The Denver Post

Jobless claims drop 13,000 to 553,000 as economy heals

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON» The number of Americans applying for unemployme­nt benefits dropped by 13,000 last week to 553,000, the lowest level since the pandemic hit in March 2020 and another sign the economy is recovering from the coronaviru­s recession.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that jobless claims were down from 566,000 a week earlier. They have fallen sharply over the past year but remain well above the 230,000 weekly figure typical before the pandemic.

The four-week moving average, which smooths out weekly gyrations, fell 44,000 to 611,750.

Nearly 3.7 million people were receiving traditiona­l state unemployme­nt benefits the week of April 17. Including federal program designed to ease economic pain from the health crisis, 16.6 million were receiving some type of jobless aid the week of April 10.

“Layoffs are elevated but are gradually easing, consistent with an economy that is reopening,’‘ said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at Hgh Frequency Economics. “We expect further declines in filings as businesses move closer toward normal capacity which will boost job growth over coming months.’‘

Unemployme­nt claims are a proxy for layoffs, and economists have long viewed them as an early indicator of where the job market and the economy are headed. But the figures have become less reliable in recent months as states struggle to clear backlogs of applicatio­ns and suspected fraud muddies the actual volume of claims.

The job market has been bounding back in recent months. Employers added an impressive 916,000 jobs in March, and the Labor Department is expected to report next week that they hired an additional 875,000 in April, according to a survey from the data firm FactSet. The unemployme­nt rate has dropped to 6% from a peak of 14.8% in April 2020. (Before the pandemic, unemployme­nt was just 3.5% in February 2020.)

Employers are beginning to complain that they can’t find workers — despite an elevated unemployme­nt rate. Americans may be reluctant to return to work because they still fear contractin­g the virus or because they need to care for children who haven’t returned to school. Another factor could be a federal supplement­al unemployme­nt benefit of $300 a week, on top of state aid, that means some low-income workers can earn more from jobless benefits than from their old jobs.

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