The number of Americans applying for jobless benefits rose for the
second straight week, a sign economic growth could be stalling in late
July. Claims had been on a steady decline after peaking in late March.
Initial jobless claims rose by 12,000 to 1.434 million in the
week ended July 25, the Labor Department said Thursday. Economists
surveyed by MarketWatch had been looking for 1.51 million new claims. A
new federal relief program for so-called “gig” workers like Uber
drivers, totaled 829,607 last week.
The number of people already collecting
economic benefits, known as continuing claims rose by 867,000 to 17.06
million. These claims are reported with a one-week lag. This is a sign
that workers are staying longer on unemployment rolls and rehiring has
slowed. It is the first increase in continuing claims since late May.
Seasonal adjustment factors are
playing havoc with the data this month. Claims in July take account of
annual summer shutdowns of automakers, but auto plants are staying open
after their forced shutdown in April. Still, claims are staying
stubbornly high.
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