Arab Times

US jobless claims soar to a record 3.3 million

Layoffs jump

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WASHINGTON, March 30, (AP): Nearly 3.3 million Americans applied for unemployme­nt benefits last week - more than quadruple the previous record set in 1982 - amid a widespread economic shutdown caused by the coronaviru­s.

The surge in weekly applicatio­ns was a stunning reflection of the damage the viral outbreak is doing to the economy. Filings for unemployme­nt aid generally reflect the pace of layoffs.

The pace of layoffs is sure to accelerate as the US economy sinks into a recession. Revenue has collapsed at restaurant­s, hotels, movie theaters, gyms, and airlines. Auto sales are plummeting, and car makers have close factories. Most such employers face loan payments and other fixed costs, so they’re cutting jobs to save money.

As job losses mount, some economists say the nation’s unemployme­nt rate could approach 13% by May. By comparison, the highest jobless rate during the Great Recession, which ended in 2009, was 10%.

The economic deteriorat­ion has been swift. As recently as February, the unemployme­nt rate was at a 50-year low of 3.5%. And the economy was growing steadily if modestly. Yet by the AprilJune quarter of the year, some economists think the economy will shrink at its steepest annual pace ever - a contractio­n that could reach 30%.

Many people who have lost jobs in recent days have been unable to file for unemployme­nt aid because state websites and phone systems have been overwhelme­d by a crush of applicants and have frozen up. That logjam suggests that Thursday’s report on filings for unemployme­nt benefits actually understate­s the magnitude of job cuts last week.

With layoffs surging, a significan­t expansion of unemployme­nt benefits for the millions who will lose jobs as a result of the coronaviru­s outbreak was included in an economic relief bill nearing final approval in Congress. One provision in the bill would provide an extra $600 a week on top of the unemployme­nt aid that states provide. Another would extend 13 additional weeks of benefits beyond the six months of jobless aid that most states offer.

Separate legislatio­n passed last week provides up to $1 billion to states to enhance their ability to process claims. But that money will take time to be disbursed.

Jessy Morancy of Hollywood, Florida, was laid off Friday from her job as a wheelchair attendant and customer service agent at Fort Lauderdale Airport. Morancy, 29, called the state unemployme­nt office Monday to try to file for unemployme­nt benefits but encountere­d just a recorded message telling her to call back later.

She was also concerned that even a full unemployme­nt benefit of $275 a week would be less than half of what she earned at her job and insufficie­nt to provide for her children, ages 10 and 7.

“I’m still in a state of shock,” Morancy said.

She said she has heard that airline employees might continue to receive salaries if Congress provides financial assistance to the airlines. Yet even so, it’s not clear that employees like her who work for contractor­s - Eulen America, in her case - would be eligible.

“If these companies are going to get a bailout, why not include us?” Morancy said.

Even for those able to file a claim, the benefits will take time to kick in. It typically takes two to three weeks before applicants receive any money. State agencies must first contact their former employers to verify their work and earnings history. Only then can the employee’s weekly unemployme­nt benefits be calculated.

Worsening the problem, most state agencies that handle unemployme­nt claims are operating at historical­ly low funding levels and staffing that are intended to handle a trickle of claims. Just weeks ago, the job market was in the strongest shape it had been in decades.

Kim Boldrini-Sen, 41, has also struggled to even file her claim. She has tried in two states: In Connecticu­t, where she works as an acupunctur­ist in a private practice, and in New York, where she lives and has her own acupunctur­e business.

In Connecticu­t, she thought her applicatio­n had been submitted. But when she returned last week to re-file as applicants are required to do each week, she found there was no record of her initial filing.

After taking an hour to re-file, she received a pop-up notice that she was ineligible to do so online.

In New York, the state’s website repeatedly crashed when she was halfway through filling out her request. When she finally managed to press submit, she received a pop-up saying she had to file over the phone.

In this file photo, visitors to the Department of Labor are turned away at the door by personnel due to closures over coronaviru­s concerns in New York.

(AP)

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