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Michigan jobless rate edges up to 5.1% in May

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Creative Commons/Flickr

This slight increase is the first discernible movement in the jobless rate in quite awhile

Michigan’s jobs picture remained stable in May as the unemployment rate rose slightly to 5.1%.

The increase of one-tenth of a percentage point from April to May is the first discernible movement in the jobless rate in quite a while, said Michigan Bureau of Labor Market Information Director Wayne Rourke. But it is a “low-fire low-hire” jobs market right now as workers are largely staying put in their current positions.

“It’s been pretty flat for six months or so at 5%, but at 5.1% it’s the same as it was last year,” he said. “So the unemployment rate’s hit a time of stability in the last year or two where it hasn't moved outside of that range of  5% percent range for a long time.”

He said the jobs numbers right now are driven more by demographics than large-scale hiring or layoffs.

“The labor force of the prime age workers and the younger workers is actually steady or going up,” he said. “But the older population, those 65-plus has actually driven the labor force down, the participation down, as those people leave the labor market.”

Rourke said demand for new hires is expected to grow, but a big question is whether Michigan will have trained and educated workers qualified to take those positions.

Michigan’s May unemployment rate is higher than the national rate, which stands at 4.5%.

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