What to watch for in tomorrow’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey data release: A sharp fall in job openings and hires

On Friday, the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) data for March will be released. Even though we already have more recent data on the labor market from other sources, this survey will provide important new information about how the coronavirus recession is unfolding.

That’s because JOLTS provides information on the moving parts that go into the net change in the number of jobs—job openings, hires, layoffs, voluntary quits, and other separations (which includes worker deaths). With JOLTS, we can get a picture of what is driving the net changes reported in the monthly jobs report.

Further, the JOLTS data that will be released tomorrow cover the entire month of March (as opposed to the monthly employment situation numbers, which only cover through the middle of the reference month). Because the labor market began deteriorating dramatically around mid-March, Friday’s release will provide a good sense of the underlying dynamics of the coronavirus labor market. At the bottom of this post is a text box explaining how the JOLTS data fit into the labor market data landscape.

What do we expect to see? Job openings and hires both have surely dropped dramatically, while layoffs have skyrocketed (note, in the JOLTS data, people who were temporarily laid off or furloughed are counted as layoffs, as long as the furlough is expected to last more than seven days). In April 2009—the worst month of the Great Recession for layoffs—there were nearly 2.7 million layoffs, or 2% of the workforce. In that same month, around 2.5 million people applied for unemployment insurance (UI). In March 2020, more than 10 million people applied for UI, so total layoffs will almost surely be higher than 10 million, which would far exceed the highest value in the series.

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16.2 million workers have likely lost employer-provided health insurance since the coronavirus shock began

Since the economic fallout of the coronavirus shock began in early March, the number of workers laid off or furloughed—as measured by new claims for unemployment insurance (UI)—has skyrocketed. We have used data from states that track UI claims by industry to get a rough estimate of how many workers are at high risk of losing their employer-provided health insurance (EPHI) over this as well.

The methodology is described in this blog post, and the underlying UI data (which has begun to include more and more states tracking UI claims by industry) can be found here. Table 1 below shows UI claims by industry across states that collect this data, and also shows employer-provided health insurance (EPHI) coverage rates in those industries in 2018. As of May 9, more than 35 million workers had been laid off or furloughed since mid-March, as measured by total initial UI claims during that period. We find that this translates into likely EPHI losses of 16.2 million.

Because the United States is unique among rich countries in tying health insurance benefits to employment, many of the newly unemployed will suddenly face prohibitively costly insurance options. A comprehensive policy solution would be to extend Medicare and Medicaid to all those suffering job losses during the pandemic period, with the federal government funding this expansion. It has been proposed that the federal government pay for all of COBRA coverage so that workers who are laid off or furloughed may continue their employer-provided coverage. While this policy proposal will help many workers continue coverage, in some states it will not help workers from small businesses with fewer than 20 employees, who are not eligible for COBRA.

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In the last eight weeks, more than one in five workers applied for state unemployment insurance benefits: Congress must act

In the last eight weeks, more than 33 million people—more than one in five workers—have applied for unemployment insurance (UI) through regular state UI programs. That is more than five times the worst eight-week stretch of the Great Recession.

Figure A

Weekly initial state unemployment insurance claims: Not seasonally adjusted, 1967–present

