San Antonio Express-News

Jobless claims fall as labor market thwarts Fed

- By Matt Ott

WASHINGTON — Fewer Americans applied for jobless benefits last week as the labor market continues to thrive despite the Federal Reserve’s efforts to cool it.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that filings for unemployme­nt claims for the week ending

April 6 fell by 11,000 to 211,000 from the previous week’s 222,000.

The four-week average of claims, which smooths out some of the week-toweek swings, fell by 250 to 214,250.

Weekly unemployme­nt claims are considered a proxy for the number of U.S. layoffs in a given week and a sign of where the job market is headed. They have remained at historical­ly low levels since the pandemic purge of millions of jobs in the spring of 2020.

The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark borrowing rate 11 times beginning in March of 2022 in a bid to stifle the four-decade high inflation that took hold after the economy bounced back from the COVID-19

recession of 2020. Part of the Fed’s goal was to loosen the labor market and cool wage growth, which it believes contribute­d to persistent­ly high inflation.

Many economists thought there was a chance the rapid rate hikes could tip the country into recession, but jobs have remained plentiful.

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