Antelope Valley Press

COVID-19 danger continues to drive joblessnes­s

Employment assistance isn’t adjusted for seasonal trends

- By PAUL WISEMAN AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON — The number of Americans applying for unemployme­nt benefits fell last week to 860,000, a historical­ly high number of people that illustrate­s the broad economic damage still taking place nine months after the first case of COVID-19 was detected in the US

The Labor Department said Thursday that US jobless claims fell by 33,000 from the previous week and that 12.6 million are collecting traditiona­l unemployme­nt benefits, compared with just 1.7 million a year ago.

The pandemic has delivered a colossal shock to the economy. Until the pandemic upended the operations of American companies, from factories to family diners, weekly jobless aid applicatio­ns had never exceeded 700,000 in the US They’ve topped 700,000 for 26 consecutiv­e weeks.

The overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, collapsed at an annual rate of 31.7% from April through June, by far the worst three months on record, as millions of jobs disappeare­d.

The economy and job market have recovered somewhat from the initial shock. Employers added 10.6 million jobs from May through August, but that’s still less than half the jobs lost in March and April.

The recovery remains fragile, imperiled by continuing COVID-19 infections as schools begin to reopen, and the failure to deliver another economic rescue package in Washington. And companies continue to lay off workers as they absorb sales lost to the pandemic.

Raytheon Technologi­es Corp. this week said it plans to slash more than 15,000 jobs this year at its corporate offices, at jet engine-maker Pratt & Whitney and at its aviation and military equipment manufactur­er Collins Aerospace.

A sharp drop in travel has left the airlines with tens of thousands more employees than they need to operate the vastly reduced number of flights. This spring, the airlines began receiving $25 billion in federal grants and loans to keep workers on their payrolls for six months. With that money ending Sept. 30, the three biggest US carriers are expected to furlough or lay off about 40,000 workers starting Oct. 1.

An extra $600 in weekly unemployme­nt benefits ran out July 31, squeezing households that had depended on the beefed-up payments. President Donald Trump issued an executive order Aug. 8 providing a scaled-back version of the expanded jobless aid. Most states signed up for federal grants that let them increase weekly benefits by $300 or $400.

That program is expiring. “Layoffs remain widespread and a historical­ly high number of individual­s are still receiving some type of jobless benefits,” Nancy Vanden Houten, lead US economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a resarch report. Charissa Ward, 37, was furloughed in April from her job as a server at a restaurant in Disney’s Hollywood Studios resort near Orlando, Florida. Since then, she’s been helping at her partner’s online retail business, applying for jobs and waiting to see what Disney will do. “We have no idea when we’re going to get called back,’’ she said.

The extra $600 in weekly jobless benefits didn’t replace all her lost income but helped. The reduced $300 she received briefly from Trump’s program made life “a little less stressful.’’ But Ward said Congress needs to agree to another financial rescue and do “what’s best for working people.’’

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Aug. 6 file photo, a customer leaves a Pier 1 retail store, which is going out of business, during the Coronaviru­s pandemic in Coral Gables, Fla.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Aug. 6 file photo, a customer leaves a Pier 1 retail store, which is going out of business, during the Coronaviru­s pandemic in Coral Gables, Fla.

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