Week ending Initial claims
1967-01-07 346,000
1967-01-14 334,000
1967-01-21 277,000
1967-01-28 252,000
1967-02-04 274,000
1967-02-11 276,000
1967-02-18 247,000
1967-02-25 248,000
1967-03-04 326,000
1967-03-11 240,000
1967-03-18 225,000
1967-03-25 215,000
1967-04-01 223,000
1967-04-08 251,000
1967-04-15 289,000
1967-04-22 218,000
1967-04-29 216,000
1967-05-06 221,000
1967-05-13 188,000
1967-05-20 177,000
1967-05-27 170,000
1967-06-03 175,000
1967-06-10 188,000
1967-06-17 176,000
1967-06-24 178,000
1967-07-01 206,000
1967-07-08 322,000
1967-07-15 309,000
1967-07-22 282,000
1967-07-29 243,000
1967-08-05 250,000
1967-08-12 193,000
1967-08-19 174,000
1967-08-26 160,000
1967-09-02 163,000
1967-09-09 156,000
1967-09-16 165,000
1967-09-23 155,000
1967-09-30 154,000
1967-10-07 195,000
1967-10-14 159,000
1967-10-21 181,000
1967-10-28 174,000
1967-11-04 204,000
1967-11-11 201,000
1967-11-18 209,000
1967-11-25 200,000
1967-12-02 228,000
1967-12-09 258,000
1967-12-16 241,000
1967-12-23 289,000
1967-12-30 332,000
1968-01-06 357,000
1968-01-13 373,000
1968-01-20 293,000
1968-01-27 242,000
1968-02-03 308,000
1968-02-10 257,000
1968-02-17 214,000
1968-02-24 199,000
1968-03-02 198,000
1968-03-09 208,000
1968-03-16 179,000
1968-03-23 175,000
1968-03-30 165,000
1968-04-06 184,000
1968-04-13 167,000
1968-04-20 165,000
1968-04-27 216,000
1968-05-04 180,000
1968-05-11 164,000
1968-05-18 156,000
1968-05-25 148,000
1968-06-01 139,000
1968-06-08 149,000
1968-06-15 154,000
1968-06-22 152,000
1968-06-29 173,000
1968-07-06 266,000
1968-07-13 242,000
1968-07-20 216,000
1968-07-27 238,000
1968-08-03 235,000
1968-08-10 222,000
1968-08-17 160,000
1968-08-24 148,000
1968-08-31 139,000
1968-09-07 135,000
1968-09-14 141,000
1968-09-21 142,000
1968-09-28 143,000
1968-10-05 153,000
1968-10-12 151,000
1968-10-19 151,000
1968-10-26 152,000
1968-11-02 161,000
1968-11-09 174,000
1968-11-16 196,000
1968-11-23 211,000
1968-11-30 180,000
1968-12-07 223,000
1968-12-14 233,000
1968-12-21 243,000
1968-12-28 333,000
1969-01-04 290,000
1969-01-11 337,000
1969-01-18 265,000
1969-01-25 236,000
1969-02-01 250,000
1969-02-08 248,000
1969-02-15 219,000
1969-02-22 199,000
1969-03-01 206,000
1969-03-08 195,000
1969-03-15 179,000
1969-03-22 158,000
1969-03-29 157,000
1969-04-05 170,000
1969-04-12 187,000
1969-04-19 168,000
1969-04-26 151,000
1969-05-03 150,000
1969-05-10 157,000
1969-05-17 141,000
1969-05-24 138,000
1969-05-31 135,000
1969-06-07 148,000
1969-06-14 145,000
1969-06-21 155,000
1969-06-28 177,000
1969-07-05 267,000
1969-07-12 271,000
1969-07-19 246,000
1969-07-26 221,000
1969-08-02 223,000
1969-08-09 210,000
1969-08-16 168,000
1969-08-23 154,000
1969-08-30 144,000
1969-09-06 133,000
1969-09-13 149,000
1969-09-20 147,000
1969-09-27 147,000
1969-10-04 159,000
1969-10-11 168,000
1969-10-18 155,000
1969-10-25 171,000
1969-11-01 174,000
1969-11-08 206,000
1969-11-15 196,000
1969-11-22 230,000
1969-11-29 219,000
1969-12-06 247,000
1969-12-13 264,000
1969-12-20 289,000
1969-12-27 320,000
1970-01-03 344,000
1970-01-10 429,000
1970-01-17 386,000
1970-01-24 316,000
1970-01-31 293,000
1970-02-07 324,000
1970-02-14 308,000
