New jobless claims reverse a 2-week rising trend

Low jobs growth, but unemployment rate falls to lowest level in nearly a decade

WASHINGTON - Fewer Americans filed for unemployment benefits last week after two weeks of small gains.

The Labor Department says weekly jobless claims dropped by 19,000 to 238,000, the lowest level in three weeks. The less volatile four-week average edged up by 750 to 243,000. Overall, 1.96 million Americans are collecting unemployment benefits, down 8.1 percent from a year ago.

Jobless claims are a proxy for layoffs. They've come in below 300,000 for 113 straight weeks, the longest stretch since 1970. The new report adds to evidence that the job market remains healthy.

Federal Reserve talks up economy, and other MoneyWatch headlines

Even though the overall economy was growing at a sluggish pace at the beginning of the year, the jobless rate fell to 4.5 percent in March, the lowest in nearly a decade. The federal government's April employment report is out on Friday.

According to ADP's reading for private sector hiring in April, the U.S. added 177,000 jobs in the month. The ADP figure doesn't include government payrolls, and it often diverges from official data. Last month, the government said employers added only 98,000 jobs, far below the robust hiring in ADP's report.

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