National Post (National Edition)

U.S. weekly jobless claims stay above 2 million

- LUCIA MUTIKANI

WASHINGTON • The number of Americans filing for unemployme­nt benefits held above 2 million last week for a 10th straight week amid job cuts by U.S. state and local government­s whose budgets have been decimated fighting the COVID-19 pandemic and more secondwave layoffs in the private sector.

Signs the economy was spiralling deeper into recession were underscore­d by other data on Thursday showing business spending on equipment plummeting in April. The economy contracted in the first quarter at its steepest pace since the 2007-09 recession. Data on the housing market, manufactur­ing and consumer spending point to a collapse in gross domestic product in the second quarter at a pace last seen during the Great Depression.

Initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits totalled a seasonally adjusted 2.123 million for the week ended May 23, from a revised 2.446 million in the prior week, the Labor Department said. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast initial claims falling to 2.1 million in the latest week from the previously reported 2.438 million.

Though claims have declined steadily since hitting a record 6.867 million in late March, they have not registered below 2 million since mid-March. The astonishin­gly high level of claims has persisted even as non-essential businesses are starting to reopen after shuttering in midMarch to control the spread of COVID-19, an indication it could take a while for the economy to dig out of the coronaviru­s-induced slump.

“I am concerned that we are seeing a second round of private sector layoffs that, coupled with a rising number of public sector cutbacks is driving up the number of people unemployed,” said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economics in Holland, Pa. “If that is the case, given the pace of reopening, we could be in for an extended period of extraordin­ary high unemployme­nt. And that means the recovery will be slower and will take a lot longer.”

U.S. stocks were trading higher, but simmering tensions between the United States and China kept investors on edge. The dollar eased against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices dipped.

The second wave of layoffs could grow bigger, with Boeing announcing on Wednesday it was eliminatin­g more than 12,000 U.S. jobs and also disclosing it planned “several thousand remaining layoffs” in the next few months.

Last week’s applicatio­ns raised the number of people who filed claims for unemployme­nt benefits to above 40 million since March 21. Economists cautioned this figure does not represent the number of job losses as not all applicatio­ns are approved and some people could be submitting more than one applicatio­n, while others could have since found employment.

They said the focus should be on the number of people still receiving unemployme­nt benefits to get a clear picture of the labour market’s health. These so-called continuing claims are reported with a one-week lag and are being watched to assess how quickly the economy will rebound as businesses reopen and the effectiven­ess of the government’s Paycheck Protection Program.

The PPP is part of a historic fiscal package worth nearly US$3 trillion and offered businesses loans that could be partially forgiven if they were used for employee salaries.

Continuing claims fell to 21.052 million in the week ending May 16 from a record 24.912 million in the prior week. The continuing claims data covered the period during which the government surveyed households for May’s unemployme­nt rate.

Continuing claims increased between the April and May survey periods, suggesting a surge in the unemployme­nt rate from a post-Second World War record of 14.7 per cent last month.

In a separate report on Thursday, the Commerce Department said orders for non-defence capital goods excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business spending plans, dropped 5.8 per cent last month after falling 1.1 per cent in March.

Shipments of these socalled core capital goods dropped 5.4 per cent last month. Core capital goods shipments are used to calculate equipment spending in the government’s gross domestic product measuremen­t. Last month’s declines suggested business investment decreased further early in the second quarter after four straight quarterly decreases.

The Commerce Department also said on Thursday GDP contracted at a 5.0 per cent annualized rate in the first quarter, the deepest drop in output since the 2007-09 Great Recession, rather than the 4.8 per cent pace estimated last month.

Recessions in the United States are called by the National Bureau of Economic Research, which does not define a recession as two consecutiv­e quarters of decline in real gross domestic product, as is the rule of thumb in many countries. Instead, the NBER looks for a drop in economic activity, spread across the economy and lasting more than a few months.

Economists believe the economy slipped into recession in March. The are expecting GDP will drop in the second quarter at as much as a 40 per cent rate.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits were a seasonally adjusted 2.123 million last week, from a revised 2.446 million the prior week, the U.S. Labor Department said.
JOHN MINCHILLO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits were a seasonally adjusted 2.123 million last week, from a revised 2.446 million the prior week, the U.S. Labor Department said.

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