Extended Unemployment: Initial, Continued and Extended Unemployment Claims February 11 2010
While today’s jobless claims report continued to show a, more or less, steady trend down to both initial and continued unemployment claims with a nearly textbook peak shaping up, considering the federal extended claims data offers a more dire view of the state of the job market and of the economy as a whole.Seasonally adjusted “initial” unemployment claims declined by 43,000 to 440,000 claims from last week’s revised 483,000 claims while “continued” claims declined 79,000 resulting in an “insured” unemployment rate of 3.5%.
Since the middle of 2008 though, two federal government sponsored “extended” unemployment benefit programs (the “extended benefits” and “EUC 2008” from recent legislation) have been picking up claimants that have fallen off of the traditional unemployment benefits rolls.
Currently there are some 5.68 million people receiving federal “extended” unemployment benefits.
Taken together with the latest 5.6 million people that are currently counted as receiving traditional continued unemployment benefits, there are well over 11 million people on state and federal unemployment rolls.
The following chart shows “population adjusted” continued claims (ratio of unemployment claims to the non-institutional population) and the unemployment rate since 1967.
Adjusting for the general increase in population tames the continued claims spike down a bit.
Labels: economy, initial jobless claims, jobless claims
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1 Comments:
Interpretation: The drop in initial claims is good news, but unemployment is still way high, and there's a lot of long-term unemployment which may be harder to shake out.
Still, maybe some light at the end of the tunnel. Although the tunnel might collapse. (I like that tunnel metaphore. Metaphors are our friends, but when mixed they muddy the prose.)
By
Dagger, at 10:35 AM
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