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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Online job ads increasing in Hawaii

Advertiser Staff

Online job advertising grew at a slightly higher rate in Hawai'i than the nation as a whole, and there were slightly more ads than unemployed people to fill them during September.

Those are among the findings of a new study by the Conference Board, a New York-based business research group that has been analyzing online job advertising in tracking the economy. The Help-Wanted Online Data Series found that nationally online advertised vacancies rose 17.5 percent in September compared to a year earlier.

Hawai'i's online advertising rose by almost 24 percent during the period, according to Conference Board data. Last month there were 16,900 Internet job vacancies posted for the state, or 3,300 more than a year earlier. The study only takes into account unduplicated ads appearing during the month.

Among other Hawai'i data the Conference Board included in the report:

  • The number of new ads appearing during the month (those that also didn't appear in August) rose by 32 percent. That compared to the national average of about 23 percent.

  • There were 2.62 advertised vacancies online for every 100 people in Hawai'i's workforce. That compared to 2.78 nationally. Alaska had the most posted vacancies at 4.7.

  • Hawai'i had the 14th-lowest supply/demand rate at 0.99 percent. That means there were more online job ads than unemployed workers.