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				Jobless claim filings ticked down by 1,000 to 224,000 for the 
				week ending March 22, the Labor Department said Thursday. That’s 
				mostly in line with the 225,000 new applications analysts 
				forecast.
 Weekly applications for jobless benefits are considered a proxy 
				for layoffs, and have remained mostly in a range between 200,000 
				and 250,000 for the past few years.
 
 It remains unclear when job cuts ordered by the Department of 
				Government Efficiency, or “DOGE,” will show up in the weekly 
				layoffs report, though the Labor Department’s February jobs 
				report showed that the federal government shed 10,000 jobs. 
				That’s the most since June of 2022.
 
 Economists don’t expect the federal workforce layoffs to have 
				much of an impact until the March jobs report, which comes out 
				April 4.
 
 Those layoffs are part of the Trump administration’s efforts to 
				shrink the size of the federal workforce through DOGE, 
				spearheaded by billionaire Elon Musk.
 
 Senior U.S. officials set the government downsizing in motion 
				late last month via a memo dramatically expanding President 
				Donald Trump’s efforts to scale back the workforce. Thousands of 
				probationary employees have already been fired — though two 
				federal judges last week issued orders requiring the rehiring of 
				thousands of those workers.
 
 Despite showing some signs of weakening during the past year, 
				the labor market remains healthy with plentiful jobs and 
				relatively few layoffs.
 
 The Labor Department reported that U.S. employers added a solid 
				151,000 jobs in February, and while the unemployment rate ticked 
				up to a 4.1%, it remains a historically healthy figure.
 
 Some high-profile companies have announced job cuts already this 
				year, including Workday, Dow, CNN, Starbucks, Southwest Airlines 
				and Facebook parent company Meta.
 
 The government's weekly jobless claims report includes a 
				four-week average of applications, meant to even out some of the 
				week-to-week swings. That fell by 4,750 to 224,000.
 
 The total number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits 
				for the week of March 15 declined by 25,000 to 1.86 million.
 
			
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