New and cumulative jobless claims by state: Numbers and shares of workers either receiving unemployment benefits or waiting for approval during the week ending July 4
State | Total currently receiving or applied for regular UI | Regular UI as a share of labor force | Total currently receiving or applied for PUA |
---|---|---|---|
Alabama | 150,988 | 6.7% | 47,145 |
Alaska | 48,080 | 13.9% | 21,289 |
Arizona | 236,557 | 6.5% | 2,323,755 |
Arkansas | 112,787 | 8.2% | 103,277 |
California | 3,051,489 | 15.6% | 1,910,546 |
Colorado | 254,821 | 8.0% | 113,421 |
Connecticut | 265,335 | 13.7% | 51,831 |
Delaware | 50,386 | 10.3% | 12,176 |
Washington D.C. | 72,895 | 17.6% | 13,994 |
Florida | 715,578 | 6.8% | 39,546 |
Georgia | 748,223 | 14.5% | 23,438 |
Hawaii | 132,041 | 19.7% | 117,873 |
Idaho | 32,061 | 3.6% | 3,409 |
Illinois | 707,701 | 11.1% | 183,484 |
Indiana | 213,171 | 6.3% | 294,789 |
Iowa | 145,875 | 8.3% | 18,546 |
Kansas | 107,555 | 7.2% | 61,999 |
Kentucky | 173,544 | 8.3% | 63,801 |
Louisiana | 331,318 | 15.7% | 168,888 |
Maine | 64,572 | 9.3% | 32,477 |
Maryland | 274,082 | 8.4% | 777,959 |
Massachusetts | 564,371 | 14.7% | 458,106 |
Michigan | 560,313 | 11.3% | 1,129,508 |
Minnesota | 364,672 | 11.7% | 64,333 |
Mississippi | 153,517 | 12.0% | 552,724 |
Missouri | 215,743 | 6.9% | 97,183 |
Montana | 40,516 | 7.5% | 52,014 |
Nebraska | 60,473 | 5.8% | 32,525 |
Nevada | 300,627 | 19.3% | 290,211 |
New Hampshire | 79,248 | 10.2% | 0 |
New Jersey | 537,283 | 11.8% | 427,136 |
New Mexico | 101,328 | 10.5% | 55,884 |
New York | 1,703,997 | 17.8% | 1,119,604 |
North Carolina | 432,351 | 8.5% | 253,496 |
North Dakota | 33,484 | 8.3% | 8,471 |
Ohio | 443,959 | 7.6% | 696,835 |
Oklahoma | 130,829 | 7.1% | 3,774 |
Oregon | 357,790 | 17.0% | 34,665 |
Pennsylvania | 697,528 | 10.6% | 3,021,336 |
Rhode Island | 70,016 | 12.5% | 53,960 |
South Carolina | 207,599 | 8.7% | 95,505 |
South Dakota | 16,600 | 3.6% | 4,382 |
Tennessee | 292,955 | 8.7% | 147,793 |
Texas | 1,387,330 | 9.8% | 251,272 |
Utah | 75,440 | 4.6% | 13,989 |
Vermont | 40,520 | 11.9% | 10,730 |
Virginia | 412,975 | 9.3% | 306,843 |
Washington | 445,708 | 11.2% | 169,660 |
West Virginia | 74,513 | 9.2% | 0 |
Wisconsin | 247,284 | 8.0% | 27,940 |
Wyoming | 15,899 | 5.4% | 4,828 |
Notes: For comparisons to the size of the labor force, we use February 2020 levels. Totals reflect the number of workers whose have made it through at least the first round of processing or are waiting for their claim to be processed.
Unless otherwise noted, the numbers in this blog post are the ones reported by the U.S. Department of Labor, which they receive from the state agencies that administer UI. While the DOL is asking states to report regular UI claims and PUA claims separately, many states appear to also be including some or all PUA claimants in their reported regular UI claims. As state agencies work to get these new programs up and running, there will likely continue to be some misreporting. Since the number of UI claims is one of the most up-to-date measures we have of labor market weakness and access to benefits, we will still be analyzing it each week as reported by DOL, but ask that you keep these caveats in mind when interpreting the data.
Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, July 9, 2020.