Tuesday, March 31st 2020, 3:10 am
By Stephanie Horan, CEPF®
Last Thursday, the Department of Labor reported that 3.28 million people filed for unemployment insurance for the week ending March 21, 2020. This was the highest historical number of new claims in a week, almost five times the previous record high. Long-term unemployment, especially during a crisis like the coronavirus pandemic, will make it difficult for many Americans to save money adequately.
Though the number of jobless claims increased in every state, some states saw bigger increases than others. In this study, we looked at which states saw the biggest spikes in unemployment claims by comparing the average number of initial claims per week in January and February 2020 to the advance number of initial claims for the week ending March 21, 2020. For details on our data sources and how we put all the information together to create our final rankings, check out the Data and Methodology section below.
Key FindingsThe biggest rise in unemployment claims took place in Nevada, the state whose workforce we predicted may be most affected by a COVID-19 recession. In January and February, an average of about 2,400 individuals filed new claims for unemployment per week. That number rose substantially in March. For the week ending March 14, 2020, 6,356 individuals filed new claims for unemployment, followed by more than 93,000 new claims for the week ending March 21, 2020.
Louisiana and New Hampshire follow closely behind Nevada with more than 35 times more new jobless claims in the second-to-last week in March than in January and February. In Louisiana, the number of claims increased by about 70,700, and in New Hampshire, claims increased by almost 21,300.
Pennsylvania has the eighth-highest percentage increase between the average number of initial claims filed per week in January and February and the number of advance claims filed for the week ending March 21. Pennsylvania also saw the largest one-week jump in the gross number of claims filed of any state. For the week ending March 14, a total of about 15,400 jobless claims were filed by Pennsylvania residents. Over the course of a mere week, that number grew by more than 363,400. For the week ending March 21, more than 378,900 individuals filed claims, representing 5.76% of the state’s labor force.
Data and MethodologyAll data for this study comes from the Department of Labor. The national figures quoted in the introduction are seasonally adjusted, while the state figures are not. To find the states seeing the biggest spikes in jobless claims during the COVID-19 crisis, we calculated the average initial unemployment claims from the week ending January 4, 2020 through the week ending February 29, 2020. We compared the average number of initial claims in January and February to the number of advance initial claims for the week ending March 21, 2020. We ranked the states from highest to lowest using the metric of the percentage difference between the number of advance claims for the week ending March 21, 2020 and the average number of weekly initial claims from January to February 2020.
Tips for Making It Through a RecessionQuestions about our study? Contact us at press@smartasset.com
Photo credit: ©iStock.com/skynesher
The post COVID-19 Crisis: States Seeing the Biggest Spikes in Jobless Claims – 2020 Study appeared first on SmartAsset Blog.
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