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“Initial claims are still impressively low, near historic lows,”
Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics,
wrote in a commentary. “The uptick from last week to this week
is trivial in a labor market of 159 million workers.″
The number of Americans signing up for unemployment benefits — a
proxy for layoffs — has stabilized in a low range of mostly
200,000 to 250,000 a week since the U.S. economy emerged from a
brief but nasty pandemic recession in 2020.
The total number of people collecting jobless aid rose by 15,000
to 1.79 million the week that ended May 16.
The persistently low number of claims suggests that most U.S.
companies have not resorted to layoffs. But even if they’re not
cutting jobs, employers haven’t been adding many either. Last
year, companies, nonprofits and government agencies added fewer
than 10,000 jobs a month, weakest hiring outside recession years
since 2002.
Job creation has picked up a bit so far this year — to an
average of 76,000 a month from January through April. By
contrast, employers added 122,000 a month in 2024 and averaged
nearly 400,000 a month from 2021 through 2023 as the economy
roared back from COVID-19 lockdowns.
But the United States now needs fewer jobs to keep the
unemployment rate from rising. President Donald Trump’s
immigration crackdown and ongoing Baby Boomer retirements means
that the monthly “break-even rate″ of monthly hiring may be as
low as zero. And the unemployment rate — 4.3% in April — has, in
fact, remained low by historic standards.
The Iran war has clouded the economic outlook as higher energy
prices squeeze consumers and businesses. Iran responded to U.S.
and Israeli attacks by turning to economic warfare — closing the
Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil
passes, and causing the biggest disruption of global oil
supplies in history. In response, U.S. gasoline prices have
surged to an average of $4.43 a gallon from an average $2.98 a
gallon on the eve of the conflict, according to AAA.
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