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Posted by Don Wong on 22 October 2014 in Press releases | No Comment

CareerBuilder & Economic Modeling Specialists Report

CareerBuilder & Economic Modeling Specialists Report: Which Job is Most Unique to Your State?

View the most concentrated occupations for each state in a map designed by mental_ floss magazine

CHICAGO – October 16, 2014—In the sprawling United States economy, the types of jobs that define entire regions are as a diverse as the geographies that shape borders and the people who live within them. Simply put, there are some jobs you can only seem to find in certain places. Using a measurement called location quotient (LQ), CareerBuilder and Economic Modeling Specialists Intl. reveal the occupation that is most unique to each state through 2013.

“The occupations on this map reflect what makes our national economy so diverse,” said Matt Ferguson, CEO of CareerBuilder and co-author of The Talent Equation. “Many of the most concentrated jobs represent well-known, longstanding regional industries, while others may come as a genuine surprise. They are rarely among the largest occupations in a state, but are often the most identifiable.”

See the results in the map designed by mental_ floss magazine: www.mentalfloss.com/uniquejobs?

Job Unique to Your State

Measuring the “Most Unique” Jobs

Location quotient measures job concentration. For example, one can effectively say that petroleum engineers are 6 times as concentrated in Texas as they are anywhere else in the United States on average.

For this analysis, LQ compares the percentage share of a state’s workforce in a given occupation to the percentage share of the nationwide workforce in that occupation. A location quotient of 1.0 means that percent employment for the state matches the nation. Jobs in retail, health care, and local government are typically the most common jobs in each state or metropolitan area, because every local economy needs a significant amount of these workers. These occupations tend to have an LQ near 1.0 in most places.

On the other hand, a high LQ is very useful for identifying what makes a regional job market tick.

“Concentrated occupations are typically tied to an industry that drives a regional economy,” said Andrew Crapuchettes, CEO of EMSI. “Oftentimes, these jobs generate exports and wealth for cities and states and are directly tied to job growth in supporting service sectors.”

As the data in the map and listed below indicates, an occupation need not have a large amount of jobs to earn a high LQ. For instance, there were 3.1 million jobs in Indiana as of 2013, but only 2,686 are boilermakers – making up just .09 percent of the statewide workforce. However, about one out of every 7 boilermaker jobs in the country are located in Indiana.

The following table represents the information found in the mental_floss map:

Which job is most unique to your state?

 

