Internet Address: http://www.bls.gov/ro2/   FOR RELEASE: March 4, 2009
Media Contact: Michael L. Dolfman,(212) 337-2500
Information: Martin Kohli,(646) 264-3620  

       COUNTY EMPLOYMENT AND WAGES IN NEW YORK:  SECOND QUARTER 2008
                                     
                  Employment growth in Queens leads State


  Queens County recorded over-the-year employment growth of 1.4 percent in
June 2008, the largest increase among New York's 18 large counties, those
with 75,000 or more jobs (as measured by 2007 average annual employment),
according to the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics.
(See chart A.)   Erie County followed with an increase of 1.2 percent.
Regional Commissioner Michael L. Dolfman noted that 10, or 56 percent, of
the State's large counties recorded job growth from June 2007 to June 2008.
Nationwide, only 37 percent of the 334 large counties in the country
experienced employment gains over this 12-month period.
  
  In the second quarter of 2008, average weekly wages in Dutchess and
Rockland Counties increased by 4.4 and 4.1 percent respectively over the
year, the fastest rates among New York's large counties.  (See chart B.)
These two counties also ranked among the top 50 in wage growth in the
nation, Dutchess at 35th and Rockland at 49th.  Nine, or one-half, of New
York's large counties reported wage growth above the national increase of
2.6 percent.
  
Chart A. Top ranking large counties in employment growth, June 2008 and Chart B. Top ranking large counties by percent growth in average weekly wage, second quarter 2008

  Among the State's large counties, New York (more commonly known as
Manhattan) recorded the highest average weekly wage at $1,569 in the second
quarter of 2008, followed by Westchester at $1,140.  New York County's
average weekly wage also ranked 1st among the 334 large counties
nationwide.  Seven of the largest counties in the State reported average
weekly wages above the U.S. average of $841.  Nationally, 157 of the 334
large counties reported wages above that for the nation.
  
  Wage and employment levels (but not over-the-year changes) are also
available for the 44 other counties in New York State with employment below
75,000.  The vast majority of these counties (40) had an average wage below
the U.S. average.  (See table 2.)

Large County Employment
  
  Employment in New York's large counties ranged from a high of 2,392,500
in Manhattan to a low of 79,400 in Saratoga in June 2008.  All together,
New York's large counties accounted for 84 percent of the statewide
employment.  Nationally, large counties accounted for 71 percent of
employment.
  
  Ten of New York's large counties recorded over the-year increases in
employment, with five reporting growth of 0.9 percent or more.  Queens and
Erie Counties ranked 34th and 41st   highest in employment growth,
respectively, among the nation's largest counties.  New York, Kings, and
Bronx Counties were also among the top 60 nationally.  In contrast, seven
counties reported employment losses; however, six of these-Monroe,
Richmond, Suffolk, Nassau, Onondaga, and Westchester-had decreases that
either matched or were less than the national decline of 0.3 percent.
Dutchess (-1.4 percent) was the only large county in New York to report a
drop steeper than the national average.
  
  Nationally, employment declined in 188 of the 334 large counties from
June 2007 to June 2008.  Lee, Fla., had the largest over-the-year
percentage decrease in employment (-8.8 percent) followed by Collier, Fla.
(-6.8 percent), Sarasota, Fla. and Elkhart, Ind. (-6.5 percent each), and
Marion, Fla. (-6.0 percent).  Employment rose in 125 of the large counties.
Orleans County, La., which includes the city of New Orleans, had the
largest over-the-year increase in employment (5.6 percent).

Large County Wage Changes
  
  In the second quarter of 2008, wage growth in 10 of the 18 large
counties in New York matched or exceeded the 2.6 percent national increase.
Two of these counties had growth above 4.0 percent, Dutchess and Rockland,
and six had growth between 3.0 and 3.9 percent-Orange, Richmond, Suffolk,
Broome, Onondaga, and Erie-placing all eight in the upper one-third of the
national ranking.  Seven counties posted below-average wage growth, with
Nassau County reporting the smallest gain, 0.6 percent.  Queens County (-
4.3 percent) was the only large county in the State to record a decline in
its average weekly wage.

