Current Employment by Industry
The Current Employment Statistics (CES) monthly survey provides
Nonfarm Payroll Employment estimates, the most up-to-date employment estimates available.
UI
Covered Employment & Wages (QCEW)
Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) is the name of the
Covered Employment and Wages program formerly known as ES-202.
Industry data is based on the North American Industry Coding System (NAICS).
Jobs and Earnings by Industry and Gender
Compare quarterly employment counts and earnings by industry, including female/male employment and earnings ratios. This data is a product of administrative records from Vermontās Unemployment Insurance program.
Funded by a grant awarded by the U.S. Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration. + more
Industry Projections
Gross Job Gains and Losses
(replaces Job Creation and Destruction)
Produced by Business Employment Dynamics (BED) at the Bureau of Labor Staistics,
this quarterly data series tracks gross job gains and losses from 1992.
Learn more at Gross Job Gains and Lossses
Quarterly Workforce Indicators
A product of U.S. Census,
Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics, an innovative program
combining Census and State UI data. At
QWI Explorer
find out about indicators, such job creation, and turnover, by state, local area, industry, year/qtr, sex, and age group.
Learn about all of the Applications and Data Analysis Tools.
From SIC to NAICS
Since the 1930's, the basic four-digit coding system used to describe the U.S.
economy has been the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Manual.
The SIC has undergone many revisions but the underlying structure has remained basically unchanged.
Beginning in the summer of 2002 and extending into 2003, LMI data series
were converted to the new six-digit North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS, rhymes with "snakes"). This represented a major revision of the
industries and, for the first time, the coding structure. NAICS provides a new view
that better reveals the inner workings of the U.S. economy but initially may be challenging for data users.
For more information, visit...
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Monthly Labor Review Articles
Implementing NAICS
A First Look Using NAICS
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