Issue Post  
Business | Entertainment | Health | Politics | Science & Tech || Special coverage: H1N1 / Swine Flu Africa | Americas | Asia | Europe | Middle East | United States

More Americans Filing for Unemployment Benefits

Thursday, February 4 2010

The number of newly-laid off Americans rose unexpectedly last month. The government's overall unemployment figure is due out Friday, and economists do not expect any improvement in the number.

The latest snapshot of the U.S. labor market shows employers squeezing more production out of existing workers rather than hiring additional help. The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits totaled 480,000 last week - 8,000 more than the previous week.

After months of steady declines from last year's record-highs of about 700,000 weekly jobless claims, recent weeks have seen upticks in the ranks of those seeking unemployment benefits. The trend worries Societe Generale's chief U.S. economist, Stephen Gallager.

"It is a little bit of a concern. Now we are getting a few weeks to the upside from the 430 [thousand weekly] claims that we had [a month ago]," Gallager said. So it is suggesting slower movement toward outright job growth. I still that is coming, but maybe not as quickly and we cannot have as much confidence that it will be sustainable."

Gallager was speaking on Bloomberg Television.

Friday, the U.S. Labor Department releases the official unemployment rate for January. Economists expect the rate will be little changed from December's reading of 10 percent. Gallager says recent jobless benefits claims data do not point to an immediate turnaround in the U.S. labor market that would bring significant reductions to America's stubbornly-high unemployment rate.

"We want to see 400,000 [weekly claimants] or below to suggest sustainable job growth. And we are not there yet," Gallager said.

But if America's gainfully-employed workforce remains stunted, how is it that the U.S. economy expanded at an annual rate of 5.7 percent in the last quarter of 2009? Quite simply, companies have found ways to get more output from their existing payrolls. Productivity - the rate of economic output per worker - increased just over 6 percent in the fourth quarter of last year.

Higher productivity levels are seen as a mixed blessing as the United States struggles to emerge from recession. On the one hand, increased worker output may allow companies to raise salaries which, in turn, can trigger boosts in consumer spending. But improved productivity can also lead companies to delay hiring new workers, which can keep unemployment levels elevated long after a recession ends.

In other economic news, the Commerce Department reports a 1 percent jump in orders to U.S. factories that beat analysts' expectations.

And U.S. retail sales rose slightly last month, according to a private survey.

US News
Iraq War Drama 'The Hurt Locker' Dominates Oscars
Suicide Blast Rocks Lahore
Turkey Quake Toll Expected to Climb
Iraqis Vote for New Parliament
Hollywood Bestows 2010 Academy Awards
Obama Hails Iraqi Vote
Study: Death Rates Higher for Elderly ICU Patients
US Redesigns Hundred Dollar Bill
Obama Pushes Congress to Pass Health Reform
Possible Shift on US Terror Trial Alarms Human Rights Groups
US Monthly Unemployment Rate Holds Steady
US Education Chief Urges More Funding for US Schools
Clinton in Uruguay to Begin 6-Nation Latin US Trip
Brazil, Chile to Dominate Clinton's Latin America Tour
US Ends 62-Year Drought in 4-Man Bobsled

More Stories
Reports: Georgian President Dismisses PM
Potential For Violence Shadows Ethiopia's 2010 Election
Olmert Vows Not to Resign Over Corruption Scandal
World Bank Provides Developing Countries with Budgetary Support
Poor Countries Walk Out on Climate Talks
Sudan Party Nominates Bashir as Candidate for 2010 Vote
McClellan Says He Does Not Know if White House Officials Committed..
Ukrainian Court Reviews Election Fraud Claim
UN Chief: System Ready for Possible Flu Pandemic
Amnesty: Israel Denies Water to Palestinians
Bush Continues Push for More Offshore Drilling
Nigeria Pushes to Eradicate Polio, Vaccinates Millions of Children
US Announces 'Integrated' Sudan Strategy
Rwanda Says French Foreign Minister Begins Official Visit
China Accuses Dalai Lama of Trying to Mar Olympic Games

© 2008-2009 Issue Post News Service