California Labor Force Shrinks by 142,000 as Unemployment Falls on Fewer Job Seekers
Updated
Updated · The Business Journal · Jul 6
California Labor Force Shrinks by 142,000 as Unemployment Falls on Fewer Job Seekers
1 articles · Updated · The Business Journal · Jul 6
Summary
California’s labor force fell by about 142,000 workers in the year through May 2026, reversing two years of gains even as unemployment rates improved across much of the Central Valley.
EDD said the better jobless figures largely reflect fewer people looking for work, with 38% of Californians who were unemployed a year earlier now out of the labor force entirely.
Central Valley counties showed the pattern clearly: Fresno lost about 3,500 labor-force participants, Tulare 5,000 and Kings 1,000, while each posted lower unemployment rates.
Retirements, lower birth rates, reduced immigration, out-migration and caregiving are shrinking the pool of working-age residents, a growing strain in agriculture-heavy regions.
Health care remains a bright spot for hiring, but manufacturing, construction and information are under pressure, and tech layoffs plus slower government hiring add to longer-term labor-market uncertainty.
With a shrinking workforce and falling unemployment, is California's economy secretly in trouble?
As remote work goes national, is California losing the talent war and its economic edge?
California Labor Market 2026: Shrinking Workforce, Stable Unemployment, and the Risks Ahead
Overview
California’s labor market in May 2026 faces a paradox: the workforce is shrinking while unemployment rates remain stable or even improve. This is not due to strong job creation, but because fewer people are actively seeking work. As a result, the apparent health of the labor market is misleading, with only a small share of previously unemployed individuals finding full-time or part-time jobs. These trends signal deeper, long-term challenges for employers, economic growth, and labor availability, highlighting that falling unemployment rates do not necessarily mean a stronger economy.