Colorado’s Diversity of Job Growth

cber.co tracks changes in employment for 23 sectors of the Colorado economy. Part of that tracking includes a two-step process for measuring Colorado’s diversity of job growth.

The first step is to identify the number of sectors that are adding jobs. For the last three years the data shows:
• In 2012 19 sectors added jobs
• In 2013 19 sectors added jobs
• In 2014 18 sectors will add jobs (estimate).

As a point of reference, a comparison can be made to the following years:
• In 1993 22 sectors added jobs
• In 1998 22 sectors added jobs
• In 2002 13 sectors added jobs
• in 2003 10 sectors added jobs
• in 2009 8 sectors added jobs
• In 2010 10 sectors added jobs.
This shows that during the best of times, some sectors lose jobs. As well, it illustrates that during the worst of times, there are sectors adding jobs.

Another way to look at the data is to calculate the percent of employment in sectors where jobs are being added. For the last three years the data shows:
• In 2012 the sectors that added jobs had 88.5% of total employment.
• In 2013 the sectors that added jobs had 89.2% of total employment.
• In 2014 the sectors that added jobs had 85.4% of total employment (estimate).
The 2014 percentage might increase when the BLS revises 2014 data in March 2015.

As a point of reference, a comparison can be made to the following years:
• In 1993 the sectors that added jobs had 99.1% of total employment.
• In 1998 the sectors that added jobs had 99.6% of total employment.
• In 2002 the sectors that added jobs had 49.4% of total employment.
• In 2003 the sectors that added jobs had 36.7% of total employment.
• In 2009 the sectors that added jobs had 27.3% of total employment.
• In 2010 the sectors that added jobs had 33.2% of total employment.

The data shows that since 2012 Colorado’s job growth has been diverse and solid.

diversity of job growth

 

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