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West Virginia Job Openings Remain a Top Concern for Main Street

West Virginia Job Openings Remain a Top Concern for Main Street

February 10, 2025

Hiring difficulties persist for small businesses, especially in construction and transportation

NFIB’s January jobs report found that 35% (seasonally adjusted) of small business owners reported job openings they could not fill in January, unchanged from December. Job openings were the highest in the transportation, construction, and manufacturing sectors, and the lowest in the agriculture and finance sectors. Job openings in construction were up four points from last month and down two points from the prior year.

Although state-specific data is unavailable, NFIB West Virginia State Director Gil White said, “West Virginia’s small businesses continue to struggle with the tight labor market in the New Year. As the Legislature prepares to start session this week, lawmakers should prioritize legislation that will strengthen small businesses and promote economic growth.”

Overall, 52% of small business owners reported hiring or trying to hire in January, down three points from December. Forty-seven percent (90% of those hiring or trying to hire) of owners reported few or no qualified applicants for the positions they were trying to fill.

Twenty-four percent of owners reported few qualified applicants for their open positions and 23% reported none.

Twenty-nine percent have openings for skilled workers (unchanged) and 10% have openings for unskilled labor (down three points).

A seasonally adjusted net 18% of owners plan to create new jobs in the next three months, down one point from December.

The percent of small business owners reporting labor quality as their top operating problem fell one point from December to 18%. Labor costs reported as the single most important problem for business owners fell two points from December to 9%, only four points below the highest reading of 13% reached in December 2021.

Seasonally adjusted, a net 33% of small business owners reported raising compensation in January, up four points from December’s lowest reading since March 2021. A net 20% (seasonally adjusted) plan to raise compensation in the next three months, down four points December.

Click here to view the entire NFIB Jobs Report.

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May 2026 NFIB Small Business Optimism Index components table with two columns: Level and Change from Last Month; rows show plans to hire, plans to invest, inventories, expectations, job openings, earnings, etc. Notable values include Plans to Increase Employment 9%, Plans to Make Capital 16%, Current Job Openings 29%, Earnings Trends -15%, and changes like -4, -1, 3, -1, -2, -5, 0, 4. NFIB logo and site at bottom (NFIB.com/SBET).
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