Marysville Appeal-Democrat

U.S. recovery more tenuous as jobless claims rise, incomes fall

- Bloomberg News (TNS)

Applicatio­ns for U.S. state unemployme­nt benefits unexpected­ly posted the first back-to-back weekly increase since July, while Americans’ incomes and savings fell last month.

Wednesday’s data indicate the economic rebound is becoming more tenuous amid soaring coronaviru­s cases, fresh lockdowns and an extended deadlock in Congress over a new stimulus package.

Initial jobless claims in regular state programs increased by 30,000 to 778,000 in the week ended Nov. 21, according to Labor Department data. Without adjustment­s for seasonal fluctuatio­ns, the figure rose by about 78,000 during the week.

A separate Commerce Department report showed U.S. household spending rose in October but incomes dropped by more than forecast, owing in large part to a decline in government supplement­al jobless benefits. The savings rate fell for a sixth month.

Continuing claims — the total pool of Americans on ongoing state unemployme­nt benefits — fell by 299,000 to 6.07 million in the week ended Nov. 14. But the number of Americans on an extended assistance program continued to increase, a sign that more people have exhausted regular state benefits.

The consecutiv­e rise in weekly claims shows that the resurgent coronaviru­s threatens to stall an economic rebound that was already moderating from a breakneck pace in the third quarter. Some economists predict a contractio­n in gross domestic product the first three months of 2021.

The job market faces additional hurdles as states and cities restrict business activity and hospitaliz­ations spike.

“The continued weakness of the labor market is something that is going to drive the whole economy down,” Catherine Mann, global chief economist at Citigroup Inc., said on

Bloomberg Television.

At the same time, solid sectors like manufactur­ing are “going to keep us from being in official recession, but it’s going to be very grim,” she said.

Several states recorded significan­t increases in initial claims, led by Illinois — where Chicago issued a stay-at-home advisory starting last week. Michigan, Washington, New Mexico, California and Minnesota also reported higher filings.

U.S. stocks edged lower along with 10-year Treasury yields, while the dollar fluctuated.

Continuing claims for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance, which provides benefits to self-employed and gig workers, increased by about 466,000 to 9.15 million. The Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on, which provides payments to the long-term unemployed, was used by 4.51 million Americans. Those two programs will expire at yearend, leaving many without government aid.

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