Initial jobless claims dropped below 300,000 for the first time since the first part of the COVID-19 pandemic when lockdowns were commonplace, according to a report released by the Labor Department on Thursday.
Overall, approximately 3.6 million people were getting some sort of jobless benefits during the last week of September.
Before the pandemic, weekly unemployment claims usually lingered at around 200,000 and 250,000.
The federal government reported last Friday that nonfarm payrolls increased by only 194,000 jobs in September, the fewest in nine months. The cooling in employment growth is mostly due to a dearth of workers as well as skills mismatch, with government data on Tuesday showing there were 10.4 million job openings at the end of August.
Labor shortage associated with the COVID-19 pandemic is also prevalent in other economies. With COVID-19 infections driven by the Delta variant declining and schools fully reopened for in-person learning, there is hope that more Americans will rejoin the labor force.
Workers who voluntarily quit their jobs are not eligible for unemployment benefits. Meanwhile, workers quitting their jobs means that employers may not need to lay off other employees—which would then drive down unemployment claims.
The historically high rates at which Americans are quitting their jobs is a sign of worker confidence in the job market.
Meanwhile, the labor crunch could diminish even more in the coming months after the expiration of expanded unemployment benefits in early September.
The scarcity of labor has triggered bottlenecks in the global supply chain as there are fewer employees to ship goods to markets and produce raw materials.
