The numbers: The number of Americans who applied
for unemployment benefits at the end of November fell to the lowest
level in seven months and returned close to a 50-year low, but the sharp
decline in jobless claims likely stems in part from the Thanksgiving
holiday.
Initial jobless claims, a rough way to measure layoffs,
dropped 10,000 to 203,000 in the seven days ended Nov. 30, the
government said Thursday.
That’s the lowest level since mid-April, when new claims fell to a
50-year low of 193,000, and a sign that the U.S. labor market remains
rock solid.
Economists polled by MarketWatch estimated new claims would total a seasonally adjusted 215,000.
What happened: Raw or unadjusted jobless claims posted unusually large declines in California and Texas and fell in many other large states.
Jobless
claims sometimes swing sharply during the long holiday season that
starts after Thanksgiving and extends through Martin Luther King Day in
late January.
Laid-off workers often wait longer to file claims and many companies
add and drop temporary workers. The U.S. Thanksgiving holiday, always on
a Thursday, also falls in different weeks each year, making it harder
for government economists to adjust the numbers for seasonal changes in
employment.
The more stable monthly average of new claims fell
by 2,000 to 217,750. The four-week average gives a more accurate read
into labor-market conditions than the more volatile weekly number.
The
number of people already collecting unemployment benefits, known as
continuing claims, increased by 51,000 to a still-low 1.69 million.
Big picture: A
slowing economy is not producing as many new jobs, but it’s not leading
to higher layoffs, either. Most companies still find enough demand for
their goods and services to maintain current staffing levels.
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