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-   -   Current Unemployement rates: State Ranking (http://www.the370z.com/lounge-off-topic/6895-current-unemployement-rates-state-ranking.html)

BanningZ 07-19-2009 07:45 PM

Current Unemployement rates: State Ranking
 
I just thought this was interesting, because of how bad the job market is here.

The Department of Labor just released the Unemployment rates for June 2009.

Keep in mind this does not include the people who can no longer receive unemployment benefits but are still unemployed.



Oregon is in 3rd place! Or 49th...whatever. We'll strive for #1. :icon14:

Unemployment Rates for States

Unemployment Rates for States

Monthly Rankings
Seasonally Adjusted

June 2009p

Rank........ State................Rate

1 NORTH DAKOTA............... 4.2
2 NEBRASKA .......................5.0
3 SOUTH DAKOTA................5.1
4 UTAH ...............................5.7
5 WYOMING ........................5.9
6 IOWA ...............................6.2
7 OKLAHOMA ......................6.3
8 MONTANA..........................6.4
9 LOUISIANA .......................6.8
9 NEW HAMPSHIRE............. 6.8
9 NEW MEXICO....................6.8
12 KANSAS ............................7.0
13 VERMONT .........................7.1
14 ARKANSAS ........................7.2
14 VIRGINIA ..........................7.2
16 MARYLAND ........................7.3
17 HAWAII..............................7.4
18 TEXAS................................7.5
19 COLORADO........................7.6
20 CONNECTICUT...................8.0
21 PENNSYLVANIA..................8.3
22 ALASKA..............................8.4
22 DELAWARE.........................8.4
22 IDAHO................................8.4
22 MINNESOTA........................8.4
26 MAINE.................................8.5
27 MASSACHUSETTS................8.6
28 ARIZONA.............................8.7
28 NEW YORK..........................8.7
30 MISSISSIPPI....................... 9.0
30 WISCONSIN........................9.0
32 NEW JERSEY........................9.2
32 WEST VIRGINIA...................9.2
34 MISSOURI............................9.3
34 WASHINGTON......................9.3
36 ALABAMA.............................10.1
36 GEORGIA.............................10.1
38 ILLINOIS.............................10.3
39 FLORIDA..............................10.6
40 INDIANA..............................10.7
41 TENNESSEE..........................10.8
42 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.......10.9
42 KENTUCKY............................10.9
44 NORTH CAROLINA.................11.0
45 OHIO....................................11.1
46 CALIFORNIA......................... 11.6
47 NEVADA.................................12.0
48 SOUTH CAROLINA..................12.1
49 OREGON................................12.2
50 RHODE ISLAND......................12.4
51 MICHIGAN..............................15.2


Seriously Ouch Michigan. :(

blue660r01 07-19-2009 07:47 PM

Prob cuz of Detroit and Flint lol

frost 07-19-2009 07:51 PM

Pretty interesting. I wonder if illegal immigrants are taken into calculation. I think that would affect the ratings of places like CA, AZ, NM, and TX.

As for Michigan ... just ... damn.

Pushing_Tin 07-19-2009 07:56 PM

We've really been hurt by the collapse of the RV industry. Here in my county we lost two huge RV manufacturers that accounted for nearly 4k jobs. Then Hyundai semi-conductor closed last fall taking another 1,200 higher paying tech jobs. The collapse of the housing market has really hurt the logging and construction people too.

Eugene just got a new Chinese company that is bringing in 150 jobs to make solar panels, so maybe that will be the start of something good.

GMZ 07-19-2009 08:04 PM

What measure is this? U3 or U6? Dont believe the numbers its really probably much worse.

BanningZ 07-19-2009 08:16 PM

^You are probably right.

This thread is sad.

http://i134.photobucket.com/albums/q...bie_Downer.jpg

Hulu - Saturday Night Live: Debbie Downer: Birthday Party

BanningZ 07-19-2009 08:55 PM

Quote:

1 NORTH DAKOTA............... 4.2
2 NEBRASKA .......................5.0
3 SOUTH DAKOTA................5.1
4 UTAH ...............................5.7
5 WYOMING ........................5.9

Population versus Land Mass??? Most of these places aren't nearly as populated as many other states in terms of size versus people. Are they?

Pushing_Tin 07-19-2009 10:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BanningZ (Post 118998)
Population versus Land Mass??? Most of these places aren't nearly as populated as many other states in terms of size versus people. Are they?

True, and a lot of the "flyover" states didn't see the huge real estate bubble and speculative building that a lot of the east/west coast and vacation/second home areas did. So their local economies weren't as suceptible to the recession. JMO of course.

dad 07-19-2009 10:27 PM

It's going to get worse!



Rising unemployment accelerates foreclosure crisis


◦WASHINGTON – Relentlessly rising unemployment is triggering more home foreclosures, threatening the Obama administration's efforts to end the housing crisis and diminishing hopes the economy will rebound with vigor.
In past recessions, the housing industry helped get the economy back on track. Home builders ramped up production, expecting buyers to take advantage of lower prices and jump into the market. But not this time.

These days, homeowners who got fixed-rate prime mortgages because they had good credit can't make their payments because they're out of work. That means even more foreclosures and further declines in home values.

The initial surge in foreclosures in 2007 and 2008 was tied to subprime mortgages issued during the housing boom to people with shaky credit. That crisis has ebbed, but it has been replaced by more traditional foreclosures tied to the recession.

