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Employment and income stability

Employment and income stability measures job market resilience with unemployment rates, volatility, labor force participation, median earnings, and industry concentration. More volatility means less predictable pay and higher income shocks.

Why it matters

Lower stability can mean more missed bills, less savings, and heavier reliance on credit during downturns.

Common questions

  • What is the unemployment rate and how volatile is it?
  • Are labor force participation and employment rates strong?
  • Are earnings rising year over year?
  • Is the local economy concentrated in a few industries?

Example signals

  • Unemployment rate
  • Unemployment volatility (monthly)
  • Labor force participation
  • Employment-to-population rate
  • Median earnings (full-time, year-round)
  • Earnings trend (YoY)
  • Industry concentration (HHI)

How this risk is used

This risk contributes to Financial Risk Score v1 as a location-level signal. Scores remain relative, explainable, and comparable across geographies.

FinancialRiskIQ does not provide personal financial advice or predictions.

Key sources

  • BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics
  • U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-year
  • County Business Patterns (industry concentration)

FAQs

What is unemployment volatility?

It captures month-to-month swings in unemployment, which signal how stable local hiring conditions are.

Why does industry concentration matter?

Heavy reliance on a small number of industries makes local incomes more sensitive to sector shocks.

Why include labor force participation?

It reflects how many adults are engaged in the workforce beyond the unemployment rate alone.

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