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Vermont’s average wage masked county disparities

Vermont’s average annual wage rose 3.7 percent in 2023, to nearly $62,000. But the wage in 12 of the state’s 14 counties came in below that average. Chittenden County, which held a third of the state’s jobs, showed the highest average annual wage: $70,269. Washington County, another large employment hub, was second, at $64,682. A little over 44 percent of Vermont‘s jobs were in either Chittenden or Washington County, so wages there had a big effect on the state average. The lowest average annual wage in a single county lagged far behind the state average: $47,479 in Essex County—though the county made little impact on average wages because it had the state’s smallest share of jobs. No county in Vermont met the national average of roughly $72,000. 

 


THIS MONTH

Vermont’s labor force—those working and those available for work—grew during the first six months of 2024. Growth in June marked 44 months of gains and brought the total labor force up to 357,568 people, a level not seen since 2011.

 

 

 

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