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  6.  | Alaska Employment: Annual Job Growth Up Slightly in October by 2.1 Percent

Alaska Employment: Annual Job Growth Up Slightly in October by 2.1 Percent

Nov 15, 2024 | Government, News

Employment concept

Photo Credit: FUNTAP P | DREAMSTIME

Losses of seafood manufacturing jobs offset gains in the construction sector, holding the statewide unemployment rate steady from September to October. The Alaska Department of Labor and Workforce Development puts the seasonally adjusted figure at 4.6 percent.

Constrained to Narrow Band

The statewide unemployment rate in October compares to the national rate of 4.1 percent, likewise unchanged from the month before. Alaska’s rate has remained within a narrow band all year; apart from a bump to 4.7 percent in February, monthly figures have held between 4.5 and 4.6 percent each month, slightly higher than the trend in 2023.

The unadjusted unemployment rate in the Anchorage area rose to 3.9 percent in October. In fact, every region saw month-to-month increases in the unadjusted unemployment rate. The seasonal swing pushed the Denali Borough from 2.8 percent in September to 8.3 percent in October, which was still significantly lower than 9.9 percent a year earlier.

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Alaska Business Magazine March 2026 cover

March 2026

The total number of nonfarm jobs in October was 332,700, a steep drop from a revised 347,400 in September but 7,000 more than a year earlier. The 2.1 percent year-over-year growth was driven by 2.5 percent more jobs in the private sector, while government jobs grew by 1 percent.

The manufacturing sector, largely driven by seafood processing, saw the largest annual percentage drop, losing 600 jobs compared to October 2023, or a loss of 5.9 percent. The information sector lost 100 jobs from a year ago, for a 2.2 percent monthly contraction. The much larger retail sector also shed 100 jobs year-over-year.

The oil and gas sector saw the biggest percentage gain, rising by 200 jobs since September and 900 from October 2023, for 11.8 percent growth. Another 900 jobs were added, year over year, in the transportation, warehousing, and utilities sector, for 3.8 percent annual growth.

The construction sector was up by 1,800 jobs compared to the year before, for 9.7 percent annual growth in October despite shedding 1,000 jobs since September. Those construction jobs, largely attributed to federally funded infrastructure and North Slope oil and gas projects, outpaced strong growth in healthcare, adding another 1,700 jobs year-over-year, for 4.2 percent annual growth.

Alaska Business Magazine March 2026 cover
In This Issue
ARCTIC DEVELOPMENT
March 2026
While all of Alaska is “arctic” to the rest of the country, our focus in the March 2026 Arctic Development special section is on projects more closely aligned to the actual Arctic, including an update on the Port of Nome deep-draft project, offshore oil activity, plans for projects on Savoonga and on the North Slope, and our cover story about the transportation industry’s efforts to operate responsibly in waters worldwide, which has direct applications to Arctic Seas. Also in this issue: learn more about the Chin’an Gaming Hall, USACE projects, the new Wildbirch Hotel, and the transportation and logistics of Girl Scout cookies. Enjoy!
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