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U.S. Jobless Claims Dropped 2K to 229K in the Week of June 18

U.S. Jobless

U.S. Jobless Claims Dropped

U.S. Jobless Claims Dropped 2K to 229K in the Week of June 18. In spite of indications of an economic downturn; the number of new applications for unemployment benefits decreased last week; and remained close to historic lows.

Initial applications for unemployment insurance; a proxy for layoffs, decreased from the prior week’s revised number of 231,000; to a seasonally adjusted 229,000 last week; the Labor Department reported on Thursday.
That is a little bit more than the notoriously tight employment market’s 2019 prepandemic; weekly average of 218,000.

Read More: U.S. initial jobless claims drop

Since falling to a 53-year low this spring, claims have been rising rapidly.
The claims four-week average, which reduces the variance in the weekly numbers; rose to 223,500.

According to the statistics released on Thursday; continuing claims—a proxy for the overall number of persons getting benefits from state unemployment programs; the numbers rose to 1.32 million from 1.31 million the week before. There is a one-week delay in reporting continuing claims.

Read More: 17 States that have lowest unemployment

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