(CNSNews.com) - A record 93,626,000 Americans 16 or older did not
participate in the nation’s labor force in June, as the labor force
participation rate dropped to 62.6 percent, a 38-year low, according to
the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
In June, according to BLS, the
nation’s civilian noninstitutional population, consisting of all people
16 or older who were not in the military or an institution, hit
250,663,000. Of those, 157,037,000 participated in the labor force by
either holding a job or actively seeking one.
The 157,037,000 who
participated in the labor force equaled only 62.6 percent of the
250,663,000 civilian noninstitutional population, the lowest labor force
participation rate seen in 38 years. It hasn’t been this low since
October 1977 when the participation rate was 62.4 percent.
Another
93,626,000 did not participate in the labor force. These Americans did
not have a job and were not actively trying to find one.
Of the
157,037,000 who did participate in the labor force, 148,739,000 had a
job, and 8,299,000 did not have a job were actively seeking one—making
them the nation’s unemployed.
The 8,299,000 job seekers were 5.3
percent of the 157,037,000 actively participating in the labor force
during the month. Thus, the unemployment rate was 5.3 percent which
dropped from the 5.5 percent unemployment seen in May.
The number
of employed Americans dropped from 148,795,000 in May to 148,739,000 in
June, a decline of 56,000. The number of unemployed Americans also
dropped over the month from 8,674,000 in May to 8,299,000 in June, a
decline of 375,000.
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