- Larry Yun, NAR
The US job market finished the year on solid footing as an important indicator of layoffs continued to be near historically low levels, showing a resilient labor market. According to the a Labor Department, national jobless claims declined by 10,000, to 265,000, during the previous week from a six-month high in the prior period.
The data tend to fluctuate around the year-end holidays, while the trend reveals managers' reluctance to fire workers as demand remains steady. Filings have been below 300,000 for 95 straight weeks — the longest streak since 1970 and a level economists say is typical for a healthy labor market. Millions of Americans have found work in the past five years, pushing the unemployment rate below 5% and eliciting complaints among businesses about how hard it is to find skilled workers to fill open jobs.
In the meantime, the less volatile four-week average of initial claims, meanwhile, dropped by 750 to 263,000. Continuing jobless claims, in turn, advanced by 63,000 to 2.1 million in the week ended December 17. These claims, reported with a one-week delay, reflect the number of people already collecting unemployment checks.
© Dukascopy Bank SA