  Across the country, Rock Island, Ill., led the nation in average weekly
wage growth with an increase of 10.5 percent from the second quarter of
2007.  Weld, Colo., ranked second with 10.4 percent, followed by the
counties of Utah, Utah (9.4 percent), Whatcom, Wash. (8.3 percent), and
East Baton Rouge, La. (7.8 percent).  Twenty-six large counties experienced
over-the-year declines in average weekly wages.  Clayton, Ga., had the
largest decline (-43.7 percent), followed by Boone, Ky. (-10.0 percent),
Ventura, Calif., and Trumbull, Ohio (-4.8 percent each), and Queens, N.Y. (-
4.3 percent).
  
Large County Average Weekly Wages
  
  Seven of New York's large counties reported average weekly wages above
the national average in the second quarter of 2008, with two surpassing
$1,100-New York and Westchester-and three exceeding $900- Nassau, Rockland,
and Suffolk.  Wages in these five counties ranked in the upper one-quarter
of the national ranking.  Albany ($881) and Dutchess ($880) were the only
other large counties to report wages above that for the nation.  Broome and
Oneida Counties had the lowest average weekly wage at $688 and $678,
respectively, placing them in the bottom quarter of the nationwide ranking.
  
  Nationally, Santa Clara, Calif. ($1,529), and Washington, D.C. ($1,433)
followed New York in average weekly earnings.  The lowest average weekly
wage was reported in Cameron County, Texas ($535), followed by the counties
of Hidalgo, Texas ($538), Horry, S.C. ($539), Webb, Texas ($562), and
Yakima, Wash. ($580).

Employment and Average Wages  in New York's Small Counties
  
  Employment and average weekly wages (but not over-the-year changes) are
also available for New York's 44 small counties, those with employment
below 75,000.  These counties accounted for 16 percent of statewide
employment.  Among the small counties, Niagara reported the highest
employment in June 2008 with 74,400, followed by Schenectady with 66,500,
and Ulster with 61,900.  Hamilton County had the fewest jobs-2,000.
  
  The average weekly wage in Steuben, at $934, was the highest among the
small counties, exceeding the national average by more than $90.  Tioga,
Schenectady, and Putnam, with wages of  $887, $879, and $876, respectively,
also exceeded the national average.  Seven counties--Tompkins, Rennselaer,
Franklin, Clinton, Ulster, Chemung, and Oswego--recorded below-average
weekly wages ranging from $799 to $700.  The remaining 33 small counties
had average weekly wages at or below $700.  Yates County, in western New
York, and Hamilton County, in the Adirondacks, reported the lowest average
weekly wages at $531 and $529, respectively.  (See chart 1.)
  
  When all 62 counties in New York are considered, 11 had an average
weekly wage above the $841 national average.  With the exception of
Schenectady, Steuben, and Tioga, these counties were clustered in New York
City, on Long Island, or in the Hudson River valley.
  
  Average weekly wage data by county are compiled under the Quarterly
Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) program, also known as the ES-202
program. The data are derived from summaries of employment and total pay of
workers covered by state and federal unemployment insurance (UI)
legislation and provided by State Workforce Agencies (SWAs).  The 9.1
million employer reports cover 136.6 million full- and part-time workers.
The average weekly wage values are calculated by dividing quarterly total
wages by the average of the three monthly employment levels of those
covered by UI programs.  The result is then divided by 13, the number of
weeks in a quarter.  It is to be noted, therefore, that over-the-year wage
changes for geographic areas may reflect shifts in the composition of
employment by industry, occupation, and such other factors as hours of
work.  Thus, wages may vary among counties, metropolitan areas, or states
for reasons other than changes in the average wage level.  Data for all
states, Metropolitan Statistical Areas, counties, and the nation are
available on the BLS Web site at http://www.bls.gov/cew/; however, data in
QCEW press releases have been revised (see Technical Note below) and may
not match the data contained on the Bureau's Web site.
  
