The number of new applications for unemployment benefits fell sharply
last week to a fresh pandemic low, but the entire decline stemmed from a
major change in how the data is reported instead a big increase in
people finding jobs. Without the change the labor market showed no
progress.
Initial jobless claims fell by 130,000 to a seasonally adjusted 881,000 in the last week of August, the Labor Department said Thursday. These figures reflect applications filed the traditional way through state unemployment offices.
Economists polled by
MarketWatch had forecast 940,000 new claims in the seven days ended Aug.
29. Yet not all of the estimates took into account the change in the
government’s formula for seasonal adjustments.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said last week it would alter
its adjustment process to make the report more accurate. The level of
seasonally adjusted new claims has run notably higher than the real or
actual number of people applying for benefits each week, a problem that
became more pronounced in the past month.
The unadjusted or real number of new jobless claims, meanwhile,
suggested there was barely any change last week in how many people are
applying for benefits. They rose slightly to 833,352 from 825,761. It
was the fifth straight week in which unadjusted claims have been below 1
million.
By any measure, though, jobless claims are still exceedingly high.
They ran in the low 200,000s and stood near a half-century low shortly
before the coronavirus epidemic broke out.
New jobless claims rose the
most in California (40,000), with smaller increases in Texas and
Louisiana. Notably they fell in Florida and Georgia, states that
suffered a big increase in coronavirus cases earlier in the summer.
Adding in self-employed workers who filed under a separate
federal program, actual or unadjusted new claims totaled 1.59 million
last week. That marks a sizable increase from 1.43 million the prior
week.
Continuing jobless claims, or the number of people already receiving
benefits, fell to a seasonally adjusted 13.25 million in the week of
Aug. 22 from 14.49 million. The raw or actual number was somewhat
smaller.
Altogether, the number of people getting benefits through eight
state and federal programs rose to an unadjusted 29.2 million as of
Aug. 15 from 27 million in the prior week. The data is released with a
two-week delay.
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