Washington,
DC, Oct. 25—Orders to U.S. factories for big ticket durable goods fell in
September for the fourth consecutive month. In another indication of deepening
economic woes, the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment
benefits rose last week to the second highest level in nearly a decade.
The Commerce Department indicated the 8.5% decline in orders for durable goods,
items expected to last three or more years, was led by a 15.9% drop in demand
for transportation goods, a category that includes autos and airplanes.
The drop in orders was certain to worsen the problems in the manufacturing
sector, which has shed more than a million jobs since the spring of 2000.
The Labor Department reported that newly laid off Americans filing for
unemployment benefits rose by 8,000 last week to 504,000, the second highest
figure in nearly a decade and a level that is generally associated with
recessions.
The department also reported that workers' wages and benefits climbed by 1% for
the three months ending in September, little changed from a 0.9% rise for the
three months ending in June.
During the last 12 months, Americans' wages and benefits rose by 4.1%, down from
a 4.3% rise in the 12 month period ending in September 2000. Analysts said this
showed that the sluggish economy is producing less generous compensation
packages.
The Federal Reserve reported this week that the terrorist attacks had brought
economic activity to a virtual standstill in the days immediately following the
September 11 tragedy and that no part of the country had been spared higher
layoffs and weaker business activity.
Most economists say the country, which had been struggling with weak economic
growth for more than a year, was pushed into a recession by the terrorist
attacks. They are predicting that the Federal Reserve, with inflation pressures
continuing to abate, will continue to cut interest rates in an effort to pull
the country out of the slump. The next rate cut, which would be the Fed's 10th
this year, is expected to occur on November 6.
The drop in durable goods orders pushed the level of new orders down to $165.44
billion, the lowest level in more than five years. The decline followed a 0.5%
August decrease and was far larger than the 1.3% dip that many analysts had been
forecasting.
The report on jobless claims showed that the increase last week pushed the
weekly number to its second highest point since July 1992, when the country was
still struggling to emerge from the 1990-91 recession. Claims had soared to
535,000 for the week ending September 29. The recent big increases pushed the
four week moving average for claims to 505,000, the highest point since the
depths of the last recession in March 1991.
The number of companies announcing layoffs has accelerated since the September
attacks as airlines and the tourism industry in general have been especially
hard hit. With all the layoffs, the number of Americans drawing unemployment
benefits now stands at an 18 year high of 3.53 million.
As part of an economic stimulus package now moving through Congress, Democrats
hope to include a provision that would extend by an additional 13 weeks the 26
week period that workers can draw jobless benefits.
The government said the 4.1% rise in the Employment Cost Index over the past 12
months included a 3.6% increase in wages and salaries and a 5.1% rise in
benefits such as health insurance and pensions. All those categories had risen
at a faster pace during the 12 months ending in September 2000.
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2001 Floor Focus Inc