New applications for U.S. unemployment benefits fell last week to a near 54-year low as employers held on to workers in a tight labor market.

Initial jobless claims, a proxy for layoffs, fell to 166,000 during the week that ended on April 2, compared with a revised 171,000 the prior week, the Labor Department said Thursday. The weekly total was the lowest since November 1968, when the labor force was less than half of its current size.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Surfside condo collapse shows how the U.S. keeps getting disaster response wrong

At least 11 people are dead and some 150 still unaccounted for…

Influx of Directors Starts Shift in Boardroom Diversity

The biggest U.S. companies sharply increased the number of new Black and…

NFL player swears off vaccination, suggests he’ll defy rules

Buffalo Bills wide receiver Cole Beasley vowed Friday to remain unvaccinated for…

China Clears Cisco-Acacia Deal With Conditions

China’s antitrust regulator approved Cisco Systems Inc.’s acquisition of Acacia Communications Inc.,…