CRANBROOK, British Columbia, June 05, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- According to the CPABC Regional Check-Up, an annual economic report by the Chartered Professional Accountants of British Columbia (CPABC), 4,500 new jobs were created in the Kootenays in 2017, pushing overall employment to 71,900, the region’s highest level since 2013.
“Our region’s employment grew by 6.7 per cent last year, outperforming all other B.C. regions. Both the goods and service sectors added to employment growth, with the service sector adding 4,200 jobs,” said Mike Calder, CPA, CA, partner at BDO Canada LLP in Cranbrook. “Although this is a sizable improvement for our region’s service sector, this still puts us at a level below the high of 55,400 service sector jobs we had in 2013.”
Between 2016 and 2017, employment in six of eleven Kootenay service industries expanded, and the top three were the trade; accommodation and food services; and the finance, insurance, real estate, rental and leasing (FIRE) industries. The trade industry steadily added workers throughout 2017, primarily at the retail level, which is consistent with the substantial increase in consumer spending reported at the provincial level, where sales increased in most retail store types. New jobs created in restaurants and pubs were responsible for most of the job growth in the accommodation and food services industry, and the region’s hotels also hired more workers.
“Employment growth helped push our unemployment rate down to 7.3 per cent in 2017. This was the first decline since 2013,” continued Calder. “Although our job growth was impressive last year, many of the new jobs created in the region were low-skilled positions. So it’s not all that surprising that the share of our labour force with at least a post-secondary certificate/diploma fell for a second consecutive year to 65.8 per cent, below the provincial average.”
Looking forward, labour market data indicates that overall employment in the Kootenays fell to 63,700 jobs by March 2018, with both the goods and services sectors losing workers. Employment fell off in the construction and manufacturing industries, while health care and social assistance, accommodation and food services, and information, culture and recreation were responsible for most of the employment decline in the services sector.
About CPABC Regional Check-Up – Kootenay:
The Kootenay Development Region is comprised of three Regional Districts: the Kootenay-Boundary, Central Kootenay, and East Kootenay. It accounts for nearly 3.1 per cent of the provincial population.
The CPABC Regional Check-Up reports look at British Columbia’s eight Development Regions as a place to work, invest, and live. The reports are available online at: www.bccheckup.com.
About CPA British Columbia
The Chartered Professional Accountants of British Columbia (CPABC) is the training, governing, and regulatory body for over 35,000 CPA members and almost 6,000 CPA students. CPABC carries out its primary mission to protect the public by enforcing the highest professional and ethical standards and contributing to the advancement of public policy. CPAs are recognized internationally for bringing superior financial expertise, strategic thinking, business insight, and leadership to organizations.