The number of Americans seeking jobless aid is rising, a sign the nationwide surge in coronavirus cases is hurting the nation's economy and leading to a spike in layoffs.
Some 853,000 people applied for unemployment benefits in the week ending December 5, the Labor Department said Thursday. That's a jump of 137,000 from the week before and the highest weekly figure in three months. Another 427,600 sought Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a new federal program for self-employed and gig workers.
While there is uncertainty in the government's weekly figures, as a Government Accountability Office report recently detailed, the jump in workers seeking jobless assistance shows how the pandemic is taking a toll on the labor market, according to experts.
"This recent surge suggests that claims are not just stagnating — they're actively worsening. The surge in initial claims is especially concerning when claims are still above levels near the peak of the Great Recession," Glassdoor Senior Economist Daniel Zhao said in a note.
"Last week's jobs report showed a rapid deceleration in the recovery in November, and surging [unemployment insurance] claims only add to the picture of a slowing recovery this winter."
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The total number of people who are receiving state-provided unemployment aid rose for the first time in three months to 5.8 million, from 5.5 million, the government said. That suggests some companies have sharply pulled back on hiring.
All told, 19 million Americans are receiving some form of jobless aid. Unless Congress agrees on an economic support package, 12 million people are set to lose their benefits on December 26.
"The Thanksgiving holiday may still be wreaking some havoc with the data, but the underlying picture is still one of weak labor market conditions as the coronavirus surges," Nancy Vanden Houten of Oxford Economics said in a report.
The Associated Press contributed reporting.