KEY POINTS
  • The official U.S. unemployment rate fell to 8.4% in August, from 10.2% in July. 
  • That number may significantly understate the true rate, however, according to some economists. The real figure may be higher than 11% when accounting for various factors.
  • That would mean the country is still in the throes of an unemployment crisis worse than any time in the post-Second World War era.  
People wait in their cars as they line up to collect unemployment forms in Hialeah, Florida.

The official unemployment rate fell to 8.4% in August as businesses continued emerging from broad shutdowns imposed early in the coronavirus pandemic, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.

That's the lowest rate since unemployment exploded in April, to levels unseen since the Great Depression. It would also mean the official rate dipped below the peak seen during the country's last downturn, known as the Great Recession.