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Tag Archives: Labor Department

Job Growth Slowed, but Economists Say U.S. Not in Recession

While still in positive territory, June marked another month of feeble gains in employment with the addition of 80,000 jobs. This was followed by 77,000 jobs added in May and 68,000 in April. While the second quarter gains look bleak in comparison to first quarter growth, Capital Economics said June's employment report doesn't mean the recovery has come to a complete halt - it has just lost momentum.

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Initial Jobless Claims in Steepest Drop in 9 Weeks

First time claims for unemployment insurance fell a sharp 14,000 to 374,000 for the week ended June 30, the Labor Department the largest drop in nine weeks, reported Thursday. The prior week's total was revised up to 388,000 from the originally reported 386,000.

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Initial Jobless Claims Dip But Remain High

First time claims for unemployment insurance fell to 387,000 for the week ended June 16, from the prior week's 389,000, (revised from the originally reported 387,000) the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists had expected the report would show 386,000 initial claims.

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Jobless Claims Climb for 5th Time in 6 Weeks

First time claims for unemployment insurance rose to 3086,000 for the week ended June 9, from the prior week's 38,000, (revised from the originally reported 377,000) the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists had expected the report would show 3795,000 initial claims.

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Initial Jobless Claims in First Drop in Five Weeks

First time claims for unemployment insurance fell to 377,000 for the week ended June 2, from the prior week's upwardly revised 389,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists had expected the report would be show 379,000 initial claims. The drop in claims was the first in five weeks.

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Job Growth Weakest in a Year; Unemployment Rate Up

The economy added just 69,000 jobs in May compared with a revised 77,000 in April down from the originally reported 115,000, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday. The closely watched unemployment rate inched up to 8.2 percent - a function of an increase in the nation's labor force to the highest level ever. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected the number of jobs to increase by 150,000 and the unemployment rate to remain at 8.1 percent.

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Job Expectations Raise Consumer Confidence in May

Consumer confidence is at a level that hasn't been seen for years, according to the results of Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan's Survey of Consumers for May. Thomson Reuters and UM released the findings of the consumer survey, revealing that the consumer sentiment index improved to 79.3 percent in the month of May, an increase of 3.8 percent from April and 6.7 percent from May 2011. Consumer confidence has improved in each survey for the past nine months, but May's level is the highest since October 2007.

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Initial Unemployment Claims Drop But Remain Elevated

First time claims for unemployment insurance dipped to 370,000 for the week ended May 19 from the previous week's upwardly revised reading of 372,000 the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists had expected the report would show 371,000 initial claims.

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Initial Unemployment Claims Creeping Up

First time claims were unchanged at 370,000 for the week ended May 12 after the number of initial claims filed for the previous week was revised upward, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Economists had expected initial claims would decrease to 365,000. The Labor Department had initially reported 367,000 claims filed for the week ended May 5. The revision turned that report to an increase of 2,000 from a previously reported decline of 1,000. Continuing claims - reported on a one week lag - increased 18,000 to 3,265,000 after the preceding week's report was bumped up to 3,247,000 from an originally reported 3,269,000, coincidentally another 18,000 increase from the original report.

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