1970-02-21 285,000
1970-02-28 241,000
1970-03-07 270,000
1970-03-14 258,000
1970-03-21 233,000
1970-03-28 236,000
1970-04-04 250,000
1970-04-11 300,000
1970-04-18 339,000
1970-04-25 299,000
1970-05-02 278,000
1970-05-09 279,000
1970-05-16 242,000
1970-05-23 231,000
1970-05-30 224,000
1970-06-06 234,000
1970-06-13 242,000
1970-06-20 245,000
1970-06-27 247,000
1970-07-04 309,000
1970-07-11 369,000
1970-07-18 353,000
1970-07-25 329,000
1970-08-01 293,000
1970-08-08 278,000
1970-08-15 257,000
1970-08-22 238,000
1970-08-29 220,000
1970-09-05 240,000
1970-09-12 207,000
1970-09-19 247,000
1970-09-26 256,000
1970-10-03 284,000
1970-10-10 287,000
1970-10-17 259,000
1970-10-24 280,000
1970-10-31 283,000
1970-11-07 333,000
1970-11-14 307,000
1970-11-21 333,000
1970-11-28 354,000
1970-12-05 378,000
1970-12-12 370,000
1970-12-19 354,000
1970-12-26 451,000
1971-01-02 443,000
1971-01-09 500,000
1971-01-16 452,000
1971-01-23 399,000
1971-01-30 353,000
1971-02-06 375,000
1971-02-13 333,000
1971-02-20 286,000
1971-02-27 289,000
1971-03-06 306,000
1971-03-13 275,000
1971-03-20 260,000
1971-03-27 261,000
1971-04-03 267,000
1971-04-10 278,000
1971-04-17 257,000
1971-04-24 248,000
1971-05-01 237,000
1971-05-08 260,000
1971-05-15 230,000
1971-05-22 231,000
1971-05-29 231,000
1971-06-05 232,000
1971-06-12 244,000
1971-06-19 249,000
1971-06-26 247,000
1971-07-03 288,000
1971-07-10 335,000
1971-07-17 367,000
1971-07-24 342,000
1971-07-31 340,000
1971-08-07 362,000
1971-08-14 282,000
1971-08-21 252,000
1971-08-28 228,000
1971-09-04 268,000
1971-09-11 219,000
1971-09-18 230,000
1971-09-25 236,000
1971-10-02 238,000
1971-10-09 280,000
1971-10-16 233,000
1971-10-23 251,000
1971-10-30 241,000
1971-11-06 297,000
1971-11-13 289,000
1971-11-20 291,000
1971-11-27 284,000
1971-12-04 372,000
1971-12-11 348,000
1971-12-18 329,000
1971-12-25 340,000
1972-01-01 405,000
1972-01-08 479,000
1972-01-15 395,000
1972-01-22 347,000
1972-01-29 326,000
1972-02-05 342,000
1972-02-12 318,000
1972-02-19 279,000
1972-02-26 252,000
1972-03-04 263,000
1972-03-11 257,000
1972-03-18 241,000
1972-03-25 231,000
1972-04-01 224,000
1972-04-08 271,000
1972-04-15 237,000
1972-04-22 223,000
1972-04-29 214,000
1972-05-06 234,000
1972-05-13 218,000
1972-05-20 210,000
1972-05-27 209,000
1972-06-03 198,000
1972-06-10 224,000
1972-06-17 227,000
1972-06-24 240,000
1972-07-01 327,000
1972-07-08 364,000
1972-07-15 367,000
1972-07-22 299,000
1972-07-29 266,000
1972-08-05 256,000
1972-08-12 220,000
1972-08-19 203,000
1972-08-26 195,000
1972-09-02 192,000
1972-09-09 178,000
1972-09-16 196,000
1972-09-23 193,000
1972-09-30 192,000
1972-10-07 233,000
1972-10-14 202,000
1972-10-21 214,000
1972-10-28 196,000
1972-11-04 242,000
1972-11-11 236,000
1972-11-18 280,000
1972-11-25 238,000
1972-12-02 268,000
1972-12-09 317,000
1972-12-16 323,000
1972-12-23 327,000
1972-12-30 338,000
1973-01-06 345,000
1973-01-13 412,000
1973-01-20 324,000
1973-01-27 267,000
1973-02-03 285,000
1973-02-10 276,000
1973-02-17 242,000
1973-02-24 220,000
1973-03-03 233,000
1973-03-10 227,000
1973-03-17 212,000
1973-03-24 209,000
1973-03-31 193,000
1973-04-07 244,000
1973-04-14 212,000
