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Jobs Up in All 14 Metro Areas in November

Press Release - Thursday, December 22, 2022

SPRINGFIELD - Jobs increased over-the-year in all fourteen Illinois metropolitan areas in November according to preliminary data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES). The unemployment rate increased in five metropolitan areas, decreased in four and was unchanged in five.

"Significant job growth has remained consistent throughout all corners of the state for nearly two years," said Deputy Governor Andy Manar. "As job expansion continues and more people enter the labor force to capitalize on newly created job opportunities, IDES stands ready to provide resources that will help match employers and jobseekers."

The metro areas which had the largest over-the-year percentage increases in total nonfarm jobs were the Davenport-Moline-Rock Island IA-IL MSA (+6.4%, +11,400), the Rockford MSA (+3.9%, +5,600), and the Chicago Metropolitan Division (+3.6%, +134,200). Industries that saw job growth in a majority of metro areas included: Manufacturing (fourteen areas); Mining and Construction, Leisure and Hospitality and Other Services (thirteen areas each); Education and Health Services (twelve areas); Wholesale Trade (ten areas); Government (nine areas); Retail Trade and Transportation, Warehousing and Utilities (eight areas each).

The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate increases were the Kankakee MSA (+0.3 point to 5.4%), the Bloomington MSA (+0.2 point to 3.4%), the Champaign-Urbana MSA (+0.2 point to 3.6%) and the Lake County-Kenosha County, IL-WI Metro Division (+0.2 point to 3.8%). The largest unemployment rate decreases were in the Rockford MSA (-0.7 point to 5.8%), the Davenport-Moline-Rock Island IA-IL MSA (-0.3 point to 3.7%) and the Decatur MSA (-0.3 point to 5.7%). The Chicago Metro Division unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.5%. The unemployment rate increased over-the-year in 83 counties, decreased in 14, and was unchanged in 5.

Not Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment Rates

Metropolitan Area

November 2022*

November 2021**

Over-the-Year Change

Bloomington

3.4%

3.2%

0.2

Carbondale-Marion

4.0%

4.0%

0.0

Champaign-Urbana

3.6%

3.4%

0.2

Chicago-Naperville-Arlington Heights

4.5%

4.5%

0.0

Danville

5.2%

5.1%

0.1

Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA-IL

3.7%

4.0%

-0.3

Decatur

5.7%

6.0%

-0.3

Elgin

4.2%

4.2%

0.0

Kankakee

5.4%

5.1%

0.3

Lake-Kenosha, IL-WI

3.8%

3.6%

0.2

Peoria

4.5%

4.5%

0.0

Rockford

5.8%

6.5%

-0.7

Springfield

3.9%

4.0%

-0.1

St. Louis (IL-Section)

3.8%

3.8%

0.0

Illinois Statewide

4.4%

4.3%

0.1

* Preliminary  I  ** Revised

 

 

 
















Total Nonfarm Jobs (Not Seasonally Adjusted) - November 2022

Metropolitan Area

November

November

Over-the-Year

 

2022*

2021**

Change

Bloomington MSA

96,600

93,400

3,200

Carbondale-Marion MSA

58,900

58,300

600

Champaign-Urbana MSA

120,200

119,400

800

Chicago-Naperville-Arlington Heights Metro Division

3,842,000

3,707,800

134,200

Danville MSA

26,400

26,000

400

Davenport-Moline-Rock Island MSA

189,800

178,400

11,400

Decatur MSA

49,500

48,400

1,100

Elgin Metro Division

260,900

253,200

7,700

Kankakee MSA

43,600

42,500

1,100

Lake-County-Kenosha County Metro Division

426,700

415,200

11,500

Peoria MSA

170,500

166,000

4,500

Rockford MSA

148,800

143,200

5,600

Springfield MSA

110,800

107,900

2,900

Illinois Section of St. Louis MSA

240,000

238,600

1,400

Illinois Statewide

6,165,200

5,975,200

190,000

*Preliminary | **Revised

 

 

 


Not Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment Rates
(percent) for Local Counties and Areas

Labor Market Area

Nov 2022

Nov 2021

Over the Year Change

 

 
   

Champaign-Urbana MSA

 

 

   

Champaign County

3.6 %

3.4 %

0.2

   

Ford County

3.6 %

3.0 %

0.6

   

Piatt County

3.1 %

2.9 %

0.2

   

Danville MSA

 

 

 

   

Vermilion County

5.2 %

5.1 %

0.1

   

Cities

 

 

 

   

Champaign City

3.5 %

3.3 %

0.2

   

Urbana City

3.8 %

3.3 %

0.5

   

Danville City

6.0 %

6.3 %

-0.3

   

Counties

 

 

 

   

Clark County

4.0 %

3.7 %

0.3

   

Coles County

4.1 %

3.7 %

0.4

   

Cook County

4.9 %

5.0 %

-0.1

   

De Witt County

3.9 %

3.5 %

0.4

   

Douglas County

3.1 %

2.8 %

0.3

   

Edgar County

3.3 %

3.1 %

0.2

   

Iroquois County

4.0 %

3.7 %

0.3

   

McLean County

3.3 %

3.2 %

0.1

   

Macon County

5.7 %

6.0 %

-0.3

   

Moultrie County

2.9 %

2.6 %

0.3

   

Sangamon County

4.0 %

4.1 %

-0.1

   

Shelby County

3.7 %

3.2 %

0.5

   

Other Areas

 

 

 

   

LWIA 17

3.6 %

3.3 %

0.3

   

LWIA 18

5.2 %

5.1 %

0.1

   

East Central EDR

3.9 %

3.7 %

0.2

   

East Central Illinois Highlights

Champaign-Urbana MSA

The not seasonally adjusted unemployment rate increased to 3.6 percent in November 2022 from 3.4 percent in November 2021.

Nonfarm employment increased by +800 compared to last November.

Leisure-Hospitality (+900), Educational-Health Services (+600), Construction (+300), and Professional-Business Services (+200) had the largest payroll gains over the year. The Government sector (-1,500) had employment declines from a year ago.

Danville MSA

The not seasonally adjusted unemployment rate increased to 5.2 percent in November 2022 from 5.1 percent in November 2021.

Nonfarm employment increased by +400 compared to last November.

Manufacturing (+200), Transportation-Warehousing-Utilities (+100), Educational and Health Services (+100), and Other Services (+100) had payroll gains over the year. The Retail Trade sector (-100) had employment declines from a year ago.


Note: Monthly 2021 unemployment rates and total nonfarm jobs for Illinois metro areas were revised in February and March 2022, as required by the U.S. BLS. Comments and tables distributed for prior metro area news releases should be discarded as any records or historical analysis previously cited may no longer be valid. The official monthly unemployment rate series for metro areas, counties and most cities begins in 1990. The official monthly nonfarm jobs series for metro areas begins in 1990 and for non-metropolitan counties it begins in 1999.

Disclaimer: The data contained in the metro area employment numbers press releases are not seasonally adjusted, and therefore are subject to seasonal fluctuations due to factors such as changes in weather, harvests, major holidays, and school schedules. Current monthly metro data should be compared to the same month from prior years (January 2022 data compared to January 2021 data) as data for these months have similar seasonal patterns. Comparisons should not be made to data for the immediate previous month or other previous non-matching months, as any changes in the data within these time periods may be the result of seasonal fluctuations and not economic factors.

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