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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Business
Mackenzie Hawkins

US jobless claims get bumped up by revisions for seasonal swings

Applications for U.S. unemployment benefits have been much higher than previously reported this year after the government updated its method of adjusting the data for seasonal swings.

Initial unemployment claims were 228,000 in the week ended April 1 and the prior week was revised up by 48,000 to 246,000, Labor Department data showed Thursday. The report included updated seasonal factors going back to 2018.

The level indicates a softer, but still strong labor market. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for 200,000 applications.

Continuing claims, which include people who have received unemployment benefits for a week or more and are a good indicator of how hard it is for people to find work after losing their job, was little changed at 1.82 million in the week ended March 25. The previous week was revised up.

The Labor Department had to switch the way it adjusts for seasonal factors during the pandemic given that the distortions were so large. Today’s report maintains that method for the first year of the pandemic but uses the traditional way when looking at data before March 2020 and after June 2021.

That means that claims have been largely above 200,000 this year, whereas they were previously reported well below that.

Economists have been puzzled as to why claims were so low, especially given large waves of layoffs and other signs of softening in the labor market. Even with the adjustments, applications are still relatively low and indicative of strong demand for workers.

A separate report Thursday showed job-cut announcements from US-based employers rose 15% in March from the prior month, marking the highest first-quarter total since 2020, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, Inc.

However, the higher level of claims shouldn’t be interpreted as a sign that layoffs have suddenly surged, according to Stephen Stanley, chief U.S. economist at Santander US Capital Markets LLC.

“I think we are going to have to give it a few weeks to see how this plays out,” Stanley said in a note. “Having said that, it is true that the trend in seasonally adjusted initial claims is noticeably higher than previously estimated, which does suggest that the flurry of layoff announcements so far this year has begun to show up in these data.”

The four-week moving average in initial claims, which smooths out week-to-week volatility, fell to 237,750 from an upwardly revised 242,000 in the prior period.

On an unadjusted basis, claims fell by around 17,000 to 206,931, with California, Kentucky and Michigan posting the biggest decreases. Indiana posted the largest increase.

The data precede Friday’s employment report, which is expected to show another strong month of hiring in March and the unemployment rate holding near a historic low.

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(With assistance from Jordan Yadoo and Augusta Saraiva.)

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