1973-04-21 211,000
1973-04-28 194,000
1973-05-05 214,000
1973-05-12 198,000
1973-05-19 189,000
1973-05-26 190,000
1973-06-02 173,000
1973-06-09 210,000
1973-06-16 198,000
1973-06-23 206,000
1973-06-30 215,000
1973-07-07 309,000
1973-07-14 270,000
1973-07-21 259,000
1973-07-28 265,000
1973-08-04 262,000
1973-08-11 238,000
1973-08-18 207,000
1973-08-25 190,000
1973-09-01 180,000
1973-09-08 177,000
1973-09-15 186,000
1973-09-22 187,000
1973-09-29 191,000
1973-10-06 210,000
1973-10-13 207,000
1973-10-20 208,000
1973-10-27 200,000
1973-11-03 230,000
1973-11-10 277,000
1973-11-17 261,000
1973-11-24 237,000
1973-12-01 299,000
1973-12-08 345,000
1973-12-15 340,000
1973-12-22 429,000
1973-12-29 461,000
1974-01-05 405,000
1974-01-12 584,000
1974-01-19 465,000
1974-01-26 373,000
1974-02-02 381,000
1974-02-09 459,000
1974-02-16 352,000
1974-02-23 296,000
1974-03-02 313,000
1974-03-09 310,000
1974-03-16 293,000
1974-03-23 285,000
1974-03-30 279,000
1974-04-06 288,000
1974-04-13 278,000
1974-04-20 256,000
1974-04-27 235,000
1974-05-04 243,000
1974-05-11 249,000
1974-05-18 238,000
1974-05-25 246,000
1974-06-01 209,000
1974-06-08 267,000
1974-06-15 255,000
1974-06-22 266,000
1974-06-29 285,000
1974-07-06 350,000
1974-07-13 351,000
1974-07-20 325,000
1974-07-27 333,000
1974-08-03 340,000
1974-08-10 318,000
1974-08-17 269,000
1974-08-24 260,000
1974-08-31 259,000
1974-09-07 253,000
1974-09-14 271,000
1974-09-21 283,000
1974-09-28 279,000
1974-10-05 325,000
1974-10-12 358,000
1974-10-19 324,000
1974-10-26 357,000
1974-11-02 375,000
1974-11-09 435,000
1974-11-16 450,000
1974-11-23 532,000
1974-11-30 524,000
1974-12-07 693,000
1974-12-14 637,000
1974-12-21 677,000
1974-12-28 813,000
1975-01-04 681,000
1975-01-11 969,000
1975-01-18 850,000
1975-01-25 729,000
1975-02-01 699,000
1975-02-08 691,000
1975-02-15 608,000
1975-02-22 567,000
1975-03-01 568,000
1975-03-08 569,000
1975-03-15 494,000
1975-03-22 499,000
1975-03-29 477,000
1975-04-05 505,000
1975-04-12 496,000
1975-04-19 456,000
1975-04-26 429,000
1975-05-03 420,000
1975-05-10 432,000
1975-05-17 410,000
1975-05-24 391,000
1975-05-31 360,000
1975-06-07 443,000
1975-06-14 422,000
1975-06-21 428,000
1975-06-28 407,000
1975-07-05 460,000
1975-07-12 517,000
1975-07-19 481,000
1975-07-26 471,000
1975-08-02 462,000
1975-08-09 429,000
1975-08-16 367,000
1975-08-23 353,000
1975-08-30 332,000
1975-09-06 331,000
1975-09-13 341,000
1975-09-20 336,000
1975-09-27 342,000
1975-10-04 365,000
1975-10-11 385,000
1975-10-18 332,000
1975-10-25 372,000
1975-11-01 378,000
1975-11-08 414,000
1975-11-15 371,000
1975-11-22 419,000
1975-11-29 403,000
1975-12-06 487,000
1975-12-13 456,000
1975-12-20 463,000
1975-12-27 573,000
1976-01-03 540,000
1976-01-10 708,000
1976-01-17 563,000
1976-01-24 486,000
1976-01-31 450,000
1976-02-07 452,000
1976-02-14 391,000
1976-02-21 367,000
1976-02-28 353,000
1976-03-06 366,000
1976-03-13 343,000
1976-03-20 330,000
1976-03-27 314,000
1976-04-03 334,000
1976-04-10 366,000
1976-04-17 316,000
1976-04-24 311,000
1976-05-01 313,000
1976-05-08 345,000
1976-05-15 308,000
1976-05-22 311,000
1976-05-29 310,000
1976-06-05 307,000
1976-06-12 351,000
