Predicting Nebraska's Future (Current Balance: $215.3m)
Nebraska's fund will likely remain solvent, largely because of ample reserves and relatively low unemployment, but increased claims have whittled down reserves, triggering an average tax increase on businesses from $113 to $300 per employee for 2010.
This news application is no longer being updated as of February 3, 2011. The historical data is still accurate.
In the Clear: Nebraska's unemployment fund is solvent. |
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6 Month Projection | Unemployment Rate (November) | Net Income (December) | Avg. Weekly Benefit | % of Unemployed Receiving Benefits |
---|---|---|---|---|
$180.5m | 4% | $-12.3m | $253.0 | 45.0% |
National: 9% | Rank: 12 of 51 | Rank: 41 of 51 | Rank: 10 of 51 |
Unemployment Reserves (millions)
Reporters: You are free to use this data to report your stories. Just remember to credit Propublica. Here's a CSV Download of our unemployment data. (Last update February 02, 2011)
Sources: Google Public Data, Department of Labor, Treasury Department.