Public Company

US initial unemployment claims slide to 550,000

In signs of easing labour market situation in the US, the number of first time claimants for jobless benefits declined by 26,000 to 550,000 for the week ended September 5. - US approves $7.4 bn Oracle-Sun deal - Really green - False dawn - US unemployment rate slips to 9.4% - US economy shrinks 1% in second quarter - US sets rates for anti-dumping duty of Indian shrimp, prawns import">US sets rates for anti-dumping duty of Indian shrimp, prawns import The fall is 26,000 compared to the previous week"s figure of 576,000, the US Department of Labor said in a statement today. "The four-week moving average was 570,000, a decrease of 2,750 from the previous week"s revised average of 572,750," it added. Meanwhile, the count of those receiving jobless benefits decreased by 159,000 to 6,088,000 for the week ended August 29. In the previous week, the same stood at 6,247,000. "The four-week moving average was 6,182,500, a fall of 37,750 from the preceding week"s revised average of 6,220,250," the statement noted. Reeling under one of the worst financial turmoils in decades, American companies have slashed thousands of jobs as part of their efforts to bring down costs. In August, the unemployment rate in the country touched a 26-year-high of 9.7 per cent. Nonetheless, the pace of job losses have slowed down amid rising hopes of an early economic recovery.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Tata Steel MD terms new year challenging
Tata Steel Managing Director H M Nerurkar today said the new year would be equally challenging as last year as the global recession is still continuing.
Popular Articles

ZEE aaproves share swap ratio for merger of ETC Network
Zee Entertainment Enterprises (ZEEL) today said its board has approved the share swap ratio for the merger of the company"s subsidiary ETC Networks with itself.

V V: Keynes - The Master returns
Unlike the Chicago economists under Milton Friedman who argued that the unrestricted operation of private enterprise—seen as the most efficient form of economic organisation—was essential for economic development and that prices should be determined purely by market forces and inflation controlled by means of controlling money supply, Keynes, the most influential macroeconomist of the 20th century, had argued in his classic work, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, that there is uncertainty in the world—uncertainty that cannot be reduced to statistical probabilities and has come to be described as “unknown unknowns.” This irreducible uncertainty, he said, lay behind panics and bouts and the instability of market economics that we see around us today. Robert Skidelsky, in his three-volume study of Keynes (1994), reminded us that the master had warned us against relying on econometric models of his own theories: