California's reported unemployment rate (seasonally adjusted) in May notched down 0.1 point to 16.3%. Continuing COVID-related issues with the core surveys used to estimate the labor force and jobs numbers, however, indicate the actual rate was higher.
Total reported employment dropped 60,700 from the revised April numbers, while total unemployment eased by 25,100.
The actual level of unemployment, however, was likely higher than the reported numbers. The labor force and jobs numbers are based on surveys done the week of May 12. The UI initial claims data shows substantial continuing increases in unemployment after that date, although now leveling into a range about 8 times above the 2019 averages. More importantly, BLS again indicated there were significant COVID-related issues in conducting the surveys for both the labor force and jobs numbers. While these issues have affected the numbers since March, the effect was somewhat lower but still substantial for the May numbers.
The more significant issue continues to be an elevated number of workers indicating they were “employed, but not at work.” BLS analysis indicates most of these responses should instead have been classified as “unemployed on temporary layoff.” BLS indicates that correcting for this factor would have raised the national unemployment rate by 3 percentage points, down from a 4.8 point effect in April. Similar factors affect the California reported data but, based on analysis of the Current Population Survey data, at a somewhat higher level.