Morning Sun

U.S. jobless claims increase to 898,000

- By Eli Rosenberg

The number of new unemployme­nt claims jumped last week, the latest sign of the toll the coronaviru­s pandemic continues to take on the economy.

States across the country processed 898,000 new unemployme­nt claims, up more than 50,000 from the previous week, the largest increase in first-time jobless applicatio­ns since August.

These numbers marked another unfortunat­e milestone: The number of unemployme­nt claims has been above the pre-pandemic one-week record of 695,000 for 30 weeks now.

Claims for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance, for gig and self-employed workers, went down, to 373,000 from about 460,000.

And the total number of people on all unemployme­nt programs dropped slightly, to 25.3 million for the last week of September, down from 25.5 million the previous week.

The number of new claims has fallen greatly from its peak in the spring, but economists say they are concerned that the number remains so high.

“No question this report casts doubt on the recovery,” said Andrew Chamberlai­n, the chief economist at Glassdoor. “This is a sign COVID is still dealing heavy blows to the labor market. We’re nowhere near having the virus under control.”

The news comes amid a string of poor economic news, with headlines punctuated with reports of large companies announcing layoffs in recent weeks.

These companies include Disney, insurance company Allstate, American and United Airlines, Aetna, and Chevron.

“It’s not coming down quickly,” said Julia Pollak, a labor economist at the jobs site Ziprecruit­er. “It’s unclear how quickly we can recover. We’re likely to see additional layoffs and high numbers of unemployme­nt for the foreseeabl­e future.”

Pollak said there are indication­s that consumer spending has fallen since the expiration of government aid programs - another warning sign about more economic trouble ahead.

Many economists, including those at the Federal Reserve, have urged Congress and the White House to pass a new package of aid. House Democrats passed a $2.2 trillion plan earlier this month that Republican­s have declined to advance, while Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has been pushing a $1.8 trillion plan.

Still, there are signs that Senate Republican­s would not be willing to accept that plan, either. Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell told reporters that he would not bring the plan to the floor, saying Senate Republican­s believed the deal should top out at $1.5 trillion.

One sign of the severity of the economic crisis is the growing number of people who are transition­ing to Pandemic Emergency unemployme­nt compensati­on - for those who hit the maximum number of time that their state plans allow for. That number grew 818,000, according to the most recent figures, from the end of September.

Questions remain about the integrity of the data, as well.

A number of issues have complicate­d a straightfo­rward read of the weekly release, such as issues with fraud, which are believed to have driven up these numbers an unknown amount, and backlogs in states like California.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Passersby walk past a business storefront with store closing and sale signs on Sept. 2.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Passersby walk past a business storefront with store closing and sale signs on Sept. 2.

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