Business & Tech
NJ Unemployment Claims Reach Highest Numbers In Years
This comes as the news of the July job report announced on Aug. 1 caused an immediate reaction in both Washington and on Wall Street.
The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits is the highest its been in nearly four years and the Garden State is leading the pack, according to new data released by the federal government.
The seasonally adjusted rate for insured unemployment was 1,974,000 for the week ending July 26, up by 38,000 over the previous week. According to the United States Department of Labor, this is the most since the 2,041,000 claims recorded for the week ending on November 6, 2021.
New Jersey led the nation in July with a 2.8 percent insured unemployment rate that represented 116,153 claims for the week ending July 19. This is a jump of 1,661 from the year prior. The Tri-State area came in high across the board, with Pennsylvania at 1.9 percent and New York at 1.7 percent trailing right behind.
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Weekly claims for unemployment benefits are viewed as a proxy for U.S. layoffs, and have hovered around the 200,000 to 250,000 mark since the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. As of the week ending August 2, jobless claims hit 226,000, a number the AP calls "historically healthy" over the last five years.
This was the second time in eight weeks that the applications rose, U.S. employers added only 73,000 jobs in July in contrast to the 115,000 that were expected.
Find out what's happening in Across New Jerseyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The available jobs dropped 258,000 from earlier estimates for both May and June in adjusted numbers.

This comes as the news of the July job report announced on Aug. 1 caused an immediate reaction in both Washington and on Wall Street. President Donald Trump fired the leader of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Erika McEntarfer, immediately on Friday, alleging that the statistics were manipulated for political purposes.
McEntarfer was an appointee of former President Joe Biden. She was confirmed on a bipartisan vote in 2024 with the Republican support of then-Senator JD Vance of Ohio, and then-Senator Marco Rubio of Florida.
Economists have a history of holding these numbers as largely reliable, and the markets responded accordingly. The Dow Jones dropped 610 points (1.5 percent) and the S&P 500 fell 1.8 percent on Friday after the numbers were released.
In July, those jobs that were added occurred largely in just a few concentrated areas. Healthcare and social assistance roles rose by 64,000, amounting to 56 percent of the total hiring. Restaurants, hotels and bars added another 26,000 jobs to the tally.
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