Report: 67 Pennsylvania counties boom for low unemployment, job growth, wage increase
For Pennsylvanians on the hunt for employment opportunities, the Keystone State still offers a favorable landscape.
The state’s jobless rate stayed at a record low 3.4% in September, better than the national rate of 4.1%.
Claire Kovach, senior research analyst at the Keystone Research Center, said Pennsylvania is drawing significant attention as a swing state. The center analyzed key economic indicators, including unemployment, jobs and wages across all the state’s counties. The state’s unemployment rate has been historically low for more than two years.
“In every one of Pennsylvania’s 67 counties, the unemployment rate is lower now than it was right before the pandemic, when the economy was strongest under President Trump’s first term,” Kovach pointed out. “It’s lower everywhere, but there’s also a clear geographic pattern. Unemployment is a lot lower than before the pandemic in western and rural Pennsylvania.”
Kovach noted the center has an interactive map showing the drop in the unemployment rate by county. She added the research revealed two-thirds of counties have seen job growth since just before the pandemic, with faster growth in the eastern half of the state, which also has faster population growth.
Kovach emphasized the tight labor market indicates a strong overall economy in Pennsylvania and is especially good for workers.
“Low unemployment benefits workers, both individually and collectively, because it’s giving them more bargaining power with their employers, more ability to get higher pay, better benefits and working conditions,” Kovach explained. “With respect to workers’ bargaining power, this is the best economy for Pennsylvania workers in half a century.”
Kovach said despite Pennsylvania workers seeing wage growth above inflation over the last decade, Pennsylvania’s minimum wage lags behind all neighboring states. She argued the gap particularly harms low-income workers, especially those in the bottom 30%. Research in the report further highlighted the effects of a stagnant minimum wage on workers.
“We found that Pennsylvania workers, the low earners, make about $1.71 less per hour than their regional counterparts in New York, Maryland and New Jersey,” Kovach stressed. “If you look at that as full-time, year-round work, that’s $3,500 a year less that our low-wage workers are getting paid in Pennsylvania.”
The state’s minimum wage remains at the federal level of $7.25 per hour.