Jobless Claims Rise, but Economists See Silver Lining

Figures lower than expected as labor market deals with volatility
By Wesley Oliver,  Newser Staff
Posted Sep 13, 2007 1:45 PM CDT
Jobless Claims Rise, but Economists See Silver Lining
Workers install a truss as they construct a new city hall and fire station, Friday, Sept. 7, 2007, in Richmond Heights, Ohio. Employers sliced payrolls by 4,000 jobs in August, the first such decline in four years and a stark sign that a painful credit crunch that has unnerved Wall Street is putting...   (Associated Press)

First-time applications for jobless claims rose last week, but economists are encouraged that the figures were less than expected, Bloomberg reports today. Claims grew by 4,000 to 319,000—still well short of the 325,000 applications expected. The numbers suggest that the labor market isn’t collapsing, despite slower growth and a spate of industry troubles.

But the outlook is not all roses: Employers reeling from troubled housing and credit markets have reduced hiring and payrolls, while Americans may be taking longer to find jobs. "The economy is not out of the woods because of the massive subprime job cuts in the pipeline,'' one economist said. The average number of people on unemployment also hit the highest level since January 2006. (More jobless claims stories.)

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