Unemployment insurance (UI) recipiency rate* and the number of persons UI lifted out of poverty, 1987–2014

 

UI recipiency rate* (right axis) Persons lifted above poverty (left axis)
1987 31.2% 0.684
1988 31.8% 0.518
1989 34.0% 0.481
1990 36.5% 0.668
1991 41.2% 1.006
1992 51.3% 1.468
1993 47.7% 1.208
1994 37.2% 0.905
1995 36.3% 0.716
1996 36.8% 0.633
1997 35.4% 0.601
1998 36.7% 0.572
1999 38.1% 0.602
2000 38.0% 0.563
2001 44.3% 0.726
2002 53.1% 1.177
2003 50.3% 1.257
2004 38.1% 0.7
2005 35.9% 0.656
2006 36.0% 0.573
2007 36.7% 0.488
2008 43.7% 0.905
2009 64.3% 3.322
2010 66.5% 3.21
2011 56.4% 2.306
2012 48.5% 1.7
2013 40.8% 1.2
2014** 28.9%

* Recipiency rate is defined as the number of people receiving any form of unemployment insurance (regular program and extended benefits) as a share of the total number of unemployed.

** 2014 UI recipiency rate value is based off of January–August data.

Source: EPI analysis of Current Population Survey basic monthly microdata; U.S. Department of Labor, "Persons Claiming UI Benefits in State and Federal UI Programs [Excel spreadsheet],” updated August 2014; Thomas Gabe and Julie M. Whittaker, Antipoverty Effects of Unemployment Insurance, Congressional Research Service, October 16, 2012; and Carmen DeNavas-Walt and Bernadette D. Proctor, "Income and Poverty in the United States: 2013," U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Reports, September 2014.

View the underlying data on epi.org.