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Consumer spending, accounting for 70 percent of economy, likely to lag as U.S. tries to shake off recession.

Job seekers look for employment on computers at JobTrain career counseling and placement services in Menlo Park, Calif. on Thursday.

AP Photo

WASHINGTON — New claims for jobless aid fell less than expected last week, and the number of people continuing to receive unemployment benefits rose — further signs that any economic recovery will be hindered by a weak job market and flat incomes.
Most economists think the recession is over, but they say the jobless rate will keep rising until at least next summer as the economy struggles to mount a sustained recovery. That means household incomes will remain depressed and consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of the economy, will continue to lag.
“Firms are still not hiring, and that reflects deep pessimism about the sustainability of the economic recovery once government stimulus programs wear off,” said Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. “The lack of job creation remains a big headwind for cash-starved and credit-constrained consumers.”
The Labor Department said the number of laid-off workers applying for benefits dipped to 570,000 from an upwardly revised 574,000 the previous week. That was a smaller improvement than economists had expected.
The number of Americans continuing to receive benefits jumped to 6.23 million, up 92,000 from the previous week and a troubling reminder of the difficulty people are having finding jobs. The continuing claims data lag new claims by one week.
The recession, which began in December 2007, has eliminated a net total of 6.7 million jobs. That toll is expected to grow today, when the government reports the unemployment rate for August. Economists predict the jobless rate, now at 9.4 percent, will rise to 9.5 percent, with 225,000 net job losses in August.
Guatieri and other analysts said job losses for August might turn out even larger — perhaps topping the 247,000 jobs lost in July — because of the weakness in the unemployment claims figures.
“Employers are nervous that the economy is growing only because of policy stimulus and that when the stimulus fades, it will weaken again,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.
In another report Thursday, a key gauge of activity in service industries, which account for about 80 percent of U.S. economic activity, edged up to 48.4 in August from 46.4 in July. It was the best reading by the Institute for Supply Management’s service-sector survey in 11 months. And it pushed the index closer to topping 50, the dividing line between contraction and expansion.
Economists closely watch initial jobless claims, which are considered a gauge of layoffs and a sign of companies’ willingness to hire new workers.
Claims are well off the recession’s high of 674,000, hit in the first week in April. But they are still running far above the 350,000 that many economists view as a sign of a healthy labor market.
The Labor Department report showed that the four-week average of initial jobless claims edged up to 571,250 last week, compared with 567,250 the previous week.
When federal emergency programs are included, though, the total number of jobless benefit recipients was 9.14 million people in the week that ended Aug. 15, down from about 9.18 million the previous week.
Congress has added up to 53 extra weeks of benefits, on top of the 26 typically provided by the states.