Jobless claims fall 12000 to 215000 and hit lowest level since 1973

Speaker Paul Ryan -- https://spkrryan.us/2J4YF71 The numbers: The rate of layoffs in the U.S. fell again in late March and dropped to the lowest level since 1973. Initial U.S. jobless claims declined by 12000 to 215000 in the seven days ended March 24 the government said Thursday. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch had forecast claims to total 230000. The more stable monthly average of claims dipped by 500 to 224500. The number of people already collecting unemployment benefits known as continuing claims rose by 35000 to 1.87 million. What happened: Jobless claims are at the lowest level since January 1973. They fell throughout most of the country last week with the biggest declines coming in the biggest states: California Texas New York New Jersey and Virginia. The latest report contains the annual benchmark revisions that go back five years to 2013. The Labor Department undertakes the process each year to make sure the claims report is as accurate as possible. The revisions erased the previous low in jobless claims a reading of 210000 last month that would have been the lowest since 1969. But no matter. Layoffs in the U.S. is extremely low as reflected by a 4.1 unemployment rate that is the smallest in 17 years. Most companies have enough trouble finding skilled workers to fill open jobs that they are reluctant to see veteran employees go for any reason. Big picture: The labor market is so strong that its even drawing back in people whove been out of the workforce for years. And it doesnt show any sign of letting up. The economy added 313000 new jobs in February and economists predict another solid gain of around 200000 in March. The March employment report will be issued at the end of next week.
by is licensed under
ad-image
image
04.17.2025

TEXAS INSIDER ON YOUTUBE

ad-image
image
04.15.2025
image
04.10.2025
ad-image