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Fewer Americans filed for unemployment aid

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WASHINGTON – Fewer Americans applied for unemployment claims last week, another sign of strength in the job market.

Weekly applications for unemployment benefits fell 11,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 271,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. The less volatile 4-week average was essentially unchanged at 271,000.

The numbers show most American workers are enjoying job security. The number of weekly claims for unemployment benefits amounts to a proxy for layoffs.

And another Labor report shows layoffs dropped to well below where they were before the Great Recession of 2007-2009.

The U.S. job market is solid. Employers have been adding a healthy 210,000 jobs a month so far this year. And unemployment last month stayed at a seven-year low 5 percent.

Unemployment claims remained near historic lows for the past nine months. Applications below 300,000 a week usually correspond with net monthly job gains of more than 200,000.

The American economy is growing at a steady but unspectacular pace of about 2 percent a year – enough to support consistent hiring. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve decided the economy was healthy enough to withstand the first interest rate increase in years.

Fed policymakers raised the short-term rate they control from near zero, where it was since December 2008.

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