U.S. UNEMPLOYMENT RATE RISES KEYSTONE
RESEARCH CENTER REPORTS -- PA. RATE HIGHER THAN ALL NEIGHBORS
EXCEPT NEW YORK
Harrisburg, January 4 Unemployment figures released today by the U.S. Department of Labor show an increase in the seasonally adjusted U.S. unemployment rate in December to 5.8 percent, up from 5.6 percent in November.
This is the highest level since April 1995.
Figures released in late December by the U.S. Department of Labor
showed that the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in Pennsylvania
was 5.0 percent in November, up from 4.6 percent in September
(when state numbers do not show the impact of the September 11
World Trade Center bombing).
Reacting to todays news about U.S. unemployment, Keystone
Research Policy Analyst David Bradley said, "Sixty four thousand
more Pennsylvania workers are jobless today because of rising
unemployment. But we still have a chance to limit the damage --
despite Washingtons failure to deliver a stimulus package.
Pennsylvania legislators must now take the lead in crafting policies
that restore economic optimism and are in line with the values
of unity and community that have come to the surface since September
11."
While unchanged since October, the November unemployment rate
in Pennsylvania was higher than in all of Pennsylvanias
neighboring states except New York.
Our five other neighbors -- Delaware, Maryland,
New Jersey, Ohio, and West Virginia had an average
unemployment rate of 4.3 percent. The unemployment rate in
Pennsylvania is 0.7 percentage points higher than 12 months
ago, 1.0 percentage point higher than its March, 2000 low,
and higher than at any point since November 1997.
Within Pennsylvania, the picture is mixed.
Over the 12 months ending with November 2001, 8 metropolitan areas had unemployment rates at least one-half percentage point higher than November 2000: Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Erie, Harrisburg-Lebanon-Carlisle, Lancaster, Reading, State College, Williamsport, and York.
From August to November 2001, however, the unemployment rate has stayed the same or declined in 8 of the states 14 metropolitan areas. Much of Pennsylvania has been spared economic trauma as a result of September 11.
Three metropolitan areas had lower unemployment rates in November 2001 compared to a year ago: Johnstown, Pittsburgh, and Sharon.
"The resolution that passed the Pennsylvania House unanimously in October of last year called on the U.S. Congress to pass a bill that would expand unemployment benefits, provide health care for the unemployed, and increase job training for displaced workers," concluded Bradley.
"These three consensus elements should
be the starting point for state actions aimed at stabilizing
our economy and strengthening our families and communities."
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