WASHINGTON: New
claims for US unemployment insurance benefits plunged more than expected
last week, but the data is still being skewed by Superstorm Sandy, the
government said on Wednesday.
Jobless claims plummeted by 41,000 to 410,000 in the week ending November 17, the Labour Department said.
That
marked a 9 percent decline from the prior week's upwardly revised
number of 451,000. Analysts on average had estimated claims would drop
to 423,000.
By volume, it was the biggest drop in new jobless claims - an indicator of the pace of layoffs - since early February 2010.
But
the improvement came after the prior week's 25 percent jump in claims
in the wake of Sandy, which both interrupted reporting and forced people
out of work in the northeast.
"Our numbers are still distorted by Hurricane Sandy," a Labour Department official said.
Sandy
blasted the northeastern coast of the United States at the end of
October and beginning of November, shutting down major cities, leaving
millions without power for days, and wrecking homes and businesses in
many communities.
The weekly figure remained well above the
360,000-380,000 range for claims of the past year, and pulled the
four-week moving average higher, to 386,750.
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