US claims for unemployment aid jump, but remain low
The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits jumped last week but remain low overall, even as the
The four-week moving average of claims, which flattens some of the week-to-week volatility, rose by 3,500 to 239,250.
Overall, 1.81 million people were collecting unemployment benefits the week that ended
American workers are enjoying unusual job security despite rising interest rates, economic uncertainty and fears of a looming recession.
As expected, in its ongoing inflation fight, the Fed on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate another quarter point. One of the Fed's goals in raising interest 10 times in the past 14 months is to cool the job market and stifle rising wages. Until very recently, there was very little evidence the central bank's actions were working on the labor market. But cracks may be starting to show.
The unemployment rate came in at 3.5% last month, a tick above January's half-century low 3.4%. Employers added 236,000 jobs in March, down from 472,000 in January and 326,000 in February, but still strong by historic standards.
Another sign that the labor market may be cooling came Tuesday when the government reported that
Analysts expect that Friday's April jobs report will show that
Last week, the
There have been an increasing number of layoffs in recent months, mostly in the technology sector, where companies added jobs at a furious pace during the pandemic.
But it's not just the tech sector that's trimming staff. McDonald's, Morgan Stanley and 3M also announced layoffs recently.
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