Unemployment stood at 9.5 percent in June and is expected to rise past 10 percent and well into next year. The last time the U.S. economy was mired in a recession with such high unemployment was 1981 and 1982.

But the home foreclosure rate then was less than one-fourth what it is today. Housing wasn't a drag on the economy, and when the recession ended, the boom was explosive.

No one is expecting a repeat. The real estate market is still saturated with unsold homes and homes that sell below market value because they are in or close to foreclosure.

"It just doesn't have the makings of a recovery like we saw in the early 1980s," says Wells Fargo Securities senior economist Mark Vitner, who predicts mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures won't return to normal levels for three more years.

Almost 4 percent of homeowners with a mortgage are in foreclosure, and 8 percent on top of that are at least a month behind on payments — the highest levels since the Great Depression.

Because home values have declined so dramatically, many people can't refinance. They owe far more to the bank than their properties are worth.

To combat the foreclosure crisis and help stabilize home prices, President Barack Obama launched an effort in March to help 9 million people avoid foreclosure by helping them refinance or modifying their loans to lower their payments.

But that's of no help to people who can't even afford the lower payments because they're making much less money or have lost their jobs altogether.

As of early July, about 160,000 borrowers were enrolled in three-month trials of loan modifications under the plan, according to preliminary figures from the Treasury Department.

Meanwhile, more than 1.5 million American households were threatened with losing their homes in the first six months of this year, foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday.

Last week, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan outlined their frustrations in a letter to 27 mortgage companies, saying the industry needs to "devote substantially more resources to this program for it to fully succeed."

While high-level pressure on the mortgage industry could help, "There's nothing there that's going to help people who don't have jobs," said Jay Brinkmann, chief economist with the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Just ask anyone in Rockford, Ill. Over the last generation, the blue-collar city of about 157,000 northwest of Chicago has struggled to attract jobs as auto suppliers, aerospace companies and machine shops closed. Today, unemployment runs at more than 13 percent.



Robin and Thomas Lewis, who live there, once earned a combined $100,000. But he lost his job in shipping and receiving at a robotics company, and she had to close her at-home day care business. They are staring at an October deadline for foreclosure.

Their water service was cut off in February because they couldn't afford to pay the bill. Since then, they and their two teenage sons have been showering at the homes of friends and family and filling up gallon jugs of water to drink at home.

Robin Lewis, 41, found a job as a cashier at Wal-Mart and is taking night classes in hopes of becoming an accountant. Her 43-year-old husband got a job through a temp agency working as a machine operator.

"At least now we have some income coming in," Robin Lewis said.

She hopes it's enough to persuade the mortgage company to modify their 30-year fixed-rate loan. They are meeting with a housing counselor next week to work on their application for a loan modification.

Around the country, the relationship between rising unemployment and foreclosures is growing. An Associated Press analysis of more than 3,100 U.S. counties found a much stronger link between foreclosure rates and unemployment this year than in 2007.

According to April figures, some of the highest unemployment rates in the country are in California cities like Merced, Modesto and Fresno that have been struck hardest by the foreclosure crisis. In those areas, home prices have been cut in half.

Even in areas where unemployment is lower, borrowers are struggling.

Claudia Escobar, a 44-year-old single mother in Clifton, Va., lives in a cozy three-story brick town house on a tree-lined suburban street about 25 miles west of the nation's capital.

A combination of family health problems and the loss of her $50,000-a-year job at an accounting firm have made it impossible to make her $900 mortgage payment.

She has staved off foreclosure so far and hopes to land a job while her lender evaluates her application for a loan modification. Her 14-year-old son, Tommy, broke down in tears when he found out that his mother lost her job. "That has to be the most devastating point since we lived here," she said, sobbing. "He keeps asking me every now and then if we're going to lose the

bigaudiofanat 07-20-2009 01:56 AM

Ya I am in 32 NJ Yes it rely dose s*** I have been unemployed for 10 months now can not find a job that is around the same wadge as I was getting, nor can I find a job that dose not want you to beat yourself up for 6.50 an hour. Not to say that I would not take it it is jsut that I am going to college and not sitting around so I will use my unemployment why I can get it.

BanningZ 07-20-2009 06:44 AM

It sure as hell doesn't help that our minimum wage is 8.40 and its going up at the end of the year again.

Inflation...

GMZ 07-20-2009 07:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BanningZ (Post 118998)
Population versus Land Mass??? Most of these places aren't nearly as populated as many other states in terms of size versus people. Are they?

They also dont have lumbering state govts like the nanny states along with huge welfare and entitlement burdens.

U3 will increase to 10%+ and U6 to 25% which are basically depression levels. Along with this increase will be an increase in prime mortgage defaults as they find themselves underwater. Think suprime was bad? Wait until the ALT-A and Option-ARM resets (at least 2x the size of subprime resets) hit in the next few years! :ughdance:

Want the real story of unemployment? Check out a website called ShadowStats, it goes over how the govt has been tweaking the stats over the years to make them seem better than they really are.

cow 07-20-2009 08:08 AM

Louisiana has pretty low unemployment between constant oil & gas speculation, general growth, & post-hurricane construction. Finally something positive.

nogoodname 07-20-2009 08:34 AM

everything went down here....pharmacuitcals to manufacturing....stores.

naughty240 07-20-2009 10:50 PM

Yay Rhode Island


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