USA TODAY International Edition

1.9M file jobless claims

Weekly activity brings total to more than 42 million as numbers head down

- Paul Davidson

About 1.9 million Americans filed initial unemployme­nt claims last week, underscori­ng that even as all 50 states begin reopening their economies, the damage from the coronaviru­s pandemic continues to mount.

Over the past 11 weeks, 42.6 million workers have sought jobless benefits as states shut down nonessenti­al businesses to curtail the spread of the virus, Labor Department data shows. The figure provides the best measure of layoffs across the U. S.

The number of Americans filing for unemployme­nt is falling, however. The latest total was below the prior week’s 2.1 million, marking the ninth straight weekly decline after the tally peaked at 6.9 million in late March.

If the trend continues, the count likely will dip below 1 million by early July, says economist Ian Shepherdso­n of Pantheon Macroecono­mics. Yet the weekly tallies are still dramatical­ly higher than the previous record of 695,000 unemployme­nt claims during a deep recession in October 1982.

The figures foreshadow another wave of historic job losses in the May employment report out Friday but then the beginnings of a turnaround in June as businesses rehire many of the workers they laid off or furloughed.

In a mildly disappoint­ing reversal, the number of Americans filing continuing jobless claims – which includes all those receiving benefits, with a oneweek lag – rose by 649,000 to 21.5 million during the week ending May 23.

That suggests more people were laid off than returned to work even as states start letting businesses reopen.

Despite the increase, total continuing claims are still down significantly from earlier, underscori­ng that many Americans are going back to work.

“The trend is moving in the right direction,” Shepherdso­n says.

In the previous week, continuing claims fell sharply by about 4 million to 20.8 million, signaling that more people came off the unemployme­nt rolls than joined.

There’s a caveat, however. The drop in continuing claims that prior week was partly driven by a 1.4 million decline in California and a 1.6 million decrease in Florida.

Both states require the unemployed to file claims every two weeks, and that was an off week. As a result, economists anticipate­d a rise in total U. S. claims as residents in the two states resumed filing.

On Friday, the Labor Department is forecast to report 8 million net job losses – which includes job cuts and new hiring – in May and an unemployme­nt rate that jumped to an unthinkabl­e 19.5% from 14.7% the month before.

The casualties are expected to be only somewhat less dire than April’s employment report, which featured a record 20.5 million payroll losses and an unemployme­nt rate that shot up from 4.4% in March.

The jobless claims recorded Thursday will figure into the June jobs report, which some economists say could represent a turning point in the coronaviru­s crisis. With all states letting nonessenti­al businesses reopen in phases, economist Gus Faucher of PNC Financial Services Group believes job gains will likely resume in June after two months of historic losses.

Shepherdso­n believes payrolls this month could rise by about 2 million if continuing claims fall briskly in coming weeks.

Yet the pain could linger. Many businesses are expected to shutter permanentl­y, and Moody’s Analytics estimates that only about half of the workers laid off during the crisis will be rehired, leaving unemployme­nt at about 10% throughout 2021.

Last week, 83,000 people filed initial claims in New York, a decline of 106,000 from the prior week. The total fell by 24,000 in Michigan to 41,000; by 16,500 in Pennsylvan­ia to 50,000; and by 14,500 in Washington to 35,000.

Yet first- time claims rose by 27,000 in California to 230,000 and by 31,000 in Florida to 206,000.

An additional 623,000 people filed for benefits under a separate program that expands eligibilit­y to the self- employed and independen­t contractor­s, among others, during the crisis. About 10.7 million Americans were already receiving unemployme­nt paychecks under that program, known as Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance.

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 ??  ?? Unemployme­nt claims are soaring across the United States due to coronaviru­s- related layoffs and closures. USA TODAY FILE PHOTO
Unemployme­nt claims are soaring across the United States due to coronaviru­s- related layoffs and closures. USA TODAY FILE PHOTO

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