KEY POINTS
  • Unemployment claims rose for the first time after 15 weeks of declines, as the coronavirus continues to spread at a high rate.
  • The lack of progress in the weekly data and other high frequency data suggests there were no job gains, and possibly even losses in July, after 7.5 million jobs were added in the last two months.
  • Economists say the weak job market makes it even more important for Congress to help workers in the next stimulus package, which is currently being debated.
Hundreds of unemployed Kentucky residents wait in long lines outside the Kentucky Career Center for help with their unemployment claims on June 19, 2020 in Frankfort, Kentucky. While the economic recovery has brought back jobs since the lowest point of the Covid-19 crisis, millions of Americans remain unemployed.

Persistently high unemployment claims show the impact of the spreading virus on the workforce, and economists are already warning that July's employment report could show no progress or even job losses.

The Labor Department said Thursday that initial jobless claims came in at 1.416 million for the week ending July 18, the 18th straight week in which initial claims totaled more than 1 million. The weekly claims also rose for the first time after 15 weeks of declines, and it was coincidentally the same week used by the government to conduct the survey for the monthly employment report.