s.
(See Table 1)
The economists point out that “lagging growth
in these high-paying sectors has been particularly hard
on the State’s office markets.” Among other
things, this means that vacancy rates in Class A office
buildings are still hovering around 25 percent, which
is, according to Hughes and Seneca, one of the highest
rates in the country.
They conclude in another report that while Corporate
America might not be abandoning New Jersey, “it
appears to be concentrating its expansion outside of
the State’s borders.” They say that this
“may well be signaling a loss of economic competitiveness”
for New Jersey.
Conclusion
The current rate of private-sector job growth in New
Jersey is one of the slowest in the country. A big loss
of manufacturing jobs and a painfully slow recovery
in a number of the State’s higher-paying service
sectors combined to place New Jersey 41st in the nation
in its rate of private-sector employment growth last
year.
In the first ten months of this year, New Jersey created
only 25,800 private-sector jobs, which barely puts it
on track to match last year’s weak performance.
The current slow rate of job growth is in sharp contrast
to the two previous expansion cycles. The 1990s produced
nearly 67,000 new private sector jobs annually, and
the 1980s, closer to 100,000.
Two of New Jersey’s leading regional economists,
Hughes and Seneca of Rutgers University, warn that the
current weak performance may signal “a loss of
economic competitiveness in New Jersey” as companies
look to other states to expand their operations.



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