The U.S. labor market showed stability in early March 2026, as weekly jobless claims remained unchanged while layoffs declined sharply. According to U.S. Department of Labor, 213,000 Americans filed new applications for unemployment benefits in the week ending February 28, 2026, exactly matching the previous week’s level. Economists had anticipated a modest increase to around 215,000, but the flat reading suggests that short-term layoffs remain under control.
Meanwhile, continued claims, which measure the number of people still receiving unemployment benefits after their initial week, increased by 46,000 to roughly 1.868 million in the week ended February 21. This rise indicates that while fewer people are newly unemployed, some laid-off workers are taking longer to find new jobs.
Further data from the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas highlighted that U.S. employers announced 48,307 job cuts in February, marking a 55% decline from January and a 72% decrease compared with February 2025. The sharp reduction in layoffs underscores a labor market where companies are holding on to workers, even if hiring is not accelerating rapidly.
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