Little Change In March Unemployment Rates
04/16/2010
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports nonfarm payroll employment increased in 33 states and the District of Columbia, and decreased in 17 states, with the largest over-the-month increase in employment happening in Maryland (+35,800), followed by Virginia (+24,500), Pennsylvania (+22,600), Indiana (+16,600), and New York (+11,700).
The largest over-the-month decreases in employment occurred in Michigan (-9,500), Nevada (-7,100), and Florida (-4,000). Nevada and Vermont experienced the largest over-the-month percentage decrease in employment (-0.6 percent each), followed by New Hampshire and New Mexico (-0.3 percent each). Over the year, nonfarm employment decreased in 47 states and increased in 3 states and the District of Columbia. The largest over-the-year percentage decreases occurred in Nevada (-4.6 percent), Wyoming (-3.5 percent), Arizona (-3.3 percent), and California (-3.2 percent).
The West reported the highest regional jobless rate in March, 11.0 percent, while the Northeast recorded the lowest rate, 9.1 percent. The rate in the West set a new series high. No region experienced a statistically significant over-the-month unemployment rate change. All four regions registered significant rate increases from a year earlier: the West (+1.5 percentage points), South (+1.4 points), Northeast (+1.3 points), and Midwest (+1.0 point).
Among the nine geographic divisions, the Pacific continued to report the highest unemployment rate, 11.9 percent in March. The East North Central recorded the next highest jobless rate, 11.4 percent. The West North Central registered the lowest rate, 7.3 percent, followed by the West South Central, 7.9 percent. The Pacific rate set a new series high, as did the South Atlantic rate (10.6 percent). No division experienced a statistically significant unemployment rate change from a month earlier.
Michigan again recorded the highest unemployment rate among the states, 14.1 percent in March. The states with the next highest rates were Nevada, 13.4 percent; California and Rhode Island, 12.6 percent each; Florida, 12.3 percent; and South Carolina, 12.2 percent. North Dakota continued to register the lowest jobless rate, 4.0 percent in March, followed by South Dakota and Nebraska, 4.8 and 5.0 percent, respectively. The rates in California, Florida, and Nevada set new series highs, as did the rate in Georgia (10.6 percent). In total, 24 states posted jobless rates significantly lower than the U.S. figure of 9.7 per-cent, 11 states and the District of Columbia had measurably higher rates, and 15 states had rates that were not appreciably different from that of the nation.
The Metropolitan Area Employment and Unemployment news release for March is scheduled to be released on Wednesday, April 28, 2010 and the Regional and State Employment and Unemployment news release for April is scheduled to be released on Friday, May 21, 2010.
Project Announcements
Apozeal Pharmaceuticals Expands Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Drug Manufacturing Operations
09/14/2025
Georgia-Pacific Expands Monroe County, Alabama, Cellulose Mill Operations
09/14/2025
Noble Plastics Expands St. Landry Parish, Louisiana, Production Operations
09/14/2025
Systems Planning & Analysis Expands Alexandria-Fairfax County, Virginia, Operations
09/13/2025
OgMentum ARK Plans Bowling Green, Kentucky, Headquarters-R&D Operations
09/13/2025
Damotech Expand Moberly, Missouri, Operations
09/11/2025
Most Read
-
Tariffs, Talent, and U.S. Expansion
Q3 2025
-
What We’re Getting Wrong About Gen Z’s Future in the Skilled Trades
Q3 2025
-
Data Center Demand Stabilizes Amid Changing Market Forces
Q3 2025
-
Powering the Next Generation of Projects
Q3 2025
-
A New Course for U.S. Shipbuilding
Q3 2025
-
How Consumer Trends Are Reshaping Food Facilities
Q3 2025
-
Optimizing Your Rail-Served Transportation Network: Strategy Before Steel
Q2 2025