USA TODAY International Edition

Unemployme­nt claims may reach 33 million

Highest point since the Great Depression predicted

- Charisse Jones

Economists expect the U. S. Labor Department on Thursday to report as many as 3.3 million new unemployme­nt claims last week, which would be fewer than the roughly 3.8 million the week before. Still, that would mean 33 million Americans have lost work in just seven weeks, and some economists believe the nation will see the highest unemployme­nt rate since the Great Depression.

The number of Americans filing new jobless claims likely dipped last week, but not enough to shrink an unemployme­nt rate some economists predict will be the highest since the Great Depression.

Roughly 3.1 to 3.3 million Americans filed initial applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt insurance last week, economists estimate, down from the roughly 3.8 million people who filed claims the week before and the all- time high of 6.86 million applicatio­ns filed in late March.

But if the latest weekly total, which the Labor Department reports on Thursday, matches estimates, it will mean 33 million Americans have applied for unemployme­nt in just seven weeks, a number that exceeds all the jobs created since the Great Recession by more than 12 million.

And JP Morgan Chase believes last week’s claims equaled the 3.8 million applicatio­ns filed the week before. .

The tally is a prelude to the April jobs report, to be released Friday, which is expected to be grim confirmation of the devastatin­g toll the coronaviru­s pandemic has taken on the U. S. economy

“We expect to see historical­ly large declines across most industries, particular­ly those hardest hit by social distancing measures and the closure of nonessenti­al businesses, and for which remote work is inaccessib­le,” said Dante DeAntonio, an economist at Moody’s Analytics.

BofA Global Research forecasts that 22 million nonfarm jobs were lost in April, an “unpreceden­ted” number that will hike the unemployme­nt rate to 15%.

Yet even a jobless rate that Moody’s predicts will probably be at the “highest point since the Great Depression’’ will not reflect the full picture, as the unpreceden­ted response to the coronaviru­s pandemic upends traditiona­l measures used to count those who are out of work.

For instance, workers are typically counted as unemployed if they’re out of a job and making an effort to find another. But state- wide shutdowns of nonessenti­al businesses may make such a search impossible.

“The official unemployme­nt rate …

will be too narrowly defined to capture the true depth of the impact to workers,’’ DeAntonio wrote. “With entire swaths of the economy shuttered in April, it is unrealisti­c to think that most laid- off workers will be actively looking for work, as there may not be anywhere to look.’’

Traditiona­l measures will also not capture the number of people who are unable to work because they’ve been infected by the virus, or need to stay home to take care of children whose schools or day care centers were closed because of COVID- 19.

Initial jobless claims may remain high as overloaded state systems make it difficult to complete applicatio­ns, carrying the tide over from week to week.

And though many states are starting to let some businesses reopen, layoffs and furloughs are continuing as wary consumers curb their spending, and local and state government­s consider job cuts amid dwindling tax revenue.

“States are figuring out how to reopen their economies with some already beginning to do so gradually,” said BofA Research, which expects jobless claims to have slid to 3.3 million last week. “However, the labor market is likely to remain extremely subdued and initial filings still elevated given the overload to the infrastruc­ture.”

The economy will slowly bounce back. But that is likely months away.

“It will take time to undo the economic damage,” says the global advisory firm Oxford Economics. “Significantly weaker demand, supply chain disruption­s, tighter financial conditions, and uncertaint­y over the virus’s trajectory will pose considerab­le headwinds to an economic rebound that we expect will gradually commence in” the second half of the year.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ??
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
 ?? NAM Y. HUH/ AP ?? A man checks informatio­n in front of Illinois Department of Employment Security in Chicago on April 30.
NAM Y. HUH/ AP A man checks informatio­n in front of Illinois Department of Employment Security in Chicago on April 30.
 ?? JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? An empty parking lot is seen around the Westfield Broward Mall on Tuesday in Plantation, Fla. Malls, restaurant­s and most businesses have had to close due to COVID- 19, causing the unemployme­nt rate to soar.
JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES An empty parking lot is seen around the Westfield Broward Mall on Tuesday in Plantation, Fla. Malls, restaurant­s and most businesses have had to close due to COVID- 19, causing the unemployme­nt rate to soar.

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