KEY POINTS
  • Initial claims for unemployment benefits (a proxy for applications) fell last week to their lowest level since Sept. 6, 1969, according to the Labor Department.
  • That statistic includes a seasonal adjustment, a standard practice meant to account for labor patterns at different times of year. The Covid pandemic has complicated that adjustment, economists said.
  • Without that adjustment, claims moved in the opposite direction. They rose by about 64,000 from the prior week, a 29% increase.
A "Now Hiring" sign outside a store on Aug. 16, 2021 in Arlington, Virginia.

Claims for unemployment benefits dropped to their lowest level in decades last week. However, that statistic is getting skewed by pandemic-era labor distortions, making it seem a bit rosier than reality, economists said.

There were 184,000 initial claims (a proxy for benefit applications) the week ended Dec. 4, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday. That's 43,000 fewer than the week prior and the lowest level since Sept. 6, 1969.