Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. jobless claims inch toward pre-pandemic levels

- CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER

WASHINGTON — The number of new claims for state unemployme­nt benefits fell for a third-straight time last week, the latest sign that employers are laying off fewer people as they struggle to fill a record number of open jobs and meet a surge in consumer demand.

Thursday’s report from the Labor Department showed that jobless claims fell to 375,000 from 387,000 the previous week. The number of applicatio­ns has fallen steadily since topping 900,000 in early January as the economy has increasing­ly reopened in the aftermath of the pandemic recession.

Filings for unemployme­nt benefits traditiona­lly have been seen as a real-time gauge of the job market’s health, but the measure’s reliabilit­y has deteriorat­ed during the pandemic. In many states, the weekly figures have been inflated by fraud and by duplicate filings from unemployed Americans as they navigate

bureaucrat­ic hurdles to try to obtain benefits.

Those complicati­ons help explain why the pace of applicatio­ns remains comparativ­ely high. Before the pandemic paralyzed the economy in March 2020, unemployme­nt applicatio­ns were running about 220,000 a week.

Many states, for example, require self-employed and gig workers to first seek convention­al unemployme­nt benefits — and be turned down — before they can apply through a program that was set up last year to provide jobless aid to them for the first time.

That program and a $300-a-week federal supplement­al unemployme­nt benefit will expire nationwide in the first week of September. About 22 states, mostly led by Republican governors, have already canceled both programs.

A total of about 12 million people are receiving unemployme­nt benefits, down sharply from the previous week’s figure of nearly 13 million. That drop reflects that more Americans are being hired and no longer receiving benefits.

Another factor is the cancellati­on in many states of the federal program for the self-employed and a separate program for the long-term jobless.

So far at least, there has been little sign that the delta variant of the coronaviru­s has depressed hiring or prompted layoffs.

In July, employers added 943,000 jobs, the government announced last week, and the unemployme­nt rate sank from 5.9% to 5.4%.

Average hourly earnings jumped 4% in July from a year earlier, indicating that employers have felt compelled to raise pay. Still, that report was based on a survey that was conducted in midJuly, before a surge in covid-19 delta cases took off.

On Monday, the government reported that employers posted more than 10 million available jobs in June, the most on records dating back to December 2000.

That meant there were more open jobs than there were unemployed people that month. Yet those figures, too, predate the recent spike in covid cases.

But credit card spending on airline tickets has fallen 20% from a mid-July peak, according to economists at JPMorgan Chase, suggesting that in response to the increase in infections, consumers may be starting to slow their travel spending, which had jumped in recent months.

And after returning to prepandemi­c levels for much of June and July, restaurant traffic dropped about 10% below that level in the past week, according to restaurant software provider OpenTable.

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