Minnesota has not only moved up a spot in the rankings to have the lowest unemployment rate in the nation. At 1.8%, it also now officially has the lowest of any state ever.
"Just think about that," said Steve Grove, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED). "We have the lowest unemployment rate that has ever existed in the United States of America since that number has been recorded."
That's largely a good thing for workers, giving them options and putting upward pressure on pay and benefits. It's also forcing employers to look deeper into the labor pool for workers.
On the flip side, it means higher costs for employers, which can translate into higher prices for goods and services. Ultimately, that may slow the growth of Minnesota's economy.
Grove took note of the record during a visit Monday to a Minnesota Valley Transit Authority parking garage in Eagan, the latest stop for DEED's "Summer of Jobs" campaign.
The agency this summer has been highlighting people who tend to be overlooked for jobs — older workers, immigrants, people with disabilities and those recently released from correctional facilities — as a solution to the state's tight labor market.
Minnesota's jobless rate had been hitting record lows in recent months but trailed Nebraska for the lowest rate in the country.
When Minnesota's June rate came out last Thursday, it was half the national rate of 3.6% and DEED officials conjectured the state may have passed Nebraska for lowest rate.