State Occupation LQ Jobs 2013 Med. Hourly Earnings
Alabama Tire Builder 7.75 1,900 $24.55  
Alaska Fishers & Related Fishing Workers 33.56 2,901 $16.85  
Arizona Semiconductor Processors 4.19 1,640 $15.32  
Arkansas Food Processing Workers 6.78 2,303 $10.59  
California Actors 3.19 33,328 $29.23  
Colorado Atmospheric & Space Scientists 7.76 1,510 $49.34  
Connecticut Actuaries 4.16 1,141 $51.22  
D.C. Political Scientists 86.61 3,197 $55.64  
Delaware Chemists 11.65 3,050 $41.45  
Florida Motorboat Operators 5.92 1,315 $14.17  
Georgia Textile Winding, Twisting, & Drawing Out Machine Setters, Operators, & Tenders 10.52 8,607 $13.03  
Hawaii Tour Guides & Escorts 8.55 1,687 $12.82  
Idaho Forest & Conservation Technicians 14.2 2,273 $15.06  
Illinois Correspondence Clerks 3.93 1,727 $19.88  
Indiana Boilermakers 7.03 2,686 $31.66  
Iowa Soil & Plant Scientists 8.94 1,574 $30.05  
Kansas Umpires, Referees, Other Sports Officials 5.42 1,216 $11.16  
Kentucky Roof Bolters, Mining 14.14 1,184 $25.65  
Louisiana Captains, Mates, & Pilots of Water Vessels 17.2 8,857 $34.88  
Maine Fishers & Related Fishing Workers 27.31 4,070 $17.52  
Maryland Subway & Streetcar Operators 10.41 1,884 $25.43  
Massachusetts Psychiatric Technicians 4.86 8,202 $17.52  
Michigan Model Makers, Metal & Plastic 6.23 1,095 $24.72  
Minnesota Slaughterers & Meat Packers 4.82 7,619 $12.80  
Mississippi Coil Winders, Tapers, & Finishers 11.18 1,340 $18.87  
Missouri Food and Tobacco Roasting, Baking, & Drying Machine Operators & Tenders 5.58 2,303 $12.37  
Montana Forest & Conservation Technicians 19.41 2,200 $15.05  
Nebraska Meat, Poultry, & Fish Cutters & Trimmers 9.92 11,453 $13.58  
Nevada Gaming Supervisors 30.91 7,414 $25.40  
New Hampshire Metal Workers & Plastic Workers, All Other 10.05 1,020 $14.40  
New Jersey Biochemists & Biophysicists 4.71 3,628 $50.38  
New Mexico Wellhead Pumpers 13.75 1,358 $22.50  
New York Fashion Designers 5.18 7,164 $32.27  
North Carolina Textile Winding, Twisting, & Drawing Out Machine Setters, Operators, & Tenders 7.63 6,394 $11.12  
North Dakota Derrick Operators, Oil & Gas 28.21 2,137 $26.65  
Ohio Rolling Machine Setters, Operators, & Tenders, Metal & Plastic 3.53 4,778 $17.21  
Oklahoma Wellhead Pumpers 8.66 1,671 $20.51  
Oregon Logging Workers, all other 21.24 1,400 $16.57  
Pennsylvania Survey Researchers 3.54 2,776 $13.09  
Rhode Island Education, Training, & Library Workers 3.04 1,062 $20.42  
South Carolina Textile Knitting and Weaving Machine Setters, Operators, & Tenders 10.99 3,220 $13.70  
South Dakota Farmers, Ranchers, and Other Agricultural Managers 9.42 14,827 $12.78  
Tennessee Conveyor Operators & Tenders 4.25 3,486 $13.73  
Texas Petroleum Engineers 6.39 21,457 $66.80  
Utah Forest & Conservation Technicians 4.4 1,362 $13.46  
Vermont Highway Maintenance Workers 3.99 1,364 $16.88  
Virginia Legal Support Workers, All Other 5.75 9,039 $43.50  
Washington Aircraft Structure, Surfaces, Rigging, & Systems Assemblers 14.21 13,535 $23.09  
West Virginia Roof Bolters, Mining 66.29 2,129 $26.84  
Wisconsin Foundry Mold & Coremakers 5.47 1,351 $15.72  
Wyoming Rotary Drill Operators, Oil & Gas 28.0 1,566 $27.05  

*Occupations that say “all other” represent a catchall category for jobs in a particular field not individually classified.

About EMSI

EMSI’s 2014.2 proprietary Class of Worker dataset, which includes self-employed workers, was used for this report. To ensure relevancy of each occupation, CareerBuilder and EMSI only included occupations with at least 1,000 jobs in the state.

Economic Modeling Specialists Intl., a CareerBuilder company, turns labor market data into useful information that helps organizations understand the connection between economies, people, and work. Using sound economic principles and good data, EMSI builds user-friendly services that help educational institutions, workforce planners, and regional developers build a better workforce and improve the economic conditions in their regions. For more information, visit www.economicmodeling.com.

About CareerBuilder®

CareerBuilder is the global leader in human capital solutions, helping companies target and attract great talent. Its online career site, CareerBuilder.com®, is the largest in the United States with more than 24 million unique visitors and 1 million jobs. CareerBuilder works with the world’s top employers, providing everything from labor market intelligence to talent management software and other recruitment solutions. Owned by Gannett Co., Inc. (NYSE:GCI), Tribune Company and The McClatchy Company (NYSE:MNI), CareerBuilder and its subsidiaries operate in the United States, Europe, South America, Canada and Asia. For more information, visitwww.careerbuilder.com.

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