- Michigan, 12.0%
- South Carolina, 11.0%
- Oregon, 10.8%
- North Carolina, 10.7%
- California, 10.5%
- Rhode Island, 10.5%
- Nevada, 10.1%
U-6 numbers for all those states? Since these seven states range from 2% to 3.9% over the national U-3 average of 8.1%, and the U-6 is 14.8% (and you add 60% to the previous spread to reflect the current 60% increase in the difference between U-3 and U-6 over the last 12 months) that means the U-6 numbers are estimated for these states to be between 3.2% and 6.3% higher than the national 14.8% U-6 average, by this method.
That's putting the U-6 range estimation for these states being 18.0% for Nevada on the low end (14.8% + 3.2%) and a staggering 21.1% for Michigan on the high end (14.8% + 6.3%).
That's frightening. Michigan would be the only 20% plus U-6 state in my estimation right now, but SC would be close at 19.5% (14.8+ 4.7%). It will not take long at all for Michigan to hit 25% on the U-6.
Not long at all. Now, these are just back-of-the-napkin numbers, but remember, 25% U-6 is Depression era level "real" unemployment. Michigan is almost there now.
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