Labor Force Participation

Where Labor Force Participation is Highest and Lowest in the U.S.

Labor force participation in the U.S. varies between 56.1 percent of the civilian population in Mississippi and 71.0 percent in Washington D.C. According to numbers by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, only two states (and D.C.) broke the threshold of 70 percent: Minnesota and Iowa. Labor force participation was the highest in the Midwestern states and the lowest in the South.

According to Brookings Institute, labor force participation is generally falling in the U.S., although that was dampened slightly since 2014 when strong job growth started being recorded in the country. Because of the aging of industrialized societies, falling labor force participation rates in the U.S. are mirrored in developed nations around the world.

Labor force participation is defined as the share of the civilian population that is either employed or looking for work, i.e. potentially part of the labor market.

Description

This chart shows labor force participation in the U.S. by state in 2019.

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U.S. civilian labor force participation rate seasonally adjusted 2011-2024
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U.S. quarterly civilian labor force Q3 1992- Q3 2024
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U.S. labor force participation rate and projections 2003-2033, by age
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U.S. labor force participation rate 2023, by age and sex
U.S. civilian labor force seasonally adjusted 2022-2024
U.S. inactive labor force seasonally unadjusted 2022-2024

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