THE PERVERSITY OF WALL ST.
US stocks edge higher as new data shows millions more jobs lost
Unemployment-insurance claims from the week that ended on Saturday totaled 2.4 million, pushing the metric's nine-week total to nearly 39 million.
US layoffs surpass 38.6 mn
as lawmakers debate stimulus
AFP/File / VALERIE MACONLayoffs caused by the coronavirus in the United States have slowed after hitting their peak in late March, but are still devastating
Job losses in the United States are slowing but totalled an unheard-of 38.6 million since the coronavirus pandemic lockdowns began, while officials debate what additional steps will be needed to rescue the beleaguered economy.
Another 2.43 million Americans were put out of work last week, fewer than the previous week but still among the highest figures on record, according to the latest Labor Department data Thursday.
Meanwhile, other reports showed US housing sales collapsed last month, and manufacturing continues to decline.
Initial claims for unemployment benefits appeared to have passed the peak hit in late March, but economists say the real picture on joblessness is likely worse than the figures indicate since many people do not quality for traditional aid.
"The dramatic spike in unemployment claims is trending down, but it still completely overshadows any precedent," Kate Bahn, director of Labor Market Policy at the Center for Equitable Growth, said on Twitter, noting that the latest number was three times higher than the record prior to the pandemic.
Democrats in Congress are calling for the Republican-controlled Senate to pass a $3.3 trillion spending measure approved by the House of Representatives last week to revitalize the economy, but President Donald Trump's administration has rejected the bill.
The coronavirus pandemic has killed 93,406 people in the US and infected nearly 1.6 million others, according to John Hopkins University, despite widespread business shutdowns from mid-March to stop the virus's spread.
- Partisan split -
Weekly jobless claims declined but they remain well above any week during the 2008 global financial crisis and more in line with job losses in the Great Depression last century.
AFP / Jonathan WALTERUnemployment in the US
"Forget the idea that they are coming down. If anyone thinks that 2.5 million new claims is anything but disastrous, they are deluding themselves," economist Joel Naroff said, warning that the economy is seeing a second round of layoffs.
And the number does not include the 2.22 million people in the week ended May 2 who applied for a federal program aimed at contractors and self-employed workers who would not normally qualify for traditional benefits.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pushed to approve the Heroes Act that includes $1 trillion for state and local governments, another round of cash disbursements to hard-hit American families, funds for hospitals, hazard pay for health workers, and relief for devastated small businesses -- measures many economists have been calling for.
But US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, though acknowledging a "strong likelihood" additional aid will be needed, rejected Pelosi's effort as "obviously" partisan, and saying officials will need to take some time to consider the next steps.
Pelosi fired back at Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, for dragging their feet.
"Instead of telling laid-off workers to pause, Leader McConnell and the Senate GOP need to come to the negotiating table to help deliver the relief to protect lives and livelihoods."
- Home sales plunge -
Adding to the building picture of the damage, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) said existing home sales -- a key sector in the world's largest economy -- plummeted in April, the first full month the lockdowns were in effect.
But realtors and economists are optimistic they will pick up quickly as the economy reopens due to very low borrowing rates.
Sales plunged 17.8 percent last month, dropping in all parts of the country, with sales in western states hit hardest, falling 25 percent compared to March.
NAR's Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said home sales have been "temporarily disrupted" by the pandemic but pointed to a year-on-year price increase of 7.4 percent as evidence that "listings that are on the market are still attracting buyers."
The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank monthly report released Thursday showed a slight improvement in manufacturing activity in the region, though it was rebounding from a 40-year low in April.
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