U.S. Jobless Claims Reach Seven-Year High of 516,000 
By Bob Willis

First-time claims for U.S. unemployment insurance rose last week to the highest 
level since September 2001, when the economy was last in a recession, as 
weakening demand led companies to fire more workers. 
Initial jobless claims increased by 32,000 to a larger- than-forecast 516,000 
in the week ended Nov. 8, from a revised 484,000 the prior week, the Labor 
Department said today in Washington. The total number of people on benefit 
rolls jumped to the highest level since 1983. 

Restrictive credit and slumping demand are causing companies to retrench by 
trimming payrolls and investment. Rising joblessness will further squeeze 
consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy, and 
threaten a protracted downturn, economists said. 

``The labor market is only reinforcing a very pessimistic picture,'' Linda 
Barrington, a labor economist at the Conference Board, said in a Bloomberg 
Television interview. ``When you start to see the downward pressure on wages as 
well as the credit crunch, that's only going to make consumers much more 
nervous.'' 

Trade Deficit Narrows 

Another government report showed the U.S. trade deficit narrowed more than 
forecast in September as a record decline in the cost of foreign crude oil 
caused fuel imports to tumble. The gap shrank 4.4 percent to $56.5 billion, the 
smallest in almost a year, from $59.1 billion in August, the Commerce 
Department said today in Washington. Excluding petroleum, the deficit widened 
as overseas sales of American-made goods dropped by the most since 2001. 

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had anticipated a reading of 480,000, based on 
the median of 40 projections in a Bloomberg News survey, from the originally 
reported 481,000 in the prior week. Estimates ranged from 465,000 to 500,000 
initial claims. 

The total number of Americans receiving jobless benefits rose to 3.897 million 
in the week ended Nov. 1, the highest level since January 1983. 

The four-week moving average of initial claims, a less volatile measure, rose 
to 491,000 last week, the highest since March 1991, from 477,750 a week 
earlier. So far this year, weekly claims have averaged 400,600, compared with 
an average of 321,000 for all of 2007, when the economy added a total of 1.1 
million jobs. 

The unemployment rate among people eligible for benefits, which tends to track 
the jobless rate, held at 2.9 percent. These data are reported with a one-week 
lag. 

Thirty-six states and territories reported an increase in new claims, while 17 
reported a decrease. 

Unemployment Rate 

The labor market is weakening as the economy appears to be in its first 
downturn since 2001. The jobless rate rose to 6.5 percent in October, the 
highest since 1994, the government said last week. 

Employers cut 240,000 jobs last month, for a total so far this year of 1.2 
million jobs lost, while the total number of unemployed Americans jumped to 
10.1 million, the highest level in a quarter century, according to last week's 
jobs report from the Labor Department. 

Job Cuts 

The monthly non-farm payrolls numbers reflect job growth and they tend to fall 
as the weekly initial jobless claims figures, which reflect firings, rise. 

Companies are trimming staff as consumer spending is forecast to fall through 
at least March, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg early this month. 
Banks, faced with mounting losses and writeoffs as the financial crisis spread 
over the past year, have been sacking thousands of workers. 

Citigroup Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., faced with a weakening economy and 
the prospect of mounting losses, began firing workers as part of the firms' 
plans to cut more than 12,000 jobs, people with knowledge of the matter said 
last week. 

Goldman, which converted last month from the biggest U.S. securities firm into 
a commercial bank, on Nov. 5 began telling about 3,200 employees, or 10 percent 
of its workforce, they were out of a job, according to one of the people who 
declined to be identified because the decisions were confidential. 

Citigroup began notifying staff last week who are affected by the bank's plan 
to discard 9,100 positions over the next 12 months, or about 2.6 percent of its 
headcount, another person said. 

Both New York-based firms have already cut staff, and are among the banks and 
brokerages worldwide that have shed almost 150,000 jobs since the subprime 
mortgage market collapsed last year. 

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aYZezaUiLEr4&refer=home

When prosperity comes, do not use all of it. 








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