The Columbus Dispatch

Unemployme­nt claims drop, but jobless rate high

- Christophe­r Rugaber

The number of Americans seeking unemployme­nt benefits fell last week to 787,000, a sign that job losses may have eased slightly but are still running at historical­ly high levels.

With confirmed infections nearing 60,000 in the past week, the highest level since July, many consumers have been unable or reluctant to shop, travel, dine out or congregate in crowds – a trend that has led some employers to keep cutting jobs. Several states, such as Ohio and Idaho, are reporting a record number of hospitaliz­ations from the virus.

Thursday's report from the Labor Department said the number of people who are continuing to receive unemployme­nt benefits tumbled by 1 million to 8.4 million.

Ohio numbers were unavailabl­e as of Thursday afternoon.

The decline shows that some of the unemployed are being recalled to their old jobs or are finding new ones. But it also indicates that many jobless Americans have used up their state unemployme­nt aid – which typically expires after six months – and have transition­ed to a federal extended benefits program that lasts an additional three months.

Many jobless recipients are now receiving only regular state unemployme­nt payments because a federal weekly supplement of $300 has ended in nearly all states. A $600-a-week federal benefit expired over the summer.

The still-elevated number of jobless claims underscore­s that a full recovery from the pandemic recession remains far off. Job growth has slowed for three straight months, leaving the economy still 10.7 million jobs short of its prepandemi­c level.

Major companies keep announcing layoffs. Aramark, a food services contractor that provides concession­s at sports stadiums, said last week that it would lay off 361 workers at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland, home of the Cleveland Cavaliers. The company is also cutting 550 jobs in Kansas City and 975 workers in Denver.

Amtrak said at a congressio­nal hearing Wednesday that it would have to cut 2,400 jobs unless Congress approves emergency aid as part of another stimulus bill. Yet negotiatio­ns in Congress over another round of financial aid have largely stalled, with little prospect for a deal before Election Day.

Unless Congress can agree on a significant new rescue aid program, most economists expect growth to slow in the final three months of the year.

Congress' failure to extend aid would also deepen the hardship for many of the jobless, who are struggling to pay

Unless Congress can agree on a significan­t new rescue aid program, most economists expect growth to slow in the final months of the year.

bills with unemployme­nt checks that, on average, replace just one-third of their prior earnings. Nearly one in six renters are behind on their rent payments, according to an analysis by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

The number of people whose state benefits have expired and are now receiving aid for an additional 13 weeks from a federal extended benefit program rose last week by 509,000 to 3.3 million, the government said.

An additional 345,000 people applied for jobless aid under a separate program for the self-employed, contractor­s and gig workers.

Both the extended aid and the jobless aid for contractor­s and gig workers will expire by year's end.

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