Additional Statistics and Other Information

  An annual bulletin, Employment and Wages, features comprehensive
information by detailed industry on establishments, employment, and wages
for the nation and all states.  The 2007 edition of this bulletin contains
selected data produced by Business Employment Dynamics (BED) on job gains
and losses, as well as selected data from the first quarter 2008 version of
the national news release.  Tables and additional content from the 2007
Employment and Wages Annual Bulletin are now available online at
www.bls.gov/cew/cewbultn07.htm.  These tables present final 2007 annual
averages.  The tables will also be included on the CD which accompanies the
hardcopy version of the Annual Bulletin.  Employment and Wages Annual
Averages, 2007 will be available for sale by the end of the first quarter
in 2009 from the United States Government Printing Office, Superintendent
of Documents, P.O. Box 37194, Pittsburgh, PA  15250, telephone 866-512-
1800, outside Washington, D.C.  Within Washington, D.C., the telephone
number is 202-512-1800.  The fax number is 202-512-2104.
  
  QCEW-based news releases issued by other regional offices have been
placed at one convenient BLS Web site location,
http://www.bls.gov/cew/cewregional.htm.
  
  Information in this release will be made available to sensory impaired
individuals upon request.  Voice phone: 202-691-5200; TDD message referral
phone number:  1-800-877-8339.
  
  For personal assistance or further information on the Quarterly Census
of Employment and Wages Program, as well as other Bureau programs, contact
the New York-New Jersey Information Office at (646) 264-3600 from 9:00 a.m.
to 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET.
                                     
                              TECHNICAL NOTE
                                     
  QCEW data are not designed as a time series.  QCEW data are simply the
sums of individual establishment records reflecting the number of
establishments that exist in a county or industry at a point in time.
Establishments can move in or out of a county or industry for a number of
reasons-some reflecting economic events, others reflecting administrative
changes.  For this reason, county and industry data are not designed to be
used as a time series.
  
  The preliminary QCEW data presented in this release may differ from data
released by the individual states as well as from the data presented on the
BLS Web site.  These potential differences result from the states'
continuing receipt, review, and editing of UI data over time.  On the other
hand, differences between data in this release and the data found on the
BLS Web site are the result of adjustments made to improve over-the-year
comparisons.  Specifically, these adjustments account for administrative
(noneconomic) changes such as a correction to a previously reported
location or industry classification.  Adjusting for these administrative
changes allows users to more accurately assess changes of an economic
nature (such as a firm moving from one county to another or changing its
primary economic activity) over a 12-month period.  Currently, adjusted
data are available only from BLS press releases.
  
NYLS -7366                                             Labor - New York
02/26/09 

Table 1. Covered1 employment and wages in the United States, New York State, and large counties,
second quarter 20082

	                                      Employment               Average weekly wage3
                                     -----------------------   ----------------------------------------
                                                    Percent                                 National
                                        June        change,            National   Percent   rank by
                                        2008         June       Level  rank by    change    percent
                                     (thousands)    2007-084    2008    level5    2007-084   change5
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
United States6                       136,631.8       -0.3       $841      -        2.6         - 

  New York                             8,758.2        0.6      1,040      3        2.3        39 

