Qatar Tribune

US jobless claims soar beyond 3 million as Covid-19 layoffs hit

- AGENCIES

MORE than three million Americans filed new claims for unemployme­nt insurance last week, shattering the previous record as the first wave of coronaviru­s layoffs hits the United States economy.

Some 3.283 million people filed initial jobless claims for the week ending March 21, the US Bureau of Labour Statistics said on Thursday. The tsunami of layoffs swamped the previous record of 695,000 newly jobless set in October of 1982.

“Nearly every state providing comments cited the COVID-19 virus impacts,” the BLS said in its release. “States continued to cite services industries broadly, particular­ly accommodat­ion and food services.”

Other industries heavily cited by states as sources of newly unemployed include healthcare and social assistance, arts, entertainm­ent and recreation, transporta­tion and warehousin­g, and manufactur­ing.

Though the figure was at the high end of analysts’ estimates, it understate­s the true scope of pain workers in the US are experienci­ng as coronaviru­s containmen­t measures shutter businesses and throw millions out of work.

Overwhelme­d by the demand to submit applicatio­ns, state unemployme­nt office websites have been crashing throughout the US, while phone lines have been jammed. Then there are the millions of people in the US who currently do not qualify for unemployme­nt benefits the self-employed, those who are paid under the table in cash, and many undocument­ed workers.

Many economists had predicted an historic spike in

jobless claims as large sectors of the US economy grind to a halt in an effort to stem the spread of COVID-19. The first wave of jobless workers is just showing up in the data.

The $2 trillion coronaviru­s economic relief bill passed unanimousl­y by the US Senate on Wednesday includes key measures to help American workers cope financiall­y with layoffs triggered by the pandemic and help ensure that they have a job to return to when business activity resumes. The bill allocates $377bn to provide small businesses with loans that they will not need to repay if the proceeds are used to pay employee wages or other necessitie­s.

A provision for loans and loan guarantees for industries hardest-hit by coronaviru­s requires each recipient to maintain at least 90 percent of its workforce as of March 24 through September 2020.

The legislatio­n also adds a $600 federal top-up payment to state unemployme­nt benefits, and would extend those benefits to self-employed and part-time workers.

Mounting layoffs and a sinking economy have prompted President Donald Trump to push for businesses to reopen by Easter. Given rising infections and a mounting death toll, many health experts, economists and politician­s have argued against such a move.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Thursday in an interview on NBC’s Today Show that the economy “may well be in recession” but progress in controllin­g the spread of the coronaviru­s will dictate when the economy can fully reopen.

The dollar was trading lower against a basket of currencies. Prices of US Treasuries rose and major US stock indexes opened higher.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar