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The gap between job growth in Connecticut and the national pace of job recovery since the pandemic recession is expected to widen, hampering state economic growth in the years to come, according ...
Job growth in CT was steady in 2021 — but still not enough to recover from COVID by Erica E. Phillips December 22, 2021 @ 5:00 am Updated June 30, 2022 @ 5:00 pm.
Post-pandemic Connecticut has fallen behind nationally in several key economic metrics, including in job growth which is 3.3 percentage points lower than that of the national average, according to ...
This means there are about 55,560 fewer jobs in the state than if Connecticut had maintained its growth with the U.S. since February 2020, says the report by the research-based advocacy group ...
“Job growth is a major component of economic growth more broadly, which is a major source of growth in the tax base,” the report found. “Compared to the U.S., Connecticut’s slower job ...
those were the sectors where jobs had been growing the fastest in the state. “Connecticut unemployment is slightly higher than national average, particularly because Connecticut’s growth had ...
Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont speaks to Chris DiPentima on his plans to improve the state's economy at the Connecticut Business Industry Association's conference in 2022. A top business expert ...
Employers added just 500 jobs in Connecticut in April, putting the brakes on a recovery that showed promise in March when more than 10 times the number of jobs were filled, the state Department of ...
A recent report showing the state grew far fewer jobs in 2018 than originally anticipated is only the tip of a more dangerous economic iceberg, one key Connecticut economist warns. The revised ...
While the US job market continues to grow robustly this year, adding 1.3 million jobs through August, Connecticut’s has stalled. The state has added only 400 jobs in a state of 3.6 million ...
The job growth is mostly due to expanding and new ... In addition to New York, states such as Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey, and Rhode Island created a total of 13,000 new jobs.