Unemployment Insurance Claims Ease Slightly in March 8 Week
Summary
- Initial claims were less than forecast.
- Total recipients of unemployment insurance also fell.
- Insured unemployment rate still 1.2%.


Initial claims for unemployment insurance were 220,000 seasonally adjusted in the week ended March 8, just slightly less than the 222,000 the week before; that earlier amount was revised marginally from 221,000 reported before. In the latest week, the Action Economics Forecast Survey had expected 230,000. In this March 8 week, the four-week moving average was 226,000.
The total number of unemployment insurance beneficiaries was 1.87 million in the week ended March 1, down from 1.897 million in the week ended February 22. The four-week moving average was 1.872 million through the March 1st week, up from 1.866 million the week before.
The insured unemployment rate, that is, the total number of beneficiaries as a percent of covered employment, remained at 1.2%, which has held since March 2023.
Economic conditions vary widely across states and territories. In the week ended February 22, the highest rates were in Rhode Island (3.37%), New Jersey (2.90%), Massachusetts (2.58%), Minnesota (2.57%) and California (2.42%). The lowest rates were in Florida (0.36%), Alabama (0.44%), Virginia (0.46%), Tennessee and North Carolina (both 0.56%) and Mississippi (0.58%). Rates in other notable states include New York (2.08%), Pennsylvania (2.03%) and Texas (1.12%). These state rates are not seasonally adjusted.
Data on weekly unemployment claims are from the Department of Labor itself, not the Bureau of Labor Statistics. They begin in 1967 and are contained in Haver’s WEEKLY database and summarized monthly in USECON. Data for individual states are in REGIONW back to December 1986. The expectations figure is from the Action Economics Forecast Survey in the AS1REPNA database.


Carol Stone, CBE
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Carol Stone, CBE came to Haver Analytics in 2003 following more than 35 years as a financial market economist at major Wall Street financial institutions, most especially Merrill Lynch and Nomura Securities. She has broad experience in analysis and forecasting of flow-of-funds accounts, the federal budget and Federal Reserve operations. At Nomura Securites, among other duties, she developed various indicator forecasting tools and edited a daily global publication produced in London and New York for readers in Tokyo. At Haver Analytics, Carol is a member of the Research Department, aiding database managers with research and documentation efforts, as well as posting commentary on select economic reports. In addition, she conducts Ways-of-the-World, a blog on economic issues for an Episcopal-Church-affiliated website, The Geranium Farm. During her career, Carol served as an officer of the Money Marketeers and the Downtown Economists Club. She has a PhD from NYU's Stern School of Business. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, and has a weekend home on Long Island.