The Inland Empire has more than 3% year-over-year job growth rate
February California Jobs Report to be Posted Monday, 3/21
Due to a delay in data release by the California Employment Development Department, we will be posting the February California jobs report as soon as the data are available. We expect to post the report on Monday, March 21, or soon thereafter. Thank you for your patience! ISEA Staff
Job Growth in US Follows Steady Geographic Pattern Job Losses Deepened in Houston, Louisiana, Alaska, and New England Regions

Job Growth in Southern California Almost Uniform Rapid Job Increases in Inland Empire and Moderate Job Growth in Coastal Areas

The Inland Empire has more than 3% year-over-year job growth rate
Geographic Pattern of US Job Growth Unchanged Job Losses Concentrated in Houston, Alaska, Louisiana, and Mideast Regions
US Annual Change in Employment, Dec 2014 – Dec 2015 A University of Redlands Institute for Spatial Economic Analysis (ISEA) study finds that the spatial distribution of year-over-year job growth in U.S. populated areas exhibits no significant changes in December compared to November. Most regions show 1% to 3% moderate job increases with rapid job increases at more than 5% …
Job Growth in California Continues the Steady pace No Significant Changes Compared to Last Month
Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Trouble: Characteristics of Income Distribution across the United States after the Great Recession
ZIP-code level analysis reveals where being middle class feels rich or poor – and where in the U.S. it feels more like a developing country
The US as a Tale of Two Countries Part II: Where Wealth Meets Income
Wealth is more unevenly distributed than income. But do the wealthy and high income earners live side by side while the have-nots and the low income earners live next to each other? The answer is: often, but not always.
California Employment Year in Review: Recovery Broadens, Accelerates
Job Growth Spreads from Coast to Inland Areas
The US as a Tale of Two Countries: the Rich and the Poor
ZIP-code level analysis reveals that the rich and the poor rarely live in the same locations