1.2 million more Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week
Continuing claims for benefits — which count people who have applied for government aid for at least two weeks in a row — came in at 16.1 million on a seasonally adjusted basis
Another 1.2 million Americans filed for first-time jobless benefits last week on a seasonally adjusted basis, the US Department of Labor reported on Thursday.
The number was down from the prior week's 1.4 million claims, reports the CNN.
First-time jobless claims peaked at 6.9 million in the last week of March and then declined for four months. But around mid-July, they reversed directions, and rose again - an unfavorable look for a labor market that desperately needs to recover after millions of workers were displaced by the pandemic.
Rising Covid-19 infections across the country have stalled the reopening of the economy and have made it harder for people to return to work. In addition, money from the government's Paycheck Protection Program, which allowed companies to hire back workers, is running out.
Continuing claims for benefits — which count people who have applied for government aid for at least two weeks in a row — came in at 16.1 million on a seasonally adjusted basis.
And those numbers are only regular jobless benefits and don't include the pandemic assistance the government rolled out over the past months.