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State Employment Now 20,000 Above Pre-Recession Peak, new data shows

New data released by the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce shows the state continues to add jobs, especially in manufacturing, while wage growth lags.

The Kentucky Chamber released a report Sunday, conducted by the Chamber’s Senior Economic Advisor Dr. Paul Coomes, looking at the just-released data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics on job and payroll growth.

“This report provides a snapshot not just of Kentucky’s economy as a whole, but of the state’s nine economic regions,” said Chamber President and CEO Dave Adkisson. “Paul’s data reveals the nuances of Kentucky’s complex economy.”

The data provides specific information about the following regions – Lexington, Mountains, Cumberland, Bowling Green-Hopkinsville, Paducah-Purchase, Owensboro-Henderson, Louisville, Northern Kentucky, and Ashland. The data also includes organized job and payroll data by county and bordering states, and includes tables and charts that summarize recent economic growth.

“Kentucky as a whole added jobs (7.4 percent) at a slower clip than the U.S. (8.4 percent), but greater than the growth rate of all border states except Tennessee and Indiana,” said Coomes. “And Kentucky now has about 20,000 more jobs it had at the peak of the last national expansion, in 2007. Additionally, the state has added manufacturing jobs at three times the rate seen nationally, though remains 12,000 jobs below its previous cyclical peak in 2007.”

Additionally, Coomes’ research found the following:

Coomes is an emeritus professor of economics at the University of Louisville and a special consultant to the Urban Studies Institute at U of L. His area of expertise is regional economics, especially Kentucky and the Louisville region. He has been informing policy decisions through applied research in Louisville and statewide for more than 25 years.

View the report at kychamber.com/2015economy.

Watch an interview with Kentucky Chamber President and CEO Dave Adkisson from KET below:

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