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News Release Information

20-887-PHI
Wednesday, May 06, 2020

Contacts Technical information: Media contact:

Unemployment in the Philadelphia Area by County – March 2020

Unemployment Rate in Ten Area Counties Increased Over the Year

In March, Burlington County, NJ, had the lowest unemployment rate in the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area at 3.4 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Sheila Watkins, the Bureau’s regional commissioner, noted that at 7.1 percent, Philadelphia County, PA, had the highest unemployment rate among the 11 counties that make up the metropolitan area. Salem County, NJ, had the second-highest jobless rate in the area at 5.3 percent. Four other area counties had jobless rates above the 4.5-percent U.S. average. (See chart 1. The Technical Note at the end of this release contains the metropolitan area definitions. All data in this release are not seasonally adjusted; accordingly, over-the-year analysis is used throughout.)

From March 2019 to March 2020, one county in the Philadelphia metropolitan area—Cecil County, MD—had an unemployment rate decrease (-0.6 percentage point). Nationally, the unemployment rate increased 0.6 percentage point. Ten area counties had jobless rate increases since March 2019. Philadelphia County, PA, had the largest rate increase at 1.9 percentage points. Among the other nine counties, jobless rate increases ranged from 1.4 percentage points each in Delaware and Bucks Counties, PA, to 0.1 point each in Burlington and Camden Counties, NJ. (See table A.)

Table A. Unemployment rates for the United States, the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area, and its components, not seasonally adjusted

Area
Back
data
Unemployment ratesChange from
Mar
2018
Mar
2019
Mar
2020(1)
Mar 2018
to
Mar 2020(1)
Mar 2019
to
Mar 2020(1)

United States

Go to web page with historical data for series LNU04000000
4.13.94.50.40.6

Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, Pa.-N.J.-Del.-Md. Metropolitan Statistical Area

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUMT423798000000003
4.33.95.10.81.2

Philadelphia, Pa. Metropolitan Division

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUDV423796400000003
5.24.76.61.41.9

Delaware County, PA

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN420450000000003
4.03.85.21.21.4

Philadelphia County, PA

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN421010000000003
5.65.27.11.51.9

Montgomery County-Bucks County-Chester County, Pa. Metropolitan Division

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUDV423387400000003
3.53.44.71.21.3

Montgomery County, PA

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN420910000000003
3.53.44.61.11.2

Bucks County, PA

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN420170000000003
3.93.85.21.31.4

Chester County, PA

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN420290000000003
3.13.04.11.01.1

Camden, N.J. Metropolitan Division

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUDV341580400000003
4.53.73.8-0.70.1

Burlington County, NJ

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN340050000000003
4.03.33.4-0.60.1

Camden County, NJ

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN340070000000003
5.04.14.2-0.80.1

Gloucester County, NJ

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN340150000000003
4.53.73.9-0.60.2

Wilmington, DE-MD-NJ Metropolitan Division

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUDV104886400000003
4.13.74.60.50.9

New Castle County, DE

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN100030000000003
3.83.44.70.91.3

Cecil County, MD

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN240150000000003
4.74.43.8-0.9-0.6

Salem County, NJ

Go to web page with historical data for series LAUCN340330000000003
6.25.05.3-0.90.3

Footnotes
(1) Data for the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area and its components are preliminary for the most recent month.

Unemployment rates in five Philadelphia-area counties were lower in March 2020 than in March 2018. Cecil County, MD, and Salem County, NJ, had the largest two-year jobless rate decreases at 0.9 percentage point each, followed by Camden County, NJ, at 0.8 point. The remaining six counties all had unemployment rate increases which were larger than the national increase of 0.4 percentage point.

The March 2020 unemployment rates for the four metropolitan divisions in the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington metropolitan area were 3.8 percent in the Camden, NJ, division; 4.6 percent in the Wilmington, DE-MD-NJ, division; 4.7 percent in the Montgomery County-Bucks County-Chester County, PA, division; and 6.6 percent in the Philadelphia, PA, division. All four divisions had jobless rate increases over the year.

The Metropolitan Area Employment and Unemployment news release for April is scheduled to be released on Wednesday, June 3, 2020, at 10:00 a.m. (EDT).


Technical Note

This release presents unemployment rate data for states and counties from the Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS) program, a federal-state cooperative endeavor. 

Definitions. The labor force and unemployment data are based on the same concepts and definitions as those used for the official national estimates obtained from the Current Population Survey (CPS), a sample survey of households that is conducted for the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) by the U.S. Census Bureau. The LAUS program measures employment and unemployment on a place-of-residence basis.  The universe for each is the civilian noninstitutional population 16 years of age and over.  Employed persons are those who did any work at all for pay or profit in the reference week (the week including the 12th of the month) or worked 15 hours or more without pay in a family business or farm, plus those not working who had a job from which they were temporarily absent, whether or not paid, for such reasons as labor-management dispute, illness, or vacation. Unemployed persons are those who were not employed during the reference week (based on the definition above), had actively looked for a job sometime in the 4-week period ending with the reference week, and were currently available for work; persons on layoff expecting recall need not be looking for work to be counted as unemployed.  The labor force is the sum of employed and unemployed persons. The unemployment rate is the number of unemployed as a percent of the labor force.

Methods of Estimation. The LAUS program is a hierarchy of non-survey methodologies for indirectly estimating employment and unemployment in states and local areas. Statewide data are produced through a modeling technique that uses estimates of payroll jobs from the Current Employment Statistics survey and unemployment insurance claims counts from the state workforce agencies to mitigate volatility in the direct CPS tabulations of employment and unemployment, respectively. Data for counties are developed through a building-block approach and adjusted proportionally to state model-based totals. For multi-county areas, such as the metropolitan areas and metropolitan divisions delineated by the Office of Management and Budget, estimates are summed from the data for their component counties. Estimates for cities and towns are produced through a disaggregation technique.

Annual revisions. Labor force and unemployment data for prior years reflect adjustments made at the end of each year, usually implemented with January estimates.  The adjusted estimates reflect updated population data from the U.S. Census Bureau, any revisions in the other data sources, and model reestimation. All substate estimates are reestimated and adjusted to add to the revised model-based estimates.

Area definitions.  The substate area data published in this release reflect the standards and definitions established by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, dated April 10, 2018. A detailed list of the geographic definitions is available at www.bls.gov/lau/lausmsa.htm

The Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area includes Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia Counties in Pennsylvania; Burlington, Camden, Gloucester, and Salem Counties in New Jersey; New Castle County in Delaware; and Cecil County in Maryland.

The Camden, NJ Metropolitan Division includes Burlington, Camden, and Gloucester Counties in New Jersey.

The Montgomery County-Bucks County-Chester County, PA Metropolitan Division includes Bucks, Chester, and Montgomery Counties in Pennsylvania.

The Philadelphia, PA Metropolitan Division includes Delaware and Philadelphia Counties in Pennsylvania.

The Wilmington, DE-MD-NJ Metropolitan Division includes New Castle County in Delaware, Cecil County in Maryland, and Salem County in New Jersey.

Information in this release will be made available to sensory impaired individuals upon request. Voice phone:  (202) 691-5200; Federal Relay Service: (800) 877-8339.

 

Last Modified Date: Wednesday, May 06, 2020