Jobless rates fell in 23 states in April
WASHINGTON – Unemployment rates fell in 23 U.S. states in April, as hiring rebounded nationwide from weak job gains the previous month.
The Labor Department said Wednesday 11 states reported a higher unemployment rate than in March, while 16 states saw no change. Pennsylvania’s rate was 5.3 percent, the same as March.
Forty states gained jobs, and nine states posted job losses.
The drag from lower oil prices triggered sharp cutbacks in oil drilling was evident in some states. Texas added just 1,200 jobs, far below its average monthly gain of 34,000 last year. Wyoming lost jobs, while North Dakota reported a small gain.
Nationwide, employers added a healthy 223,000 jobs in April, dropping the unemployment rate to a seven-year low of 5.4 percent. That represented a reassuring bounce back after the economy generated just 85,000 jobs in March.
Nebraska reported the lowest unemployment rate at 2.5 percent, followed by North Dakota at 3.1 percent. North Dakota boasted the lowest rate for nearly every month since the Great Recession, but the figure climbed from 2.7 percent a year earlier in part because of layoffs by oil drillers.
Nevada had the highest unemployment rate at 7.1 percent, followed by West Virginia at 7 percent.