On TravelingCrossing
Employment News
The American public is regularly bombarded with the gloomy national jobless (down to 8.6 percent in the month of November). But the situation in your local area is much more relevant to most Americans, and unemployment numbers cary vastly by city. Indeed, some Americans are living in a near Depression, while some others, like the residents of oil-soaked North Dakota, are enjoying an unemployment rate at a 3.5 percent (along with some of the unpleasant side effects).
Job search aggregator Indeed.com looks at the 50 largest metropolitan areas each month, counts up the job postings, and cross references those with the city’s unemployment rate, as listed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The result: the numbers of job seekers per every opening, or rough sketch of the worst cities in which to launch a job hunt right now.
Here is the list of the worst 10 cities to find a job, as reported by Forbes:
Only TravelingCrossing consolidates every job it can find in the domain and puts all of the job listings it locates in one place.