An additional 2.4 million Americans filed jobless claims, bringing 9-week total to more than 38 million
The unemployment rate in the U.S. is the highest since the Great Depression.
An additional 2,438,000 Americans filed for unemployment insurance last week, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday.
This brings the nine-week jobless claims total since the coronavirus crisis took hold in the U.S. to approximately 38.6 million people.
"With a ninth straight week of new weekly jobless claims being counted in the millions, although at a lower level than before, one might be tempted to focus on the continuing decline," Mark Hamrick, the senior economic analyst for Bankrate, said in a commentary Thursday.
"But at 2.4 million new claims last week, the seismic impact should not be dismissed because earlier shock waves were larger," he added. "This number of new claims alone is about equal to the population of the city of Houston, Texas."
Millions have filed for unemployment benefits every week for the last two months. New jobless claims peaked at nearly 7 million in the week ending March 28, though they have leveled off since then. Prior to this pandemic, the record for new weekly unemployment filings was 695,000 in 1982.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its April Jobs report that the unemployment rate in the U.S. had skyrocketed to 14.7% -- the highest since the Great Depression -- though many economists say it could climb even higher, pointing to the mounting unemployment filings. The unemployment rate in February was 3.5%.
Among the hardest-hit industries by the coronavirus lockdowns and restrictions are hospitality, food services and retail, though the pandemic has impacted nearly all industries in the U.S. economy.