US Regional Unemployment Rates, June 2020

Aug 14, 2020
Unemployment Rate in US Regions

The chart above shows the unemployment rate in each US region as of June 2020, the change from the previous month, and the rate one year prior.  The Northeast is the only region whose rate rose over the previous month.

Findings

  • The difference between the region with the lowest unemployment rate, the South, and the region with the highest, the Northeast, is 5.29 percentage points (up from 2.54 last month and up from 0.45 last year).  The South had the lowest rate last month and last year.  The West had the highest rate last month and last year.
  • The Northeast has 1.61 times the unemployment rate that the South does (up from 1.21 last month and up from 1.13 last year).
  • Zero regions saw no change in their rate from the previous month, three regions saw an improvement, and one region saw a deterioration.
  • Zero regions saw no change in their rate from last year, zero regions saw an improvement, and four regions saw a deterioration.

Caveats

  • Data is from June 2020.
  • Data may conflict with previous month's report as statistical agencies make updates to the rates over the course of the month.
  • All figures are rounded to the nearest hundredth.
  • The Midwestern US consists of Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
  • The Northeastern US consists of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Delaware, Maine, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
  • The Southern US consists of Texas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Louisiana, South Carolina, Alabama, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, and West Virginia.
  • The Western US consists of California, Washington, Colorado, Arizona, Oregon, Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, Hawaii, Idaho, Alaska, Montana, and Wyoming.

Details

In absolute terms, the South had the best performance over the previous month dropping its rate 3.38 percentage points.  The Northeast had the worst performance raising its rate 0.04 percentage points.  Year over year, the South had the best performance raising its rate 5.13 percentage points.  The Northeast had the worst performance raising its rate 10.24 percentage points.

In relative terms, the South had the best performance over the previous month dropping its rate 28.19%.  The Northeast had the worst performance raising its rate 0.29%.  Year over year, the South had the best performance with a 147.41% rise in its rate.  The Northeast had the worst performance with a 279.78% rise in its rate.

The Northeast has an unemployment rate higher than 43 out of 50 states.  The South has an unemployment rate that is lower than just over half of the states in the country besting 27 out of 50 states.

The South has the smallest range in unemployment rates this month with a low of 4.3% in Kentucky to a high of 10.4% in Florida and West Virginia.  The Northeast has the greatest range with a low of 6.6% in Maine to a high of 17.4% in Massachusetts.

Sources

Bureau of Labor Statistics.  2020.  "State Employment and Unemployment (Monthly) News Release."  Accessed August 11, 2020.  https://www.bls.gov/news.release/laus.htm.

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