Weekly jobless claims fell to 803,000 versus 885,000 expected, an improvement after two weeks of increases, the Department of Labor reported Wednesday.

The numbers are still above the recent lows of 711,000 seen in early November, reflecting the muted recovery and the impact of states increasing business and social restrictions as coronavirus cases continue to break records.

Initial claims represent the number of workers seeking jobless claims for the first time, and are used by economists as an approximation of layoff activity.

The Department of Labor usually issues the jobless claims report on Thursdays, but did so a day early in light of the Christmas break.

Jobless claims spiked to nearly 7 million at the end of March, and have since improved. Yet they still are about four times above pre-pandemic levels.

The new plateau in initial claims also remains above the highest seen in the Great Recession under the Obama Administration, which peaked 661,000 in March, 2009.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

Vet technician, 27, identified as victim in Minnesota bar shootout that injured 14 others

A 27-year-old veterinary technician was identified by police Monday as the woman…

Biden adviser warns of ‘worst’ January ever from post-Christmas Covid surge

Despite the rollout of two new vaccines, the pandemic is accelerating and…

Latino community college presidents cautiously optimistic about enrollment

As students head back to school for the fall, administrators at Hispanic-serving…

Israel shot down a ballistic missile fired from Yemen, U.S. officials say

Militants believed to be Houthi rebels fired a medium-range ballistic missile from…