May county unemployment rates substantially decreased in Sevier County and across Tennessee as the state reopened, but Sevier unemployment remains the highest in the state at 18.5%.
Record-high unemployment rates recorded in counties across Tennessee in April experienced sizable decreases as the state slowly reopened in May 2020, according to preliminary data released by the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development.
All 95 of Tennessee’s counties had lower unemployment rates in May, compared to the number of individuals who could not work in April when many businesses closed in order to help slow the spread of COVID-19.
Even with marked improvement, 42 counties had unemployment rates greater than 5%, but less than 10%. Fifty-three counties, more than half of the counties in the state, had rates greater than 10%, but less than 20%.
Weakley County had Tennessee’s lowest unemployment rate in May. The county’s new rate of 7% is 2.5 percentage points lower than it was in April.
Fentress County had the second-lowest figure in May at 7.1%, down from 9.9% the month before. Williamson County’s unemployment rate was the third-lowest statewide. At 7.4%, the rate is down 3.1 percentage points from the county’s all-time high of 10.5% recorded in April. Sevier County continued to have the highest rate of unemployment in Tennessee. Still, the county’s new rate of 18.5% is a staggering drop of 10.6 percentage points from April’s record high of 29.1%.
At 17.6%, Warren County recorded the second-highest unemployment rate in May, down 7.5 percentage points from April’s rate. Marshall County had the third-highest rate for the month with a rate of 17.5%, a decrease of 6.6 percentage points from the previous month’s rate.
May unemployment numbers dropped in each of Tennessee’s three largest cities. Knoxville had the most significant decrease with its rate changing from 14.7% in April to 10% in May. Nashville experienced the second biggest decrease with unemployment dropping from 16.1% in April to 12.6% in May, a difference of 3.5 percentage points. Memphis recorded a rate of 13.2%, down 1.3 percentage points from April’s rate.
The statewide unemployment statistic from May also decreased significantly. The new preliminary rate of 11.3% is down from the revised April rate of 15.5%.
Nationwide, unemployment decreased to 13.3% in May, down from the 14.7% rate recorded the month before.
Unlike the statewide rate, county unemployment rates are not seasonally adjusted.
A complete analysis of Tennessee’s May 2020 county unemployment data is available here.
TENNESSEE UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS DATA
Week Ending: June 20, 2020
Total Claims Paid | 294,363 |
Total Payments | $298,597,211 |
Tennessee Payments | $0* |
Federal Payments | $298,597,211 |
*TUC payments paid through the Federal Coronavirus Relief Fund
New Claims Filed: The number of individuals filing new unemployment claims for the
previous week.
Continued Claims: The number of claims continued with weekly
certifications.
Statewide Data
Week | Week Ending Date | New Claims Filed | Continued Claims |
10 | March 14, 2020 | 2,702 | 16.342 |
11 | March 21, 2020 | 39,096 | 16,098 |
12 | March 28, 2020 | 94,492 | 34,570 |
13 | April 4, 2020 | 116,141 | 112,438 |
14 | April 11, 2020 | 74,772 | 199,910 |
15 | April 18, 2020 | 68,968 | 267,053 |
16 | April 25, 2020 | 43,792 | 324,543 |
17 | May 2, 2020 | 37,319 | 321,571 |
18 | May 9, 2020 | 29,308 | 325,095 |
19 | May 16, 2020 | 28,692 | 314,487 |
20 | May 23, 2020 | 26,041 | 310,126 |
21 | May 30, 2020 | 22,784 | 302,260 |
22 | June 6, 2020 | 21,417 | 292,234 |
23 | June 13, 2020 | 19,925 | 280,593 |
24 | June 20, 2020 | 21,155 | 266,596 |
New Claims Since March 15 | 643,799 |