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        <title><![CDATA[US workers file 860,000 jobless claims, crisis total tops 61 million]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">US workers file 860,000 jobless claims, crisis total tops 61 million</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some 860,000 Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week as the coronavirus pandemic continued to <strong>weigh on the US labor market</strong>, the feds said Thursday.</p><p>Last week&#8217;s initial jobless claims dropped from the prior week&#8217;s revised total of 893,000 but brought the total for the coronavirus pandemic to more than 61 million — a number larger than the combined populations of California and Florida.</p><p>Unemployment filings have remained at historic highs for 26 straight weeks as employers struggled to bounce back from the COVID-19 lockdowns that sparked record job losses this spring.</p><p>The most recent seasonally adjusted total was well below the late March peak of roughly 6.8 million but still exceeded the pre-pandemic record of 695,000, according to the US Department of Labor data.</p><p>Workers laid off in the spring who are still looking for work will soon exhaust the 26 weeks of unemployment benefits that states generally provide. That could lead to a jump in applications for the federal Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation program, which provides another 13 weeks of payments, according to Bloomberg economist Eliza Winger.</p><p>&#8220;In the coming weeks, jobless claims could start to fall at a quicker pace as more unemployed Americans exhaust their 26 weeks of benefits,&#8221; Winger said in a commentary.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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