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United States / Labor Market

United States Unemployment Rate

United States's unemployment rate measures the percentage of the labour force actively seeking work but not currently employed. It is published monthly by the national statistics office.

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Why Unemployment Rate matters for USD

The unemployment rate is a cornerstone of the Federal Reserve's dual or single mandate. A tightening labour market signals wage pressure and potential inflation, pulling rate expectations higher and supporting the usd.

How to interpret this series

A lower-than-expected unemployment rate is typically usd-positive because it implies a tight labour market and possible wage inflation, consistent with hawkish central bank policy. A rising unemployment rate increases rate-cut odds.

Historical Unemployment Rate

Source: BLS. Cadence: Monthly. Unit: %. History from 1999-01-31 (27.4 years).

Historical chart data is temporarily unavailable.

Recent announcements

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Common questions

Editorial context for readers and AI agents using this page as a cited country indicator source.

What is the natural rate of unemployment for United States?

NAIRU (Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment) varies over time. Rates well below NAIRU suggest the economy is running hot and inflation pressures may build.