USA TODAY International Edition

1.48M new jobless claims

Aid requests are slowing yet ‘ turmoil’ may go on

- Charisse Jones

The latest report shows fewer people filing for unemployme­nt last week, the 12th weekly drop in a row. But the slide in initial claims is slowing down, “reminding us that layoffs in some areas remain widespread,” economists noted.

Fewer Americans are seeking unemployme­nt benefits, but the number who need help remains high as the country haltingly reopens its economy amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. 1.48 million workers filed first time claims for unemployme­nt insurance last week, the Labor Department said Thursday. That latest round of applicatio­ns means a staggering 47.1 million Americans have made initial jobless benefits claims in just 14 weeks. While the number of people seeking first time aid fell below the 1.5 million who filed claims the week before and marks the 12th weekly drop in a row, the slide is slowing. And last week’s tally was greater than the 1.3 million to 1.4 million economists expected. Initial jobless claims are the nation’s most reliable gauge of layoffs, and in an investors note, Oxford Economics said the latest numbers “paint a picture of a job market in turmoil. Initial claims fell only slightly from last week, reminding us that layoffs in some areas remain widespread.” When the economy largely shut down in March to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, job cuts were concentrat­ed in the retail, restaurant and travel industries, businesses especially

hard hit when people were instructed to stay home. But job losses have now spread to other sectors, including education, manufactur­ing and profession­al services.

The nation experience­d an unexpected uptick in jobs when roughly 2.5 million positions were added in May, following the loss of 22 million jobs during the previous two months.

Still, the weekly numbers of Americans needing aid because they are out of work far exceed the previous record of 695,000 first- time jobless claims made in the fall of 1982, when the nation was in the midst of a deep recession.

Economists expect the unemployme­nt rate to stay high, hovering around 10% by the end of the year. And many out of work Americans may be about to struggle more as the extra $ 600 unemployme­nt insurance payment they receive through the federal CARES Act is set to expire next month, nearly a week earlier than many expected.

“If these trends hold steady, 26 million Americans are set to lose benefits by July 26th, costing the economy $ 15.6 billion dollars in economic stimulus per week and leaving millions of families at a sudden severe risk for evictions and hunger,” Andrew Stettner, a fellow with The Century Foundation, said in a statement.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Economists expect the unemployme­nt rate to stay high.
GETTY IMAGES Economists expect the unemployme­nt rate to stay high.

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