The Department of Labor has announced that new jobless claims rose by a staggering 78,000 in the first week after the election, reaching a seasonally-adjusted total of 439,000. Over the past year, and in the weeks leading up to the election, jobless claims were said to be declining, dipping as low as 339,000, with the media proclaiming that they had reached the "lowest level in more than four years." Now, suddenly, the news seems far less rosy.
From the Department of Labor press release this morning:
In the week ending November 10, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 439,000, an increase of 78,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 361,000. The 4-week moving average was 383,750, an increase of 11,750 from the previous week's revised average of 372,000.
Some of the new claims, especially in New Jersey, were due to
Hurricane Sandy--but these were offset by a decline in claims filed in
New York. The highest numbers of new filings came from Pennsylvania and
Ohio, where there were thousands of layoffs in the construction,
manufacturing, and automobile industries.
Both states had been targeted by the presidential campaigns.
President Obama highlighted his record of job creation in Ohio in
particular, focusing on the automobile industry. The state reported
6,450 new jobless claims in the week after the election--second-highest
after Pennsylvania, which recorded 7,766 new claims.
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