US layoffs stay high as weak demand lingers despite businesses reopening

Companies are hiring, but others are cutting jobs at nearly the same pace. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - Weak demand is forcing US employers to lay off workers, keeping new applications for unemployment benefits extraordinarily high, even as businesses have reopened. This is buttressing views that the labour market could take years to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits totalled a seasonally adjusted 1.480 million for the week ended June 20, down from 1.540 million in the prior week, the Labour Department said on Thursday (June 25).

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 1.3 million claims in the latest week.

The weekly jobless claims report, the most timely data on the economy's health, also showed millions continue to collect unemployment checks more than a month after many businesses resumed operating following closures in mid-March in an effort to slow the spread of the respiratory illness.

Companies are hiring, but others are cutting jobs at nearly the same pace.

The economy slipped into recession in February.

"There were some businesses that tried to maintain their workforce, waiting to see what would happen as businesses reopened," said Mr Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

"Even as the economy is picking up, they are not seeing a lot of demand and are deciding that they don't need that many workers."

Claims have dropped from a record 6.867 million in late March, but the pace of decline has slowed and they are double their peak during the 2007 to 2009 Great Recession.

From manufacturing to transportation, retail and leisure and hospitality industries, companies are restructuring to adapt to a vastly changed landscape, leading to layoffs and bankruptcies.

State and local governments, whose budgets have been squeezed by the Covid-19 fight, are also cutting jobs.

Rising coronavirus infections in many parts of the country, including California, Texas and Florida, are likely to hurt employment as some people stay away from restaurants and other consumer-facing establishments, even if businesses are not shut down again.

"It's looking like a bumpy ride," said Mr Josh Wright, chief economist at Wrightside Advisors in New York.

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