US job market not in free fall says Fed official

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Washington,  While a recent study showed that US unemployment rate could jump to 32 per cent due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the American job market was not in "free fall", a senior Federal Reserve official said.

"I would push back against the idea of the economy or the job market being in free fall," Xinhua news agency quoted James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, as saying on Sunday in a CBS program.

"We're asking people to stay home to invest in national health, and we're asking them to use the unemployment insurance program in order to get the transfers they need to be able to pay bills while they're at home, while they're not able to work because health authorities are trying to get the virus under control," he said.

Bullard's comments came after a study from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis estimated in March that the pandemic could cost 47 million American jobs in the second quarter, bringing the unemployment rate to 32 per cent.

"Our estimates suggest the unemployment rate could go anywhere between 10 per cent and 42 per cent," Bullard said, adding the projected 32 per cent figure was "a compromise in the middle".

The Labor Department reported on Friday that US employers cut 701,000 jobs in March and the unemployment rate soared to 4.4 per cent.

The number of COVID-19 cases in the US reached 337,620 as of Monday, the highest in the world, with 9,643 deaths, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.
(IANS)

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