World

New US jobless claims drop 75,000: official data

Latest weekly US jobless benefits fall to 712,000

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 04 Dec 2020 3:30AM

New US jobless claims drop 75,000: official data
Analyst say that the big drop in jobless claims for the latest week may not provide much comfort since the Thanksgiving holiday could skew the figures. – AFP pic, December 4, 2020

WASHINGTON – New applications for US jobless benefits fell to 712,000 last week, a better-than-expected decline of 75,000, the Labor Department reported yesterday.

Economists had been anticipating the number of new claims to hold steady after spiking in the week ended November 21 to an upwardly revised 787,000.

The four-week average for initial claims also dropped by 11,000, according to the weekly data.

The report showed that through the week ended November 14, 20.2 million people continued to receive some form of unemployment benefit -- a decline of about 350,000 -- including under special programs passed during the pandemic that will soon expire.

The fate of those programs remains uncertain as Congress has yet to break the impasse over a new federal relief plan that can be approved in the few weeks before President-elect Joe Biden takes office.

Democratic leaders in Congress have thrown their support behind a $908 billion bipartisan proposal, but Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell continues to press for a much more limited plan of about $500 billion.

Amid continued signs the labor market recovery has stalled, the big drop in jobless claims may not provide much comfort since the data are for the week that include the Thanksgiving holiday, which could skew the figures.

“The plunge in initial claims does not refute the idea that the trend is rising; we expected a sharp fall because of the difficulty of adjusting for Thanksgiving,” said Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics. 

He warned that “initial claims likely will rebound strongly next week, probably rising above the 800,000 mark for the first time in eight weeks.” – AFP, December 4, 2020.

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