Share to friends













127 Shares

A record 22 million Americans who lost their jobs have filed for unemployment benefits in 4 weeks, wiping out a decade of job gains as the nation grapples with the unprecedented shutdown of the U.S. economy to contain the coronavirus.

Just last week alone, 5.2 million Americans filed for unemployment. That number is down from the revised 6.6 million in the week that ended April 4, the Labor Department announced.

The dramatic reversal followed a decade of spectacular growth in jobs that brought the unemployment rate to near 50-year lows along with record low jobless rates for blacks and Hispanics. Now the job market is on its knees.

This level of Unemployment claims filings equate roughly to a 15% unemployment rate, a figure last seen in 1940. Ostensibly all new jobs created since the 2008-2009 financial crisis have been wiped out.

The unemployment rate is expected to surge in coming months, with many full-time workers pushed into part-time jobs or not working at all. The economy lost about 700,000 jobs in March — ending 113 straight months of increases. And overall job losses are likely to be 10 to 20 times that big in April, says Dante DeAntonio, an economist at Moody’s Analytics.

“The speed and scale of job losses will be more similar to a natural disaster than a typical recession,” DeAntonio says.

In its first four weeks, the crisis has erased job openings “at a rate that took the Great Recession nine months to match,” says Daniel Zhao, senior economist at Glassdoor.

While the first wave of layoffs tended to hit hospitality, energy and retail workers, the current round is affecting a broader swath of the economy.

Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, says the April unemployment report is likely to show a loss of 3.4 million jobs in business services, which include architects, lawyers, consultants and advertising professionals.

“The virus shock does not discriminate across sectors as we initially thought,” Daco told The Wall Street Journal.

Zhao says that “it’s hard to find an industry or city not impacted by the coronavirus currently.” Source: NPR