Manufacturing jobs lost between March 1998 and 2013, by state

State/region Manufacturing jobs lost since March 1998 Manufacturing  jobs lost as a share of total employment in March 1998
UNITED STATES* 5,702,200 4.6%
NORTHEAST 1,217,100 5.0%
  New England 371,700 5.6%
    Connecticut 85,400 5.2%
    Maine 31,000 5.5%
    Massachusetts 167,600 5.3%
    New Hampshire 38,700 6.6%
    Rhode Island 36,000 7.9%
    Vermont 12,900 4.6%
  Middle Atlantic 845,400 4.8%
    New Jersey 188,900 5.0%
    New York 342,500 4.2%
    Pennsylvania 314,000 5.7%
MIDWEST 1,647,500 5.3%
  East North Central 1,341,600 6.3%
    Illinois 330,500 5.6%
    Indiana 169,500 5.8%
    Michigan 340,000 7.6%
    Ohio 368,500 6.8%
    Wisconsin 133,100 4.9%
  West North Central 305,900 3.2%
    Iowa 32,200 2.3%
    Kansas 41,100 3.2%
    Minnesota 89,800 3.5%
    Missouri 125,600 4.7%
    Nebraska 17,200 2.0%
    North Dakota -2,600 -0.8%
    South Dakota 2,500 0.7%
SOUTH 1,948,200 4.5%
  South Atlantic 1,100,900 4.8%
    Delaware 19,100 4.8%
    District of Columbia** 3,200 0.5%
    Florida 164,400 2.5%
    Georgia 193,600 5.2%
    Maryland 69,000 3.0%
    North Carolina 360,000 9.7%
    South Carolina 117,100 6.6%
    Virginia 145,000 4.4%
    West Virginia 29,500 4.1%
  East South Central 478,700 6.5%
    Alabama** 114,600 6.1%
    Kentucky 76,700 4.4%
    Mississippi 95,600 8.5%
    Tennessee 191,700 7.3%
  West South Central 368,700 2.8%
    Arkansas 89,900 8.1%
    Louisiana 41,500 2.2%
    Oklahoma** 36,900 2.6%
    Texas 200,400 2.3%
WEST 889,300 3.4%
  Mountain 150,400 1.9%
    Arizona 56,700 2.8%
    Colorado 57,200 2.8%
    Idaho 9,900 1.9%
    Montana 3,700 1.0%
    Nevada -200 0.0%
    New Mexico 14,000 2.0%
    Utah 8,500 0.8%
    Wyoming 700 0.3%
  Pacific 738,900 4.0%
    Alaska -1,300 -0.5%
    California 604,800 4.5%
    Hawaii 2,300 0.4%
    Oregon 56,600 3.6%
    Washington 76,600 3.0%

*The total represents the sum of states and the District of Columbia, and differs slightly from total national employment as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (2014b)

**Nonseasonally adjusted data are used for Alabama, the District of Columbia, and Oklahoma

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics (2014c) and author's analysis

View the underlying data on epi.org.