Nine States Have Jobless Rates Higher Than US Average

WASHINGTON (Stateline.org/MCT) —

Nevada once again leads the nation with the highest unemployment rate, but its 9.3 percent rate in October is the lowest in five years.

Nationwide, nine states and the District of Columbia had measurably higher unemployment rates than the national rate of 7.3 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said in the first state-by-state unemployment report since the federal government shutdown ended.

In the last month, 28 states saw jobless rates decrease, and over the last year, unemployment rates declined in 38 states, BLS said.

Nevada’s jobless rate is the lowest in that state since December 2008. “Overall, the state is moving in a positive direction, with the unemployment rate continuing to fall and employers continuing to add jobs,” Bill Anderson, chief economist for Nevada’s Department of Employment, said in a statement.

In Illinois, Jay Rowell, director of the state’s Department of Employment Security, called the state’s 8.9 percent unemployment rate “encouraging,” particularly because of job growth in manufacturing and retail trade. “Manufacturing numbers show continued growth in Illinois, and retail trade growth anticipates shoppers willing to spend, with the potential for additional hires in November,” he said.

Florida’s unemployment rate is down 4.4 percentage points since December 2010, and has remained below the national average since March of this year. The Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater area led all Florida metro areas in job creation in the last year, the state announced, with a gain of more than 39,800 new jobs.

Georgia has seen its rate decline to 8.1 percent for October, from 8.7 in August and 8.3 in September. “We’ve seen Georgia gain almost 30,000 jobs over the last two months,” State Labor Commissioner Mark Butler said. “And, the good thing about the job creation is that it’s pretty much through all sectors.”

Meanwhile, Connecticut hit a milestone with its lowest unemployment rate since the recovery began in February 2010, dipping to 7.9 percent in both October and September from 8.1 percent in August. That marks the first time the state’s jobless rate was below 8 percent since April 2009.

Seventeen states had jobless rates significantly lower than the U.S. average of 7.3 percent, and 24 states had rates that were not appreciably different from that of the nation, BLS said.

North Dakota continued to have the lowest jobless rate, at 2.7 percent.

The largest over-the-month increases in employment occurred in Florida (+44,600), California (+39,800), and North Carolina (+22,200). The largest over-the-month decrease in employment occurred in Kentucky (-12,600), followed by Washington (-8,100), New Jersey (-5,500) and Virginia (-5,400), BLS said.

Over the last year, Texas gained the most jobs with 267,400, followed by California with 207,300 and Florida with 182,200.

HIGHEST UNEMPLOYMENT RATES, OCTOBER 2013

  • Nevada – 9.3 percent
  • Rhode Island – 9.2 percent
  • Michigan – 9.0
  • Washington, D.C. – 8.9 percent
  • Illinois – 8.9
  • California – 8.7
  • Kentucky – 8.4
  • New Jersey – 8.4
  • Tennessee – 8.4
  • Georgia – 8.1

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