U.S. weekly jobless claims fall to 214,000, lowest level since start of year-Xinhua

U.S. weekly jobless claims fall to 214,000, lowest level since start of year

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2022-03-18 04:48:14

Construction workers work at a construction site in the Brooklyn borough of New York, the United States, June 15, 2021. (Xinhua/Michael Nagle)

The latest data, which is slightly better than the Dow Jones estimate for 220,000, marked the lowest level since the start of the year, another sign that the labor market is very tight.

WASHINGTON, March 17 (Xinhua) -- Initial jobless claims in the United States last week fell to 214,000, the lowest level since the beginning of the year, the U.S. Labor Department reported on Thursday.

In the week ending March 12, the number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits decreased by 15,000 from the previous week's upwardly revised level of 229,000, according to a report released by the department's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

The latest data, which is slightly better than the Dow Jones estimate for 220,000, marked the lowest level since the start of the year, another sign that the labor market is very tight. Earlier data showed that unemployment rate slightly dropped to 3.8 percent in February as the Omicron-fueled COVID-19 surge fades.

The four-week moving average for initial jobless claims, a method to iron out data volatility, decreased by 8,750 to 223,000, the BLS report showed.

The latest jobless claims report also showed that the number of people continuing to collect regular state unemployment benefits, which run a week behind the headline numbers, decreased by 71,000 to 1.419 million. That number peaked in April and May in 2020, when it was over 20 million.

The total number of people claiming benefits in all programs -- state and federal combined -- for the week ending Feb. 26, however, increased by 59,516 to nearly 1.97 million.

The U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate, the federal funds rate, by a quarter percentage point to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent from near zero, a major step in exiting from the ultra-loose monetary policy enacted at the start of the pandemic.

"We're not going to let high inflation become entrenched. The costs of that would be too high," Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday afternoon at a virtual press conference, while describing the labor market situation as "tight to an unhealthy level". 

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