1976-06-19 342,000
1976-06-26 339,000
1976-07-03 401,000
1976-07-10 445,000
1976-07-17 455,000
1976-07-24 418,000
1976-07-31 401,000
1976-08-07 373,000
1976-08-14 329,000
1976-08-21 320,000
1976-08-28 301,000
1976-09-04 321,000
1976-09-11 280,000
1976-09-18 320,000
1976-09-25 327,000
1976-10-02 332,000
1976-10-09 388,000
1976-10-16 325,000
1976-10-23 361,000
1976-10-30 370,000
1976-11-06 387,000
1976-11-13 363,000
1976-11-20 430,000
1976-11-27 369,000
1976-12-04 500,000
1976-12-11 494,000
1976-12-18 434,000
1976-12-25 466,000
1977-01-01 558,000
1977-01-08 685,000
1977-01-15 597,000
1977-01-22 589,000
1977-01-29 518,000
1977-02-05 704,000
1977-02-12 552,000
1977-02-19 422,000
1977-02-26 360,000
1977-03-05 367,000
1977-03-12 335,000
1977-03-19 321,000
1977-03-26 298,000
1977-04-02 296,000
1977-04-09 367,000
1977-04-16 316,000
1977-04-23 314,000
1977-04-30 305,000
1977-05-07 333,000
1977-05-14 309,000
1977-05-21 293,000
1977-05-28 298,000
1977-06-04 283,000
1977-06-11 308,000
1977-06-18 310,000
1977-06-25 321,000
1977-07-02 348,000
1977-07-09 431,000
1977-07-16 424,000
1977-07-23 391,000
1977-07-30 380,000
1977-08-06 379,000
1977-08-13 319,000
1977-08-20 298,000
1977-08-27 282,000
1977-09-03 289,000
1977-09-10 260,000
1977-09-17 289,000
1977-09-24 293,000
1977-10-01 275,000
1977-10-08 345,000
1977-10-15 287,000
1977-10-22 322,000
1977-10-29 309,000
1977-11-05 352,000
1977-11-12 310,000
1977-11-19 367,000
1977-11-26 342,000
1977-12-03 430,000
1977-12-10 448,000
1977-12-17 412,000
1977-12-24 450,000
1977-12-31 535,000
1978-01-07 559,000
1978-01-14 579,000
1978-01-21 500,000
1978-01-28 445,000
1978-02-04 447,000
1978-02-11 438,000
1978-02-18 455,000
1978-02-25 372,000
1978-03-04 360,000
1978-03-11 342,000
1978-03-18 302,000
1978-03-25 280,000
1978-04-01 278,000
1978-04-08 338,000
1978-04-15 279,000
1978-04-22 277,000
1978-04-29 269,000
1978-05-06 291,000
1978-05-13 268,000
1978-05-20 266,000
1978-05-27 256,000
1978-06-03 242,000
1978-06-10 292,000
1978-06-17 287,000
1978-06-24 297,000
1978-07-01 347,000
1978-07-08 428,000
1978-07-15 421,000
1978-07-22 387,000
1978-07-29 371,000
1978-08-05 376,000
1978-08-12 326,000
1978-08-19 287,000
1978-08-26 264,000
1978-09-02 249,000
1978-09-09 246,000
1978-09-16 262,000
1978-09-23 254,000
1978-09-30 249,000
1978-10-07 323,000
1978-10-14 262,000
1978-10-21 287,000
1978-10-28 280,000
1978-11-04 302,000
1978-11-11 286,000
1978-11-18 345,000
1978-11-25 350,000
1978-12-02 427,000
1978-12-09 427,000
1978-12-16 390,000
1978-12-23 447,000
1978-12-30 515,000
1979-01-06 559,000
1979-01-13 680,000
1979-01-20 488,000
1979-01-27 423,000
1979-02-03 424,000
1979-02-10 418,000
1979-02-17 384,000
1979-02-24 364,000
1979-03-03 358,000
1979-03-10 346,000
1979-03-17 315,000
1979-03-24 296,000
1979-03-31 300,000
1979-04-07 449,000
1979-04-14 424,000
1979-04-21 340,000
1979-04-28 303,000
1979-05-05 307,000
1979-05-12 290,000
1979-05-19 280,000
1979-05-26 287,000
1979-06-02 262,000
1979-06-09 322,000
1979-06-16 312,000
1979-06-23 343,000
1979-06-30 366,000
1979-07-07 458,000
1979-07-14 446,000
1979-07-21 445,000
1979-07-28 417,000
1979-08-04 428,000
1979-08-11 360,000
