Job-Openings

A help-wanted sign at a business in Richmond, Va., on June 2. Steve Helber/Associated Press, file

WASHINGTON — The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits rose for the first time in five weeks even though the economy and job market have been recovering briskly from the coronavirus pandemic. In Maine, initial claims continued to decline gradually to a new pandemic low.

Jobless claims edged up by 4,000 to 353,000 from 349,000 a week earlier, the U.S. Labor Department reported Thursday. The four-week average of claims, which smooths out week-to-week volatility, fell by 11,500 to 366,500 – lowest since mid-March 2020, when the coronavirus was beginning to slam the United States.

The weekly count has fallen more or less steadily since topping 900,000 in early January as the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines has helped the economy – encouraging businesses to reopen or expand hours and luring consumers out of their homes to restaurants, bars and shops.

“We expect jobless claims to remain on a downward path as the labor market continues to recover, but progress will be more fitful as claims get closer to pre-pandemic levels,” economists Nancy Vanden Houten and Gregory Daco of Oxford Economics said in a research note.

A resurgence of cases linked to the highly contagious delta variant has clouded the economic outlook. And claims already remain high by historic standards: Before the pandemic tore through the economy in March 2020, the weekly pace amounted to around 220,000 a week.

In Maine, the state Department of Labor recorded about 750 initial claims filed for state unemployment insurance last week, and 100 initial claims filed for federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance. Claims were down by about 50 from a week earlier, continuing the state’s recent, gradual decline.

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Continuing weekly claims also fell by about 200 in Maine from the previous week to 29,700.

Filings for unemployment benefits have traditionally been seen as a real-time measure of the job market’s health. But their reliability has deteriorated during the pandemic. In many states, the weekly figures have been inflated by fraud and by multiple filings from unemployed Americans as they navigate bureaucratic hurdles to try to obtain benefits. Those complications help explain why the pace of applications remains comparatively high.

The job market has been rebounding with vigor since the pandemic paralyzed economic activity last year and employers slashed more than 22 million jobs in March and April 2020. The United States has since recovered 16.7 million jobs. And employers have added a rising number of jobs for three straight months, including a robust 943,000 in July. They have been posting job openings – a record 10.1 million in June – faster than applicants are lining up to fill them.

Some employers blame labor shortages on supplemental unemployment benefits from the federal government – including $300 a week on top of regular state aid – for discouraging some of the jobless from seeking work. In response, many states have withdrawn from the federal programs, which expire nationwide next month anyway.

Economists point to other factors that have kept people out of the job market – difficulty finding or affording child care, fear about becoming infected by the virus at work and the hope of some individuals to find better jobs than they had before the pandemic.

Whatever the causes, the economy remains 5.7 million jobs shy of what it had in February 2020.

Including federal programs, 12 million people were receiving some type of jobless benefit the week of Aug. 7, down from 27.5 million a year before.


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