Jobless Claims Queue Keeps Shrinking

August 7, 2003 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - The line for Americans filing first-time claims for jobless benefits keeps getting shorter.

The US Department of Labor (DoL) reported that the August 2 claims total dipped for the third straight week – this time by 3,000 to 390,000 from a revised 393,000 in the prior period. Representing the third straight week the totals were below the key 400,000 mark – a widely accepted benchmark dividing a growing job market from a stagnant one – analysts said the latest DoL data could represent a strengthening in the domestic employment picture.

Last week’s claims were the lowest for any week since February 8, when they totaled 378,000.

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Adding to the impression of an improving job market, the DoL said the four-week claims moving average, which irons out weekly variations, also fell below the 400,000-a-week level. The latest data showed that the average was 397,250, a decrease of 12,750 from the previous week’s revised 410,000.

Once again, the August 2 report was below the expectations of Wall Street analysts in a regular Reuters survey who had been calling for 395,000 claims.

DoL announced recently that the nation’s unemployment rate had dropped to 6.2% in June but that market was still shedding jobs (See  Jobless Rate Drops; Employers Still Slashing Positions ).

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