1979-08-18 329,000
1979-08-25 313,000
1979-09-01 312,000
1979-09-08 285,000
1979-09-15 311,000
1979-09-22 309,000
1979-09-29 303,000
1979-10-06 379,000
1979-10-13 335,000
1979-10-20 342,000
1979-10-27 353,000
1979-11-03 372,000
1979-11-10 392,000
1979-11-17 401,000
1979-11-24 379,000
1979-12-01 513,000
1979-12-08 521,000
1979-12-15 455,000
1979-12-22 580,000
1979-12-29 596,000
1980-01-05 574,000
1980-01-12 804,000
1980-01-19 648,000
1980-01-26 515,000
1980-02-02 471,000
1980-02-09 493,000
1980-02-16 418,000
1980-02-23 415,000
1980-03-01 407,000
1980-03-08 413,000
1980-03-15 398,000
1980-03-22 392,000
1980-03-29 399,000
1980-04-05 451,000
1980-04-12 535,000
1980-04-19 495,000
1980-04-26 482,000
1980-05-03 491,000
1980-05-10 526,000
1980-05-17 539,000
1980-05-24 525,000
1980-05-31 477,000
1980-06-07 562,000
1980-06-14 511,000
1980-06-21 529,000
1980-06-28 563,000
1980-07-05 584,000
1980-07-12 643,000
1980-07-19 628,000
1980-07-26 569,000
1980-08-02 536,000
1980-08-09 494,000
1980-08-16 435,000
1980-08-23 410,000
1980-08-30 397,000
1980-09-06 374,000
1980-09-13 414,000
1980-09-20 381,000
1980-09-27 363,000
1980-10-04 410,000
1980-10-11 417,000
1980-10-18 355,000
1980-10-25 384,000
1980-11-01 395,000
1980-11-08 416,000
1980-11-15 403,000
1980-11-22 440,000
1980-11-29 407,000
1980-12-06 534,000
1980-12-13 481,000
1980-12-20 499,000
1980-12-27 546,000
1981-01-03 580,000
1981-01-10 839,000
1981-01-17 638,000
1981-01-24 521,000
1981-01-31 490,000
1981-02-07 500,000
1981-02-14 439,000
1981-02-21 430,000
1981-02-28 432,000
1981-03-07 414,000
1981-03-14 385,000
1981-03-21 365,000
1981-03-28 356,000
1981-04-04 383,000
1981-04-11 401,000
1981-04-18 350,000
1981-04-25 379,000
1981-05-02 342,000
1981-05-09 369,000
1981-05-16 340,000
1981-05-23 342,000
1981-05-30 301,000
1981-06-06 384,000
1981-06-13 367,000
1981-06-20 376,000
1981-06-27 387,000
1981-07-04 430,000
1981-07-11 516,000
1981-07-18 481,000
1981-07-25 429,000
1981-08-01 444,000
1981-08-08 419,000
1981-08-15 369,000
1981-08-22 351,000
1981-08-29 352,000
1981-09-05 396,000
1981-09-12 331,000
1981-09-19 392,000
1981-09-26 392,000
1981-10-03 416,000
1981-10-10 476,000
1981-10-17 408,000
1981-10-24 450,000
1981-10-31 479,000
1981-11-07 534,000
1981-11-14 483,000
1981-11-21 522,000
1981-11-28 535,000
1981-12-05 726,000
1981-12-12 657,000
1981-12-19 644,000
1981-12-26 702,000
1982-01-02 694,300
1982-01-09 1,073,500
1982-01-16 761,700
1982-01-23 771,200
1982-01-30 692,300
1982-02-06 671,000
1982-02-13 532,800
1982-02-20 522,900
1982-02-27 536,300
1982-03-06 566,300
1982-03-13 515,100
1982-03-20 510,500
1982-03-27 501,500
1982-04-03 516,600
1982-04-10 606,300
1982-04-17 540,300
1982-04-24 518,600
1982-05-01 475,600
1982-05-08 516,500
1982-05-15 486,500
1982-05-22 486,300
1982-05-29 485,800
1982-06-05 478,600
1982-06-12 541,600
1982-06-19 508,100
1982-06-26 507,700
1982-07-03 594,400
1982-07-10 631,400
1982-07-17 647,000
1982-07-24 576,100
1982-07-31 562,600
1982-08-07 569,200
1982-08-14 536,400
1982-08-21 510,400
1982-08-28 502,300
1982-09-04 537,600
1982-09-11 467,700
1982-09-18 559,500
1982-09-25 535,000
1982-10-02 565,600
1982-10-09 638,100
