![]() ![]() – Total labor force: 6,715 people (285 unemployed) #7. – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 4.2% – Total labor force: 46,966 people (1,945 unemployed) #8. – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 4.1% – Total labor force: 20,369 people (815 unemployed) #11. – Total labor force: 13,491 people (543 unemployed) #12. 1-year change: Up 0.4 percentage points – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 4% 1-year change: Up 0.9 percentage points 1-month change: Up 0.9 percentage points ![]() – Total labor force: 17,363 people (677 unemployed) #14. 1-year change: Up 1.1 percentage points – Total labor force: 9,351 people (365 unemployed) #15. – Total labor force: 8,260 people (320 unemployed) #16. 1-month change: Up 1.2 percentage points – Total labor force: 8,154 people (319 unemployed) #17. ![]() – Total labor force: 6,795 people (262 unemployed) #18. 1-month change: Up 0.7 percentage points – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 3.9% 1-year change: Up 0.7 percentage points – Total labor force: 22,176 people (837 unemployed) #21. 1-year change: Up 1.0 percentage points – Total labor force: 10,588 people (407 unemployed) #22. 1-year change: Up 0.5 percentage points 1-month change: Up 1.1 percentage points – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 3.8% – Total labor force: 8,881 people (302 unemployed) – Total labor force: 8,141 people (277 unemployed) #48. 1-year change: Up 0.8 percentage points 1-month change: Up 1.0 percentage points – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 3.4% 1-year change: Up 0.6 percentage points 1-month change: Up 0.8 percentage points – May unemployment rate (preliminary): 3.3% County-level unemployment rates are not seasonally adjusted. Counties are ranked by their preliminary unemployment rate in May 2023, with initial ties broken by the number of unemployed people within that county, though some ties may remain. Stacker compiled a list of counties with the highest unemployment rates in Indiana using Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Seasonally adjusted unemployment rates by state demonstrate a rather sizable spectrum, ranging from just 1.9% in South Dakota to 5.4% in Nevada. It was not until the spring of 2019 that unemployment finally went down to the same level it sits at now.Īs of May 2023, national unemployment is at 3.4%, with little change from April. The last economic recession-the Great Recession of 2007-2009-sent rates up to 10% as of October 2009. ( Stacker) - While significantly lower than the alarming pandemic peak of 14.7% experienced in April 2020, unemployment rates remain a subject of concern, though experts’ views on a potential recession are mixed. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |