The Macomb Daily

Jobless claims spike higher in midst of holiday season

Layoffs rising as 21,493 new filings reported

- By MediaNews Group staff

Laid-off Michigan workers filed 21,493 new jobless claims last week in a sign that layoffs are rising in the midst of the holiday shopping season.

Michigan’s numbers are rising over previous weeks as restrictio­ns curtail movement and economic activity in response to increasing coronaviru­s cases.

The state numbers reported Thursday by the U.S. Labor Department for the week ending Nov. 28 are higher than the 33,941 revised initial jobless claims filed the previous week.

Michigan reached a low of 12,640 new jobless claims for the week ending Oct. 17, but they’ve been trending upward since as

the economic response to the pandemic continues.

Continuing jobless claims, however, continue to decline – to 153,685 for the week ending Nov. 21 – though that may be because workers are exhausting their state unemployme­nt benefits and moving to federal pandemic unemployme­nt assistance of which many of those programs are scheduled to expire later this month.

Nationally, the number of Americans applying for unemployme­nt benefits fell as the nation celebrated Thanksgivi­ng last week to a still-high of 712,000, the latest sign that the U.S. economy and job market remain under stress from the intensifie­d viral outbreak.

Thursday’s report from the Labor Department said that initial claims for jobless aid dropped from 787,000 the week before. Before the virus paralyzed the economy in March, the number of people applying for unemployme­nt benefits each week had typically amounted to roughly 225,000. The chronicall­y high pace of applicatio­ns shows that nearly nine months after the pandemic struck, many employers are still slashing jobs.

“Thanksgivi­ng seasonals likely explain the drop in jobless claims last week, Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, wrote in a research note. “Expect a rebound next week.”

The total number of people nationally who are continuing to receive traditiona­l state unemployme­nt benefits declined to 5.5 million from 6.1 million. That figure is down sharply from its peak of nearly 23 million in May. It means that some jobless Americans are finding jobs and no longer receiving aid. But it also indicates that many of the unemployed have used up their state benefits, which typically expire after six months.

With layoffs still elevated and new confirmed viral cases in the United States now exceeding 160,000 a day on average, the economy’s modest recovery is increasing­ly in danger. States and cities are issuing mask mandates, limiting the size of gatherings, restrictin­g restaurant dining, closing gyms or reducing the hours and capacity of bars, stores and other businesses.

Most experts say the economy won’t be able to sustain a recovery until the virus is brought under control with an effective and widely used vaccine.

Many jobless Americans are now collecting checks under two federal programs that were set up this year to ease the economic pain inflicted by the pandemic. But those programs are set to expire the day after Christmas. When they do, benefits will end completely for an estimated 9.1 million unemployed people.

he number of people collecting aid under one of those programs — the Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program, which offers coverage to gig workers and others who don’t qualify for traditiona­l benefits — fell by 339,000 to 8.9 million for the week ending Nov. 14.

But the number of people receiving aid under the second program — the Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program, which provides 13 weeks of federal benefits to people who have exhausted their state aid — rose by 60,000 to 4.6 million.

All told, roughly 20.2 million people are now receiving some type of unemployme­nt aid. (Figures for the two pandemic-related programs aren’t adjusted for seasonal variations.)

Still, the Government Accountabi­lity Office, a federal watchdog, has concluded that the jobless claims numbers are being distorted by flaws in the way the government collects the data. The GAO said the problem arose because the Labor Department uses state numbers as a proxy for the number of people claiming benefits nationwide. But backlogs in state processing of claims and other data-collection problems have resulted in inaccurate counts, the GAO reported.

For months, Congress has failed to agree on any new stimulus aid for jobless individual­s and struggling businesses after the expiration of a multi-trillion dollar rescue package enacted in March. This week, though, efforts to forge some limited short-term rescue package have intensifie­d. Democrats have scaled back their demands for a $2 trillion-plus measure by more than half in hopes of breaking the logjam.

Democratic leaders have given their support to a nearly $1 trillion package as a “basis” for discussion­s. This plan would establish a $300-a-week jobless benefit, send $160 billion to help state and local government­s, boost schools and universiti­es, revive “paycheck protection” subsidies for businesses and bail out transit systems and airlines. So far, though, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been unwilling to abandon a $550 million Senate Republican plan that failed twice this fall.

President-elect Joe Biden lent his support to the bipartisan effort Wednesday, saying the developing aid package “wouldn’t be the answer, but it would be the immediate help for a lot of things.” Biden said he wants a relief bill to pass Congress now, with more aid to follow next year.

Regardless of what happens on Capitol Hill, the promise of a vaccine could help ease the health and economic crises in coming months. In the meantime, with the virus still raging, the economic damage has become increasing­ly visible. The data firm Homebase reports that its measures of job market health — employees working, hours worked and businesses open — have deteriorat­ed from where they stood in the summer.

“We expect conditions to worsen, placing increased pressure on Main Street as small businesses continue to struggle to survive,” Homebase researcher­s wrote.

Likewise, the data firm Womply estimates that 21% of small businesses were shuttered at the start of November, up from June’s 16% rate. Womply also said that consumer spending at local businesses declined 30% last month from a year earlier, marking a deteriorat­ion from a 20% year-overyear decline in October.

Americans are bracing for the picture to worsen: Thirty percent of adults surveyed by the Commerce Department from Nov. 11 to 23 reported that they or someone in their household expected to lose income in the next four weeks, up from 23% of those surveyed from Sept. 30 to Oct. 12.

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