New York Post

ANOTHER 1.1 MIL JOBLESS

COVID claims top 57M

- By NOAH MANSKAR

Some 1.1 million Americans filed applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt benefits last week, driving the total for the coronaviru­s pandemic above 57 million.

Thursday’s jump in seasonally adjusted initial jobless claims came just a week after they fell below 1 million for the first time in five months — offering another signal that the labor market is recovering in fits and starts.

“There is some caution on the part of businesses all across the United States on whether there will be any demand for their products and services going forward, so that’s why we may see claims data and other labormarke­t indicators going up and down in the coming months,” Yelena Shulyatyev­a, senior US economist at Bloomberg Economics, told The Post.

New jobless filings have stayed far above any level recorded before the pandemic despite steadily falling from their peak of 6.8 million. The latest US Department of Labor figures show roughly 57.4 million initial claims filed since mid-March — more than the combined population­s of Texas and Florida.

Continuing claims measuring sustained joblessnes­s on a one-week lag dropped to about 14.8 million in the week ending Aug. 8, the feds said, an encouragin­g sign that more Americans are leaving unemployme­nt rolls.

Those still collecting checks have now gone about three weeks without the $600 boost to weekly benefits provided under the CARES Act stimulus bill. President Trump signed an executive order this month to continue the extra benefits at $300 a week, but only a handful of states have signed up to receive the federal funds.

The money running out may have pushed some people back into the workforce — but the bigger problem is there are still too few jobs to be had, according to Shulyatyev­a.

“It’s clear that what is keeping people unemployed is not overly generous benefits, but a lack of job openings,” said Andrew Stettner, an unemployme­nt insurance expert and senior fellow at the Century Foundation think tank.

Thursday’s claim numbers followed other signs that the labor market’s recovery from the pandemic is losing steam.

The US added nearly 9.3 million jobs from May to July, but growth slowed to 1.8 million last month from about 4.8 million in June. And the number of people who have permanentl­y lost work climbed to almost 2.9 million in those three months.

Meanwhile, difference­s over the extra benefits and other measures have left Congress deadlocked on a new spending package to blunt the economic impact of the virus.

“This economy doesn’t have enough fuel to make it on its own without the support of the federal government,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at MUFG Union Bank.

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