NEW REPORT:
Migration: Millennials and the wealthy moved in. Most Vermonters stay put
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On average, 3.3 percent of Vermont’s labor force was officially unemployed in 2016. The average annual rate has dropped below this level only three times in the last 40 years: to 3.0 percent in 1988 and 1999 and 2.8 percent in 2000. Last month Vermont’s jobless rate fell to 3.0 percent.
In Chittenden, more workers
Vermont has struggled to regain employment since the recession. In the last 10 years Chittenden County has added workers—more than 8,000, a rise of nearly 10 percent. But this increase was overwhelmed by losses in the rest of the state as a whole, where the number of people working fell by more than 18,000, or about 7 percent. This includes Franklin County, the only county besides Chittenden that saw growth.
Faster income growth, too
Coming out of the recession, Chittenden County saw somewhat greater income growth than the rest of the state. Adjusted gross income for residents of the county rose 22 percent from 2006 to 2015, the latest year for which the Vermont Tax Department has data. Elsewhere in the state incomes rose just over 19 percent during the same period.
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