The jobless claims continue to surprise analysts and not in a good way. Once against the number of those who filed was higher than expected. Thursday morning. the Labor Department reported, “In the week ending April 4, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 6,606,000.” That’s a decrease of 261,000 from the previous week, but higher than the estimate of 5 million claims.

CNBC points out, “That brings the total claims over the past three weeks to more than 16 million. If you compare those claims to the 151 million people on payrolls in the last monthly jobs report, that means the U.S. has lost 10% of the workforce in three weeks.” And with all the problems people have had filing claims, analysts say the actual number of people out of work or furloughed may be even higher than what is being reported.

The Wall Street Journal cautions:

Each additional week of historically high jobless claims dims the prospects for a rapid economic recovery once the new coronavirus is contained in the U.S. and businesses start reopening.

“The biggest direct impact of the loss of jobs is going to be the loss of income and therefore the loss of spending,” said Jacob Robbins, assistant professor of economics at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

And the WSJ points out layoffs are hitting more and more industries:

Take Oregon as an example. In the week ended March 21, slightly more than 30% of the state’s jobless claims were from laid-off workers in the restaurant industry. In the week after, the share of claims from restaurant employees remained roughly the same, but the portion of claims coming from health-care and retail workers rose.