Minnesota continued to post job growth last month though not at the robust levels seen earlier this year.
The state added 4,200 jobs in September while the unemployment rate ticked up a tenth of a percentage point to 2%, the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development said Thursday.
August also wasn't as dire as initially reported; the numbers for that month were revised to a gain of 1,200 jobs instead of a loss of 3,100 jobs.
Still, job growth appears to be slowing compared to the spring, when the state added more than 10,000 jobs in each of three consecutive months, and to July, when it added 17,100 jobs.
The moderation comes in a still very tight labor market and as the Federal Reserve has aggressively hiked interest rates to try to rein in inflation and cool the labor market.
DEED Commissioner Steve Grove noted that job numbers can bounce around from month to month and hailed Minnesota's 12th straight month of job growth. He added that he's not seeing much evidence of a tempering in employers' appetite to hire.
"When you've got four jobs open for every one person searching in the state, it's hard to say that there's been much slowing," he said. "We talk to employers everyday who are continuing to really struggle to find workers."
Minnesota had 192,000 job openings in August, down from 226,000 the month before, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. At the same time, state officials said the number of unemployed people in Minnesota is at its lowest level since the 1970s.