New Jobless Benefits Filings Tumble 09/09 11:42
The number of people signing up for unemployment benefits dropped to the
lowest level in two months, an encouraging sign that companies aren't resorting
to deeper layoffs even as the economy has lost momentum.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The number of people signing up for unemployment benefits
dropped to the lowest level in two months, an encouraging sign that companies
aren't resorting to deeper layoffs even as the economy has lost momentum.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that new claims for unemployment aid
plunged last week by a seasonally adjusted 27,000 to 451,000. Economists had
predicted a much smaller decline of just 2,000.
In a second hopeful sign, the government said the trade deficit narrowed
significantly in July as exports climbed to the highest level in nearly two
years. The narrower gap reflected big gains in exports of U.S.-made airplanes
and other manufactured goods. Imports declined.
Together, the two reports eased fears that the economy might slide back into
recession.
"At the moment, we can rule out a double-dip for the economy," said Chris
Rupkey, chief economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi. "The economy is not out of
the woods with today's data, but things look better than they have in several
week, and there is no danger of a new downturn in activity."
On Wall Street, the news lifted stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average was
up around 60 points in morning trading.
Concerns about a possible new recession had arisen after a batch of downbeat
reports in August. For example, new applications for jobless benefits shot past
the half-million mark in mid-August, the highest level since November. Since
that spike, though, they have drifted lower. New filings for benefits are now
at their lowest level since July 10.
Meanwhile, the four-week moving average of new claims, which smooths out
weekly fluctuations, also fell last week, dropping by 9,250 to 477,750. So did
the number of people continuing to draw unemployment aid.
Even with latest decline, new filing for jobless benefits are still much
higher than they would be if the economy were healthy. When the economy is
growing strongly and companies are hiring, requests for unemployment benefits
fall below 400,000.
The July trade deficit fell 14 percent to $42.8 billion, the Commerce
Department said. That was much lower than economists had forecast. The lower
trade deficit should give a boost to overall economic growth.
Still, near double-digit unemployment is a political headache for President
Barack Obama and his Democrat party with the congressional midterm elections
just months away.
Obama, in an interview with ABC News, conceded that if the midterm election
turns out to be mostly a referendum on the economy, "we're not going to do
well."
Last week, the government reported that the unemployment rate ticked up a
notch to 9.6 percent in August from 9.5 percent in July, as the number of
jobseekers swamped the number of job openings. Private employers in August
added a net total of only 67,000 jobs in August. Job gains would need to be
more than three times that to drive down the unemployment rate.
The unemployment rate has exceeded 9 percent for 16 straight months and is
likely to extend that streak into next year.
Without more jobs, consumers are likely to spend cautiously, which would
keep the economy mired in its slow-growth rut.
The economy's growth has slowed sharply from earlier this year as the impact
of the government's stimulus package fades. Companies are wary about stepping
up hiring because they are worried about their sales and whether the economy
will continue to lose momentum. But in recent weeks, companies have shied away
from resorting to even deeper layoffs.
Thursday's report showed the number of people continuing to draw
unemployment aid dipped by 2,000 to 4.5 million, the lowest since late June.
That, however, doesn't include millions of people who are receiving extended
benefits under emergency programs enacted by Congress during the recession.
More than 5 million people were on the extended benefit rolls during the week
of Aug. 28, the latest data available.
(KA)