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WASHINGTON (AP) - Fewer people applied for unemployment aid last
week, the third drop in four weeks and evidence that the job market
is showing signs of life.
If the decline continues, it could signal more hiring in the
near future. The report comes after the Labor Department said last
week that private employers added the most jobs in six months in
October.
The Labor Department said Wednesday that initial claims for
jobless aid dropped by 24,000 to a seasonally adjusted 435,000.
Many Wall Street economists expected a smaller decrease.
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The four-week average of claims, a less volatile measure, fell
10,000 to 446,500. That's the lowest level for the average since
the week that ended Sept. 13, 2008, just before the financial
crisis intensified that weekend with the collapse of Lehman
Brothers.
Weekly first-time claims are now at their lowest level since
early July, when they were temporarily lowered by the July 4
holiday. Last week's figures are the second-lowest this year.
Applications fell partly because the weather has been relatively
warm so far this fall, a Labor Department analyst said, and
construction and manufacturing firms haven't temporarily laid off
as many workers due to cold weather as they have in the past.
Claims have previously dropped sharply this year, but have
always bounced back. Applications have fluctuated around 450,000
for most of this year, after falling last year from about 600,000
when the recession ended in June 2009. Economists say claims need
to drop below 425,000 to signal a healthy pace of hiring.
Applications for unemployment benefits, while volatile, provide
a real-time snapshot of the job market. They are a measure of the
pace of layoffs and signal whether companies are adding jobs.
Some companies are hiring new workers, despite the slow economy.
US Airways said Monday that it plans to hire 500 flight attendants
and pilots next year, mostly to cover planned retirements and
attrition. The jobs will initially be offered to former employees
laid off during the downturn.
(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)