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(CEP News) - First-time claims for jobless benefits in the United States rose 35k to 380k following a 33k fall last week, while continuing claims rose to 3019k, higher than expectations, the Department of Labor reported Thursday.
U.S. initial jobless claims came in higher than expected for the week ending April 26 with a total of 380k claims filed. Forecasts were looking for a total of 365k claims. The previous week's figure was revised up slightly to 345k from 342k. The latest figure is above the four-week moving average of 363.7k, which moved down from the previous week's reading of 370k. Economists say the average is a less volatile employment indicator than the weekly claims snapshot. Jobless claims have retraced after reaching a two-and-a-half year high of 407,000 in the final week of March. The index's all-time high was reached on Sept. 30, 1982 when initial jobless claims surged to 671k. The all-time low was in 1968 when claims stood at 162k. Continuing claims rose to 3019k in the week ending April 19, up from an upwardly revised reading of 2945k in the previous week. Continuing claims reached their highest level of 4637k in May 1975 and dipped to their lowest level of 988k in May 1969. By Stephen Huebl,
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, edited by Nancy Girgis,
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