Seasonal retail and health care hires did not offset the loss of jobs in the professional services and construction sectors in October, resulting in a net loss of 1,000 jobs in Minnesota.
And while a state report released Thursday found the manufacturing sector added 1,100 jobs in October, a new survey by Enterprise Minnesota found that factories are slowing hiring for the rest of the year.
“We know that more manufacturers aren’t hiring. They’re either full or just turning away open positions because demand is either flat or a little bit down. So the number of manufacturers in our survey that have open positions has dropped quite a bit,” said Robert Lodge, spokesman for the Enterprise Minnesota entity that assists small and medium-sized manufacturers.
The survey of factory heads found they were concerned about the economy and had low confidence levels as they grapple with inflation, rising health care costs and new state regulations. Specifically, 68% expected to be affected by a new payroll tax required to fund the paid family and medical leave program that goes into effect in January 2026.
“The survey this year reveals that manufacturing executives believe that Minnesota’s business climate is worse than any time in the 16-year history of the survey,” said Bob Kill, president and CEO of Enterprise Minnesota.
Ernie Goss, director of Creighton University’s Economic Forecasting Group, said he found similar trends across most central states in his monthly survey. In Minnesota, employment trends remained “below neutral” in October.
So far this year, Minnesota factories lost 4,020 jobs.
In October alone, the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development said Thursday that the month’s lost jobs were not enough to move the state’s unemployment rate, which stayed at 3.4%.