   Albany                                230.1        0.1        881     83        2.7       145 
   Bronx                                 227.4        0.9        820    130        2.6       158 
   Broome                                 97.4        0.1        688    284        3.5        79 
   Dutchess                              117.8       -1.4        880     85        4.4        35 
   Erie                                  466.1        1.2        747    209        3.2       109 
   Kings                                 482.5        1.1        728    232        2.1       203 
   Monroe                                386.5       -0.1        823    125        2.2       194 
   Nassau                                615.4       -0.3        962     47        0.6       281 
   New York                            2,392.5        1.0      1,569      1        2.0       212 
   Oneida                                113.1        0.1        678    293        2.4       175 
   Onondaga                              256.1       -0.3        786    158        3.3        94 
   Orange                                134.0        0.0        752    202        3.6        72 
   Queens                                508.3        1.4        840    111       -4.3       323 
   Richmond                               94.5       -0.2        755    199        3.6        72 
   Rockland                              118.9        0.1        932     57        4.1        49 
   Saratoga                               79.4        0.1        719    247        1.8       228 
   Suffolk                               642.6       -0.2        922     62        3.6        72 
   Westchester                           430.8       -0.3      1,140     14        2.2       194 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Includes workers covered by Unemployment Insurance (UI) and Unemployment Compensation for Federal
  Employees (UCFE) programs.
2 Data are preliminary.
3 Average weekly wages were calculated using unrounded data.
4 Percent changes were computed from quarterly employment and pay data adjusted for any noneconomic
  county reclassifications.
5 Ranking does not include the county of San Juan, Puerto Rico.
6 Totals for the United States do not include data for Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands. 

Table 2.  Covered1 employment and wages in the United States and counties in
New York, second quarter, 20082

                   Employment                                Employment         
                      June     Average                          June     Average
                      2008     weekly                           2007     weekly 
     Area          (thousands)  wage3            Area        (thousands)  wage3 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  United States4    136,631.8    $841           New York        2,392.5  $1,569 
                                                Niagara            74.4     674 
    New York          8,758.2   1,040           Oneida            113.1     678 
                                                Onondaga          256.1     786 
      Albany            230.1     881           Ontario            51.1     678 
      Allegany           14.5     669           Orange            134.0     752 
      Bronx             227.4     820           Orleans            13.4     664 
      Broome             97.4     688           Oswego             34.6     700 
      Cattaraugus        32.0     657           Otsego             25.4     655 
      Cayuga             27.3     664           Putnam             27.0     876 
      Chautauqua         56.5     623                                           
      Chemung            40.0     704           Queens            508.3     840 
      Chenango           16.8     682           Rennselaer         53.8     787 
      Clinton            35.4     710           Richmond           94.5     755 
                                                Rockland          118.9     932 
      Columbia           21.5     646           Saratoga           79.4     719 
      Cortland           17.5     634           Schenectady        66.5     879 
      Delaware           17.2     675           Schoharie           9.3     616 
      Dutchess          117.8     880           Schuyler            5.1     616 
      Erie              466.1     747           Seneca             11.6     671 
      Essex              15.2     660           St. Lawrence       37.6     686 
      Franklin           19.2     713                                           
      Fulton             18.7     643           Steuben            39.5     934 
      Genesee            25.5     603           Suffolk           642.6     922 
      Greene             15.2     667           Sullivan           27.1     682 
                                                Tioga              15.5     887 
      Hamilton            2.0     529           Tompkins           51.7     794 
      Herkimer           17.3     584           Ulster             61.9     706 
      Jefferson          43.9     648           Warren             41.6     641 
      Kings             482.5     728           Washington         16.4     694 
      Lewis               7.0     639           Wayne              31.3     686 
      Livingston         20.8     644           Westchester       430.8   1,140 
      Madison            22.2     628                                           
      Monroe            386.5     823           Wyoming            14.7     664 
      Montgomery         19.8     641           Yates               7.0     531 
      Nassau            615.4     962                                           
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Includes workers covered by Unemployment Insurance (UI) and Unemployment
  Compensation for Federal Employees (UCFE) programs.
2 Data are preliminary.
3 Average weekly wages were calculated using unrounded data.
4 Totals for the United States do not include data for Puerto Rico or the Virgin
  Islands.

