![]() |
Monday January 5, 2009 | ||||||
| |||||||
|
your email address:
|
New Jersey Jobs Creation:
Not There Yet (Despite What You’ve Heard)
TRENTON—If you’ve been reading the newspaper lately, you may be of the opinion that New Jersey is well on its way to recovery. Although the new jobs numbers are encouraging, one good month of job creation does not a recovery make. Despite the big bump in the number of jobs created in March, the federal government is still far behind in its job growth predictions when applied to New Jersey. This is the primary finding of an analysis of jobs data through March 2004, conducted by New Jersey Policy Perspective and the Washington-based Economic Policy Institute as part of EPI’s JobWatch program to monitor employment nationwide since the latest round of federal tax cuts. For more on JobWatch, go to http://www.jobwatch.org. "Gaining 12,900 jobs in a month is encouraging," said NJPP President Jon Shure. "The trouble is, we’d have to gain that many jobs every month through December to meet the promise of the federal tax cuts that are going disproportionately to the wealthiest people." The federal Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act was passed in May of 2003 and implemented in June. The stated mission of the tax-cut measure was to stimulate the economy and increase jobs. But the increase in jobs is far below what supporters of the act projected. Nationally, supporters of the tax cuts predicted creation of 306,000 jobs per month for the United States.
The JobWatch analysis takes into account differences that can be expected among states in terms of job creation. EPI uses state-by-state employment forecasts of Economy.com, a leading forecaster of regional economics. Economy.com provides employment projections for each state for the fourth quarter of 2002 to the fourth quarter of 2004. Using this data, EPI calculated each state’s share of the total employment growth and applied it to the projected 306,000-jobs-per month growth rate to calculate how much employment growth each state should experience if the federal government’s employment projects were realized. That works out to an average of 9,000 new jobs per month for New Jersey. Economic Policy Institute’s JobWatch tracks current trends in the U.S. labor market and offers up-to-date readings on its status. New Jersey Policy Perspective is a non-profit, non-partisan organization that conducts research and analysis aimed at providing information to help inform debate in New Jersey.
|