WASHINGTON – The number of people applying for unemployment benefits plunged last week to the lowest level in nearly three years, continuing a downward trend that suggests hiring could pick up this year.

Applications sank by a seasonally adjusted 36,000 to 383,000, the lowest point since early July 2008, the Labor Department reported Thursday.

Some analysts cautioned that severe winter weather that affected 30 states could have contributed to the sharp drop, closing some government offices and preventing people from filing applications.

Still, many analysts said the decline points to better hiring ahead. “The sharp drop bodes well for February job creation,” said economist Ellen Beeson Zentner at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.

Applications below 425,000 tend to signal modest job growth. But they would need to dip consistently to 375,000 or below to indicate a significant and steady decline in the unemployment rate.

Last week’s sharp decline continues a downward trend that took shape late last year. The last time applications fell below 400,000 was near the end of December.

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The four-week average, a less volatile measure, dipped to 415,500 last week. That’s slightly above the two-year low of 411,250 in the week ending Jan. 1.

The unemployment rate fell to 9 percent in January, marking the fastest two-month decline in 53 years. Still, 9 percent unemployment is high.

Close to 14 million people are out of work. That’s about twice as much as in December 2007, when the recession began. Competition for jobs remains fierce.

Employers will probably create a net total of 2.2 million jobs this year, according to an AP Economy Survey. That compares with 909,000 last year. The economy lost a total of about 8 million jobs in the two years before that.

Thursday’s report also showed that the number of people on the unemployment benefit rolls fell to 3.89 million.

Those figures are one week behind the data on applications. It doesn’t include millions more who are receiving benefits under emergency federal programs enacted during the recession.

 


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