Table 3. Covered1 employment and wages by state and territory, second quarter 20082

                                 Employment              Average weekly wage3
                                 ----------   --------------------------------------------
                                                                                National  
            Area                   June       Average     National   Percent      rank    
                                   2008       weekly      rank by    change,   by percent 
                                (thousands)    wage       level4     2007-08     change4   
                                                                                           
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 United States5                  136,631.8     $841          -        2.6          -
                               
  Alabama                          1,955.4      720         33        3.3         15  
  Alaska                             330.6      860         12        3.1         16  
  Arizona                          2,543.9      806         19        2.4         34  
  Arkansas                         1,183.5      661         46        3.4         11  
  California                      15,760.3      955          6        2.2         42  
  Colorado                         2,346.3      858         13        3.1         16  
  Connecticut                      1,722.3    1,036          4        0.3         49  
  Delaware                           427.3      862         10       -0.8         51  
  District of Columbia               691.4    1,433          1        5.9          1  
  Florida                          7,620.1      762         26        2.6         30

  Georgia                          4,059.7      787         22       -0.6         50  
  Hawaii                             623.9      764         24        3.9          9  
  Idaho                              671.9      636         48        1.6         46  
  Illinois                         5,930.0      893          8        2.3         39  
  Indiana                          2,906.5      715         38        1.9         43  
  Iowa                             1,521.2      683         42        2.9         23  
  Kansas                           1,389.1      720         33        2.4         34  
  Kentucky                         1,818.9      718         35        2.6         30  
  Louisiana                        1,900.3      750         29        5.5          3  
  Maine                              620.3      676         44        2.7         28  
                                                     
  Maryland                         2,577.7      920          7        2.8         26  
  Massachusetts                    3,310.4    1,044          2        3.6         10  
  Michigan                         4,163.3      825         18        2.4         34  
  Minnesota                        2,733.9      849         14        1.8         45  
  Mississippi                      1,139.1      635         49        4.4          7  
  Missouri                         2,761.6      752         28        3.4         11  
  Montana                            450.3      629         50        2.9         23  
  Nebraska                           936.1      676         44        3.4         11  
  Nevada                           1,271.8      797         20        2.7         28  
  New Hampshire                      641.9      835         16        1.5         48  
                                                      
  New Jersey                       4,054.4    1,004          5        1.6         46  
  New Mexico                         837.2      715         38        4.2          8  
  New York                         8,758.2    1,040          3        2.3         39  
  North Carolina                   4,083.6      735         31        2.4         34  
  North Dakota                       356.4      654         47        5.8          2  
  Ohio                             5,315.0      757         27        2.3         39  
  Oklahoma                         1,556.0      701         40        5.3          5  
  Oregon                           1,747.4      764         24        3.0         20  
  Pennsylvania                     5,743.3      827         17        3.1         16  
  Rhode Island                       481.6      796         21        2.8         26  
                                                     
  South Carolina                   1,907.5      681         43        2.4         34  
  South Dakota                       409.0      606         51        2.9         23  
  Tennessee                        2,752.7      745         30        1.9         43  
  Texas                           10,510.3      849         14        2.5         33  
  Utah                             1,234.3      716         37        2.6         30 
  Vermont                            305.6     $718         35        3.0         20 
  Virginia                         3,720.4      885          9        3.0         20 
  Washington                       3,000.9      862         10        3.4         11 
  West Virginia                      715.3      695         41        5.1          6 
  Wisconsin                        2,836.8      730         32        3.1         16 
  Wyoming                            296.7      780         23        5.4          4 

  Puerto Rico                        997.8      475          6        3.5          6 
  Virgin Islands                      45.9      703          6       -0.6          6 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Includes workers covered by Unemployment Insurance (UI) and Unemployment Compensation
  for Federal Employees (UCFE) programs.
2 Data are preliminary.
3 Average weekly wages were calculated using unrounded data.
4 Ranking does not include Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands.
5 Totals for the United States do not include data for Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands.
6 Data not included in the national ranking.

Chart 1. Average weekly wages, counties in New York State, second quarter 2008

 

Last Modified Date: March 6, 2009