- Nevada, California, and Hawaii had the largest
unemployment spikes in 2020, new BLS data shows. - Nebraska, Utah, and South Dakota saw their unemployment rates rise the least.
- Employment-population ratios sank to all-time lows in 15 states including Illinois and Virginia.
The coronavirus sparked the worst
The nationwide
For one, four states saw average annual unemployment rate above 10% last year. Nevada faced the bleakest downturn, with unemployment averaging 12.8% in 2020. Hawaii and California followed with averages of 11.6% and 10.1%, respectively.
New York - the epicenter of the nation's first COVID-19 outbreak - saw unemployment average 10% in 2020, according to the Wednesday report.
Conversely, some states' labor
Gaps also emerged in states' employment-population ratios. The metric is a popular alternative measure of unemployment since it counts Americans who dropped out of the labor force.
The ratios fell to record-lows in 15 states, supporting fears that the economic fallout is among the worst ever seen in the US. Nevada, Hawaii, and Rhode Island suffered the biggest declines of the group. The national ratio fell to 56.8% from 60.8% last year.
Mississippi and West Virginia posted the lowest ratios of 50.6% and 50.3%, respectively. To be sure, the readings weren't the lowest in history for either state. Nebraska ended the year with the highest employment-population ratio of 66.7%.
Overall, 23 states boasted ratios higher than the national figure. Yet all 50 states and the District of Columbia saw their employment-population ratios decline from levels seen in 2019.