Unemployment rates by state

KD00LS

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US interactive guide
Nov 4th 2010, 15:51 by The Economist online

AMERICA as a whole has just endured its sharpest recession since the 1930s, and the recovery is still fragile. But as our interactive map reveals, the pain has been spread very unevenly. The hardest-hit state, Nevada, has an unemployment rate more than three times as bad as that of North Dakota, the state that has done best on that measure. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, there is a close inverse correlation between growth rates and unemployment.

But what of politics? On the whole, the states with the worst unemployment levels tend to vote Democratic, and those with the best are in the Republican camp. Politicians will argue furiously about which way round the arrow of causation ought to run.

Interestingly, America's ethnic composition seems to have little consistent economic impact. States with large numbers of Hispanics (by far the fastest-growing ethnic group in America) include low-growth/high unemployment states like California and Nevada, as well as good performers like Texas and New Mexico.

http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2010/11/us_interactive_guide
 
I am willing to bet you will also find that the states with the worst unemployment generally tend to be the ones with the most restrictive housing/land regulations as well; the ones where the housing boom's occurred primarily.

This is the problem with artificially created booms and the artificially created booms happened due to federal level legislative responses to what were originally LOCAL issues (through the community reinvestment act).
 

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