U.S. jobless claims dropping faster in states ending federal benefit
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[June 25, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ongoing claims for
U.S. unemployment insurance have dipped faster in recent weeks in states
ending federal benefits this summer than in states keeping the $300
weekly supplement in place until the fall, according to government data
through last week.
From the week ending May 1 through the week ending June 12, continuing
claims for state unemployment benefits fell 17.8% in the 26 states
ending benefits early, to 990,000, and by 12.6%, to 2.18 million, in the
rest of the country, according to a Reuters analysis of weekly federal
unemployment data.
The data do not yet answer the larger and arguably more important
question of whether hiring will also accelerate in those states, the
outcome an almost all-Republican group of governors says is the goal of
cutting the benefits early.
Weekly data from small business time provider Homebase through the week
ending June 20 in fact has shown no pickup in hiring in the states
cancelling unemployment benefits. To the contrary the other states
appear to have added jobs faster in recent weeks - a possible
consequence of the fact that large Democratic-led states like California
and New York have recently lifted most of the remaining restrictions put
in place to fight the pandemic.
The states stopping benefits as a group have also pulled closer to their
pre-pandemic levels of unemployment, suggesting less room for
improvement.
(Graphic: Unemployment benefits and hiring,
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/xklpyxkeevg/
chart.png)
The issue of how unemployment benefits are impacting the recovery of the
U.S. job market has become a core concern among Federal Reserve and
other policymakers as they try to determine how fast national employment
might rebound to pre-pandemic levels, a judgment hard to make until the
economy is fully reopened and benefit levels returned to normal.
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A sign advertising job openings is seen outside of a Starbucks in
Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S., May 26, 2021.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Twelve states have already halted benefits in what has been a largely partisan
split between Republican governors arguing that the pandemic emergency
unemployment payments are now discouraging people from working, and Democratic
governors who feel people still need support as the pandemic wanes.
(Graphic: A (mostly) red state roll off,
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/EMPLOYMENT/
oakpedgnkvr/chart.png)
The states stopping benefits early include the entire Deep South, where pandemic
unemployment has fallen hard on the large Black population, but only one state,
Louisiana, with a Democratic governor. Only two Republican-led states, Vermont
and Massachusetts in the Northeast, plan to continue the payments until they end
nationwide in September.
The data overall suggest "more downward momentum in initial and continuing
claims over the next few weeks," said Jefferies economist Thomas Simons.
Sky-high unemployment claims have been a hallmark of the pandemic, topping 23
million at one point in the spring of 2020 as the coronavirus took hold, more
than 10 times the level at the start of the year.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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