Washington,
DC, Aug. 24—The number of laid off workers receiving unemployment benefits has
hit a nine year high—more evidence that the yearlong economic slowdown has
been taking a toll on the nation's labor markets. According to the Labor
Department, the number of Americans collecting unemployment benefits rose to
3.18 million in the week ending August 11, the highest level since September
1992, when the country was struggling to emerge from the last recession.
In addition to those already getting benefits, the Labor Department said the
number of newly laid off workers filing applications for benefits rose by 8,000
last week to 393,000, the highest level since mid-July.
Private economists feel the increase in new claims and the rising number of
people receiving benefits were indications of growing strains because of the
weak economy.
“The labor market hasn't seen the worst of this slowdown,” said Richard
Berner, chief U.S. economist at Morgan Stanley. “There are more layoffs to
come.”
The government’s figures come after another string of layoff announcements in
recent weeks ranging from Ford, the nation's second largest automaker, to
Lucent, the telecommunication equipment giant, and Steelcase, the second leading
office furniture manufacturer.
The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.5% in July, but economists warned
it was likely to rise to 4.6% this month and top 5% by the end of the year as
more companies cut workers in the face of sluggish sales.
“There has been more deterioration in labor markets. We’re not out of the
woods yet in terms of whether we’ll have a recession or not,” said Michael
Niemira, chief economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York.
The concern is that rising layoff notices could cause a sharp cutback in
spending by worried consumers. So far, consumer spending, which accounts for two
thirds of total economic activity, has offset a steep slide in business capital
spending and kept the country out of a full blown recession.
The Federal Reserve cut interest rates for a seventh time on Tuesday in an
easing cycle that began at the beginning of the year. However, the rate cut was
only a quarter point, disappointing those on Wall Street who had been hoping for
a half point reduction. At their June 27 meeting, when the Fed also cut rates by
a quarter point, a number of Fed officials expressed the view that the central
bank “might well be near the end of its easing cycle,” according to minutes
of those discussions.
Both Berner and Niemira said they had not ruled out the possibility that the
country will dip into a recession this year. Berner said he believed second
quarter economic growth, first reported at an extremely weak 0.7%, will be
placed in negative territory when the government issues its revisions of the
gross domestic product (GDP) next week and he predicted the third quarter to be
negative as well. A recession is marked by two consecutive negative quarters of
GDP.
However, other economists insisted there are signs that growth is beginning to
pick up. Even if the Fed does not cut rates again at its October 2 meeting, it
has already lowered rates enough to guarantee the economy will regain its
footing, they said.
These analysts noted another report Thursday showing 30 year fixed rate
mortgages declined to 6.91% this week, the second straight week the rate has
been below 7%. Low interest rates are keeping home sales and auto sales at
strong levels despite the economic slowdown, which began last summer.
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