New York Post

‘WORKING’ BETTER

Jobless claims sink to 199K — lowest since 1969

- By WILL FEUER wfeuer@nypost.com

The number of Americans newly seeking jobless benefits last week plummeted below pre-pandemic levels — and to the lowest point since 1969 — marking a milestone as the US economy struggles to recover from COVID-19, the feds said Wednesday.

As of last week, initial filings for unemployme­nt benefits, seen as a proxy for layoffs, fell to 199,000, down 71,000 from the prior week’s revised level of 270,000, according to data released Wednesday by the Labor Department.

Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expected to see new claims fall to 260,000, after seeing five consecutiv­e weeks of decreases.

The plummet in new jobless claims along with a high quit rate and number of openings suggest the historical­ly tight labor market is continuing, giving workers job options, at least in the short term, and making companies desperate to hold on to workers.

“It is fair to say that we didn’t see that coming,” said Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate. “Getting new claims below the 200,000 level for the first time since the pandemic began is truly significan­t, portraying further improvemen­t.”

However, PNC chief economist Gus Faucher warned that Wednesday’s readout could overstate the recovery in the labor market.

“Although the plunge in UI claims was certainly welcome, it does not indicate a dramatic turn in the labor market. Claims are highly volatile, especially around holidays,” he said in a note.

Companies managed to add 531,000 jobs in October — the biggest monthly gain in three months — and the unemployme­nt rate fell to 4.6 percent from 4.8 percent a month earlier, the department reported earlier this month.

The economy, however, is still missing more than 4 million jobs compared with just before the pandemic.

Earlier this month, analysts at Goldman Sachs estimated that some 2.5 million of those missing jobs are due to retirement­s, including 1.5 million early retirement­s.

The recovery also could be threatened by the recent resurgence of COVID-19, which could once again scare people away from work, sending claims higher once again.

Broadly speaking, many economists saw the numbers as a positive surprise heading into the new year.

Hamrick noted that the “strains associated with higher prices, shortages of supplies and available job candidates are weighed against low levels of layoffs, wage gains and a falling unemployme­nt rate.”

Weekly new claims have fallen substantia­lly from the 2020 peak of about 6.1 million new claims in a single week, and have now even passed below the 200,000 new claims per week seen before the pandemic.

And earlier this month, the department reported that Americans quit their jobs in September at a record clip and nationwide job openings remained just shy of its record.

Wednesday’s report also showed that continuing claims fell by 60,000 from the prior week’s revised level. That figure stood at about 6 million at the same time last year, in the thick of the pandemic.

Just over 2 million Americans remain on traditiona­l state unemployme­nt benefits, the feds added.

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