California returns to job growth in March, but unemployment rate remains highest in nation
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 03: A job seeker meets with a recruiter during the Healthcare Academy career and training fair outside of the Chase Center on June 03, 2022 in San Francisco, California. The Healthcare Academy held a career and training fair as employers added 390,000 jobs in May, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The national unemployment rate remains at 3.6 percent. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
A job seeker meets with a recruiter during a healthcare career fair in San Francisco. Despite California's comparatively weaker job growth, hiring in health services has remained robust. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)

For the second month in a row, California posted the highest unemployment rate in the country, according to new data for March. And it was one of only two states, the other being Nevada, with a March jobless rate above 5%, said the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

On the positive side, data released Friday by the state’s Employment Development Department showed that California’s job growth turned upward last month, though the improvement still lagged behind the national average.

California’s jobless rate remained steady at 5.3% last month, even as unemployment for the nation ticked down to 3.8% in March.

Over the last year, California’s employment growth has been lagging behind the nation as a whole, in large part due to the deleterious effects of high interest rates on three pillars of the state’s economy — high-tech, entertainment and housing.

Analysts say that near-term job growth in California is likely to remain comparatively weak, but prospects down the road look brighter.

Despite the immediate hiring doldrums, the state’s budget woes — including costs for unemployment claims — and stubbornly high inflation, experts think California will not fall into a recession or lead the country into a downturn.

For one thing, the broader U.S. economy is continuing to expand nicely. The nation’s gross domestic product, or total economic output, likely expanded by a robust 3% in the first quarter, according to analysts’ forecasts. The GDP report will be released Thursday.

California’s greater reliance on sectors such as real estate that are highly sensitive to interest rates for financing and investing has hampered the state.

Even so, unlike the housing bust that brought on the Great Recession in 2007-09, many homeowners aren’t struggling with underwater loans or failing to keep up with payments. The overwhelming majority of people in California and the rest of the country have jobs and most homeowners are locked in at fixed rate mortgages that are considerably lower than the current rate of around 7%.

“In general, housing often functions as a trigger or force multiplier in a recession in California,” said G.U. Krueger, a longtime housing economist in Los Angeles.

About 90% of homeowners, in fact, are carrying home loans with rates below 5%, said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at the accounting firm RSM US.

So even though more consumers in California are having trouble with credit card debt, data show mortgage delinquencies remain very low.

Moreover, while inflation has been stickier than hoped for, analysts still see overall consumer prices gradually coming down this year and expect the Federal Reserve to begin cutting interest rates this summer or fall, in what is likely to be the beginning of a series of rate reductions.