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Jobless Claims One Economic Indicator That's Back to Normal

Unemployment and housing are lackluster, but initial jobless claims are down to boom-time levels

March 22, 2012 RSS Feed Print

Today the Labor Department reported that initial claims for unemployment insurance hit a new four-year low last week, coming in at 348,000, 5,000 lower than the previous week's reading.

That's the lowest point since February 2008, and it is moving further into the territory of the booming mid-2000s. From 2005 to 2007, when the unemployment rate hovered between 4.4 and 5.4 percent, weekly jobless claims tended to remain between the upper 200,000s and the upper 300,000s, averaging around 322,000.

[Why twentysomethings could compete for internships with Mom and Dad.]

"When we look at it now at the rates that they are, we, I think, are generally of the opinion, I think among economists, that the current levels are representative of normal turnover," says Patrick O'Keefe, director of economic research at accounting firm J.H. Cohn.

That "normal turnover" indicated by the jobless claims figure points to a more healthy labor market overall, says Joel Naroff, president and chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisors. The figure has been relatively stable in recent months, showing a slow but steady decline. Though labor market improvements are coming slowly, that lack of volatility is also promising, he says.

"What it's telling us is that we have had a clear firming in labor market conditions," says Naroff. "It's a slow decline, but it's also consistent with further declines in the unemployment rate."

Jobless claims are a rough indicator of layoff activity. So while fewer claims do not primarily drive economic growth, they are a sign that other things are going well. "Everything else is growing, a growing economy which requires more workers. So that greater [number of] workers reduces the terminations, increases the hiring, increases confidence, increases spending," says Naroff.

"When all those factors happen, the unemployment claims number goes down," he adds.

There's still plenty of room jobless claims to drop further, but just as a too-low unemployment rate could cause economic problems, like inflation, some new jobless claims every week is a good thing, reflecting healthy movement in the labor market as people change jobs.

"Even in a very tight labor market some jobs disappear. Some workers get laid off temporarily," says O'Keefe.

[See why recent veterans' unemployment has been so high.]

While the continued steady decline in jobless claims is promising, the latest report contains a handful of other bright spots. No individual state reported a jobless claim increase of more than 1,000 people. Claims from newly discharged veterans and federal employees also dropped slightly.

In broader context, the jobless claims indicator shows how much improvement the labor market has seen since the worst of the economic downturn. In early and mid-2009, weekly jobless claims were often above 600,000, with continuing claims inching above 6.6 million. Now, continuing claims are around half that, at nearly 3.4 million.

Twitter: @titonka

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economy,
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I cannot believe the MSM is still regurgitating this debunked bull excrement, and that the masses of asses are still believing it.

Here is how the slight-of-hand works:

Assume you have a hypothetical pool of 100 people, and a fixed layoff rate of 10% per year.

after year 1, you'll lay off 10 people, leaving you with 90 workers

after year 2, you'll only lay off 9 this time, leaving you with 81

after year 3, you'll only lay off 8 this time, and so on - because the pool of workers gets smaller and smaller...but the rate stays the same.

The labor force participation rate continues to plummet.

The ONLY way the government assumes people are "going back to work" is based on the figures of people who left the unemployment system - there is nothing else they can refer to at this time to verify it, and I will make a wager that the tax records that we could refer to in the future will prove that these people never re-entered the work force. It just so happens that if you compare the numbers of people whose unemployment insurance expired, it "coincidentally" directly coincides with the number of people Obozo claims went back to work.

Tyler of AZ 10:30AM March 23, 2012

However, we should expect further worsening on joblessness in the country in the next quarter because of political anxieties in the Middle East, check out an article called High Speed Universities for relation between a degree and job and the pay rate.

johnnilles of CA 6:18AM March 23, 2012

Balancing the budget won't restore confidence and improve the economy. Hoover already tried that and that didn't work. Also, Ron Paul has no chance of becoming president, so get over it. It's scary to think that people like you know what's best for the country. People like you are clueless and delusional.

Pato of CA 1:17AM March 23, 2012

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