U.S. braces for record surge in jobless claims amid coronavirus fallout
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[March 26, 2020]
By Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of
Americans filing claims for unemployment benefits likely raced to as
high as a record 4 million last week as strict measures to contain the
coronavirus pandemic ground the country to a sudden halt, unleashing a
wave of layoffs.
The weekly jobless claims report from the Labor Department on Thursday
is set to offer the clearest evidence yet of the coronavirus'
devastating impact on the economy, which has forced the Federal Reserve
to take extraordinary steps and set the U.S. Congress racing to assemble
a record $2 trillion stimulus package.
Economists say the economy is already in recession and the jobless
claims report would offer proof of that.
The weekly claims figures are the most timely labor market indicator.
The report on Thursday is set to grab attention on both Wall Street and
Main Street after the Trump administration requested that states stop
giving daily snapshots of applications for jobless aid.
According to a Reuters survey of economists, initial claims for state
unemployment benefits probably surged to a seasonally adjusted 1 million
for the week ended March 21, which would far eclipse the previous record
of 695,000 set in 1982. Estimates in the survey were as high as 4
million, which would dwarf the 281,000 applications received during the
week ended March 14.
"Containment efforts in response to the coronavirus resulted in a very
sudden and very dramatic change over just a few days," said Stephen
Gallagher, U.S. chief economist at Societe Generale in New York.
"Layoffs were part of that change and applicants appear to have flooded
state unemployment insurance offices within a very short time-span."
There were reports of many states saying their employment websites
crashed because of heavy traffic.
Governors in at least 18 states, accounting for nearly half the
country's population, have ordered residents to stay mostly indoors.
"Non-essential" businesses have also been ordered closed. According to
economists, a fifth of the workforce is on some form of lockdown.
Economists' collection of raw data from states, industry groups and
their own models show an unprecedented jump across all states.
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A view of Bourbon Street amid the outbreak of the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19), in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. March 25, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman
Morgan Stanley is forecasting unadjusted claims for California, one
of the regions hardest hard by the respiratory illness called
COVID-19 brought on by the coronavirus, to have shot up by 550,000.
California Governor Gavin Newsom said earlier this week that new
filings for jobless benefits there were running at an average of
106,000 a day in the past week.
Claims from New York, now at the center of the outbreak, are
forecast to have increased by 210,000, according to the Morgan
Stanley estimate. Applications in Washington state are expected to
have risen by about 100,000.
With state employment websites overwhelmed, economists say some of
the applications that were supposed to be filed during the week
ended March 14 were pushed back to last week, which could also
account for the anticipated surge in claims.
"In addition, reports from some states also suggest that the process
for making claims has been in part shifted to a pen and paper
approach, potentially delaying the filing process as well," said Jan
Kozak, an economist at Morgan Stanley in New York. "This means that
some of the 3.4 million in claims we estimate might have been spread
into this week as well."
Last week's claims data likely will have no impact on March's
employment report as it falls outside the period during which the
government surveyed employers for nonfarm payrolls, which was the
week to March 14. Economists, however, say the rush for benefits in
that survey week suggests payrolls declined this month, which would
end nearly 9-1/2 years of job growth.
"Jobs will decline in March," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at
Moody's Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania. "There are numerous
reports of laid-off workers unable to file for unemployment
insurance because so many people are trying to file at the same
time. Millions of job losses are likely in coming weeks."
(Additional reporting by Ann Saphir in San Francisco; Editing by Dan
Burns, Andrea Ricci and Chizu Nomiyama)
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