Illinois unemployment rate tops national average; state ends 2025 with fewer jobs
(The Center Square) – Illinois State Rep. Chris Miller argues numbers tell the story as new U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data highlight the state’s unemployment rate is outpacing that of the national average.
Statistics show Illinois lost 17,000 jobs in 2025, leaving at least 302,000 residents still looking for work. At the same time across the country, employers added upward of 584,000 posts, settling the national unemployment rate at 4.4%, compared to 4.6% in Illinois.
Miller insists figuring out reasons for the differences grow easier by the day.
“When you compare the cost of doing business in the state of Illinois and cost of doing business in other places that are more business-friendly, the answer is the exodus from Illinois continues because of bad public policy and then the hostile environment for working families and small business,” the lawmaker told TCS. “There is less opportunity for small businesses and middle-class families to thrive and therefore as businesses leave the rate of unemployment goes up.”
Since 2020, the state’s job market has struggled to recover from the pandemic, ending 2025 as just one of 16 states to shed jobs over the last year to now rank No. 46 in the country in job recovery over the last five years. By comparison, four of the six neighboring states (Missouri, Iowa, Indiana and Wisconsin) ended 2025 with an unemployment rate below 4%.
“We are our own worst enemy because of the bad public policy,” Miller said. “If we continue to do what we’ve always done, we’ll continue to get what we’ve always gotten, and that means that the exodus of families and the exodus of business is going to continue and it’s going to increase.”
With the state already being home to among the highest state and local tax burdens in the country and the third highest state corporate income tax, Miller warns things may be poised to get worse before they get better.
In 2025, more than 108,000 Illinoisans left the workforce, lowering the state’s labor force participation rate from over 65% to a little more than 63% over a 12-month period, placing the state No. 35 in the country for overall job creation.
Event Calendar
Latest News Stories
Trump vetoes bill easing repayment for Colorado pipeline
Islamic civil rights group says nothing about civil unrest in Iran
Ohio debate over potential child care facility fraud heats up
As Illinois ends grocery tax locals can replace, food inflation debate continues
North Carolina NYE terror attack foiled by FBI, several police departments
DeWine defends fraud safeguards at Ohio child care facilities
Illinois quick hits: State keeps more tax revenue, locals get less
U.S. House contests to decide control of Congress in 2026
‘Locked and loaded’:Trump warns Iran
First negotiated Medicare drug prices go into effect Jan. 1
U.S. House vote on employee bargaining met with ‘political theater’ criticism
Eight killed in U.S. military counter-narcotics strikes