Unemployment rate history · 2019
Unemployment Rate in 2019
In 2019, the US unemployment rate averaged 3.67% of the labor force — the 33rd-highest of the 35 years on record. Here's where that sits in 35 years on record, the story behind it, that year's Misery Index, and how it compares with the 4.2% of 2025.
- 2019 unemployment 3.67% of the labor force
- vs prior year -0.23 pts from 3.90% in 2018
- vs today 4.2% in 2025
- 1991–2025 average 5.68% long-run norm
The Misery Index in 2019
The Misery Index — a simple gauge coined by economist Arthur Okun — adds the unemployment rate to the inflation rate, on the idea that both eat into household wellbeing at the same time. The higher the sum, the more economic pain a typical household feels. Here's how 2019 stacks up:
So in 2019, a 3.67% jobless rate sat alongside 1.81% inflation, for a combined Misery Index of about 5.5. For the other half of that figure — what consumer prices did and what 2019's money is worth today — see historical inflation rates.
What happened to jobs in 2019
Unemployment fell to around a 50-year low as the long post-crisis expansion matured.
In 2019, the unemployment rate ran at 3.67%, down from 3.90% in 2018. That made it the 33rd-highest of the 35 years on record, and below the long-run average of 5.68%. For comparison, unemployment sits at about 4.2% today — a gap of 0.53 points.
How 2019 compared
Across the full 1991–2025 record, unemployment has averaged about 5.68%, so 2019 ran below that long-run norm. Within the 2010s, the jobless rate averaged roughly 6.23%, and 2019 sat below its own decade. Five years earlier, in 2014, the rate was 6.17%. The following year, 2020, unemployment rose to 8.05%.
The labor market and borrowing costs move together: a weak jobs market often pushes the Fed to cut rates, while a hot one invites hikes. See what mortgage rates did in 2019 for another angle on the same economy.
This is one year out of the whole story. For the complete history — every year since 1991, the all-time high and the record low, the decade-by-decade view, and what drives unemployment over time — see historical unemployment rates, 1991–today.
Unemployment in 2019 — FAQ
What was the unemployment rate in 2019?
The US unemployment rate averaged 3.67% of the labor force in 2019. That was down 0.23 points from 3.90% the year before.
Was unemployment high or low in 2019?
Measured against the full 1991–2025 record, 2019's 3.67% was the 33rd-highest of the 35 years on record, and below the long-run average of 5.68%.
What was the Misery Index in 2019?
The Misery Index — unemployment plus inflation — was about 5.48 in 2019, combining a 3.67% jobless rate with 1.81% inflation.
How does 2019 unemployment compare with today?
In 2019, unemployment averaged 3.67%, versus 4.2% in 2025 — a difference of 0.53 points. The long-run (1991–2025) average is 5.68%.
Why was unemployment low in 2019?
Unemployment fell to around a 50-year low as the long post-crisis expansion matured.