Record-low unemployment rates were reported in 14 states over the past 12 months, as businesses continue to thrive with the help of President Donald Trump’s tax cuts and economic reforms.
California reached the lowest unemployment rate since BLS began tracking state-level unemployment in 1976. The Golden State reported a 4.1 percent unemployment rate, just one-third of the 12.3 unemployment rate recorded at the peak of the economic recession in December 2010.
Colorado’s unemployment rate also dropped to one-third of that in 2010. The state’s unemployment rate was 2.6 percent in March, among the lowest in the nation.
Only 3.7 percent of workers are unemployed in Alabama. Arkansas reached historic low unemployment of 3.6 percent last May.
North Dakota, Texas, and Tenessee also set records over the past 12 months. Unemployment dropped to 3.9 percent in Texas in November and to 3.3 percent in Tennessee in January.
Unemployment rates are below 3 percent in Wisconsin, North Dakota, New Hampshire, Nebraska, Maine, Iowa, and Idaho. Hawaii has the lowest unemployment in the United States.
As unemployment continues to drop, economists expect business to offer higher wages as the supply of workers dries up. In March, the average hourly wages for non-farm employees grew to $26.82 from $26.11 at the same time last year.
The improving jobs market is also drawing people who haven’t worked in a long while.
Unemployment in Alaska is the highest of all states at 7.3 percent. Alaska’s unemployment is historically above the national average.
Both red and blue states tracked record-low unemployment, showing that the trend cuts across ideological boundaries.