នេះគឺជារឿង 3 ដែលត្រូវដឹងអំពីការទាមទារភាពអត់ការងារធ្វើ

A job seeker receives information from a recruiter during a job fair in Miami, Florida, on Dec. 16, 2021.

អ៊ីវ៉ាម៉ារីអូកឃ្យូយ / ប៊្លុកតាមរយៈរូបភាពហ្គេតធី

The number of people filing for unemployment benefits jumped last week to the highest level since October, the Labor Department said Thursday.

That may signal a troubling rebound, after claims hit recent lows unseen in over 50 years. But the one-week bump may not portend an ugly trend for the labor market, according to economists.

នេះជាអ្វីដែលត្រូវដឹង។

អូមីញ៉ូន

A recent surge in Covid cases, fueled by the highly contagious omicron variant, likely contributed to the spike in claims last week, economists said. But the extent of that impact is unclear.

Average daily U.S. Covid cases hit a recent peak of almost 798,000 on Jan. 15 — nearly double the tally from the beginning of the year and roughly eight times that of early December, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ទិន្នន័យ។

About 8.8 million workers said they were out sick with the virus or caring for an ill family member between Dec. 29 and Jan. 10 — a pandemic-era record, according to federal data.

(A quirk in unemployment rules disallows benefits for workers who test positive for Covid; but someone who’s exposed or who loses hours due to a business shutdown may be eligible.)

However, elevated caseloads likely aren’t the only factor at play, according to economists.

Seasonal swings

January is normally a volatile time of year for jobless claims.   

That’s largely due to seasonal labor patterns — layoffs of temporary holiday workers, construction projects affected by winter weather, people delaying a claim for benefits until after the holidays are over.

“It’s pretty normal to see a spike in claims in January,” according to Daniel Zhao, a senior economist at the career site Glassdoor.

ច្រើនទៀតពីហិរញ្ញវត្ថុផ្ទាល់ខ្លួន:
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The Labor Department adjusts its weekly unemployment data to account for these seasonal patterns. But pandemic-era distortions to the labor market make it more difficult to control for those factors.

“Seasonality in the best of times can be tricky to interpret, especially during a pandemic when everything is upside down and really wacky,” according to AnnElizabeth Konkel, an economist at job site Indeed.

It’s therefore hard to assess the impact of rising Covid cases on layoffs and furloughs relative to the typical winter reasons.

Historical standards

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/01/20/here-are-3-things-to-know-about-unemployment-claims.html