Posts Tagged ‘minneapolis jobs’

Why Minneapolis is a Great Place to Work

Monday, December 17th, 2007

Minneapolis is the largest city in Minnesota. The city is located on both banks of the Mississippi river. Saint Paul is right across from Minneapolis, hence the name “Twin Cities,” this makes it the 15th largest metropolis area in the US. The population of Minneapolis is 380,000 people roughly. The city is rich in water and has over 20 lakes and wetlands.

Minneapolis’s economy is based in finance, commerce, trucking and rail industries, and jobs in healthcare. This is a great place to live and work if you work in the business industry, trucking, or health care. Smaller industries in Minneapolis are; publishing, milling food processing, graphic arts, insurance, and high technology.

If you are looking for a labor jobs in Minneapolis some more industries are; metal and automotive products, chemical and agricultural products, electronics, computers, plastics and machinery.

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Minneapolis Jobs

Monday, November 5th, 2007

Despite being named on of the best metro-areas for business by a recent MarketWatch report, Minneapolis job growth is not what it used to be. As the number of available Minneapolis jobs decrease, the unemployment rate is beginning to climb. September Statistics show that the city’s jobless rate has now surpassed the national average. As 4.9 percent of the city’s citizens struggled to find work, the national unemployment rate dropped to 4.7 percent.

Throughout the country, 4.3 percent more people have been able to find employment since 2003. In the same time period, Minnesota employment has only increased by 2.4 percent. Some analysts say that the issue is not lack of Minneapolis job creation, but that the highly educated population is over qualified for a vast majority of the positions being created.Other’s blame the lack of new Minneapolis jobs to be had on the housing market slump and uninspiring retail sales.

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Minneapolis – St. Paul Rivalry Impacts Job Growth

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

In the state of Minnesota, the majority of residents live in the Twin Cities region of Minneapolis-St.Paul area. It is under the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Council. Since their creation, these two metropolitan cities have competed for attention. Through the years, these two rivals have competed for a major league baseball sports teams and what resulted are two rival stadiums, one built in each city.

In the mid 1960s, the two rivals even failed to agree on which calendar to follow in respect to daylight savings time. Eventually, the cities opted on two different calendars and those in Minneapolis were one hour ahead of anyone in St. Paul for several weeks of the year. Yet what is more important as the rivalry and disputes is the sharing of pain and suffering each experience as a collective in 2007.

Looking back to as recent as August 31, 2007, the Twin Cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul Minnesota the employment outlook for Minneapolis jobs and future of international trade for the state was surprisingly healthy. However, two fatal blows as the calendar pages turned left this once thriving job market in despair. More than 60,000 jobs were available statewide before the devastating collapse of the I35W Bridge.

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