1982-10-16 540,300
1982-10-23 577,600
1982-10-30 576,800
1982-11-06 604,800
1982-11-13 546,700
1982-11-20 650,400
1982-11-27 574,100
1982-12-04 709,400
1982-12-11 638,200
1982-12-18 598,000
1982-12-25 653,600
1983-01-01 745,100
1983-01-08 976,600
1983-01-15 773,600
1983-01-22 650,600
1983-01-29 597,700
1983-02-05 594,200
1983-02-12 525,100
1983-02-19 506,300
1983-02-26 448,700
1983-03-05 497,400
1983-03-12 459,700
1983-03-19 427,500
1983-03-26 422,100
1983-04-02 423,000
1983-04-09 509,700
1983-04-16 464,800
1983-04-23 431,300
1983-04-30 399,900
1983-05-07 435,000
1983-05-14 385,200
1983-05-21 380,300
1983-05-28 373,000
1983-06-04 351,100
1983-06-11 390,100
1983-06-18 369,200
1983-06-25 383,500
1983-07-02 397,400
1983-07-09 451,900
1983-07-16 459,400
1983-07-23 428,300
1983-07-30 383,400
1983-08-06 382,500
1983-08-13 382,300
1983-08-20 356,900
1983-08-27 323,600
1983-09-03 328,800
1983-09-10 288,700
1983-09-17 326,900
1983-09-24 324,700
1983-10-01 318,500
1983-10-08 390,500
1983-10-15 319,900
1983-10-22 354,900
1983-10-29 356,400
1983-11-05 398,200
1983-11-12 347,300
1983-11-19 431,900
1983-11-26 362,900
1983-12-03 458,400
1983-12-10 442,900
1983-12-17 414,600
1983-12-24 496,800
1983-12-31 558,900
1984-01-07 621,600
1984-01-14 637,900
1984-01-21 475,100
1984-01-28 448,500
1984-02-04 408,400
1984-02-11 381,500
1984-02-18 349,300
1984-02-25 329,100
1984-03-03 350,500
1984-03-10 344,000
1984-03-17 323,500
1984-03-24 317,600
1984-03-31 291,400
1984-04-07 390,300
1984-04-14 330,800
1984-04-21 326,500
1984-04-28 309,300
1984-05-05 318,900
1984-05-12 312,100
1984-05-19 294,200
1984-05-26 292,700
1984-06-02 268,700
1984-06-09 333,800
1984-06-16 309,900
1984-06-23 316,800
1984-06-30 329,000
1984-07-07 432,500
1984-07-14 435,900
1984-07-21 396,200
1984-07-28 343,800
1984-08-04 348,100
1984-08-11 328,100
1984-08-18 321,000
1984-08-25 303,300
1984-09-01 303,500
1984-09-08 289,300
1984-09-15 320,700
1984-09-22 313,200
1984-09-29 304,700
1984-10-06 373,300
1984-10-13 353,200
1984-10-20 378,700
1984-10-27 380,500
1984-11-03 413,400
1984-11-10 397,500
1984-11-17 370,800
1984-11-24 387,000
1984-12-01 494,700
1984-12-08 477,900
1984-12-15 443,700
1984-12-22 482,300
1984-12-29 527,500
1985-01-05 568,300
1985-01-12 770,000
1985-01-19 537,700
1985-01-26 478,300
1985-02-02 452,400
1985-02-09 473,300
1985-02-16 404,700
1985-02-23 379,000
1985-03-02 377,300
1985-03-09 389,200
1985-03-16 360,500
1985-03-23 346,700
1985-03-30 329,100
1985-04-06 398,000
1985-04-13 397,500
1985-04-20 351,800
1985-04-27 324,700
1985-05-04 335,600
1985-05-11 339,100
1985-05-18 324,900
1985-05-25 328,500
1985-06-01 293,500
1985-06-08 368,900
1985-06-15 339,200
1985-06-22 339,500
1985-06-29 349,800
1985-07-06 409,500
1985-07-13 481,500
1985-07-20 413,700
1985-07-27 358,700
1985-08-03 365,800
1985-08-10 358,200
1985-08-17 319,400
1985-08-24 314,800
1985-08-31 317,600
1985-09-07 304,700
1985-09-14 332,900
1985-09-21 317,600
1985-09-28 301,600
1985-10-05 355,600
1985-10-12 358,000
1985-10-19 331,000
1985-10-26 375,700
1985-11-02 375,300
1985-11-09 404,100
1985-11-16 380,300
1985-11-23 423,100
1985-11-30 384,700
1985-12-07 504,200
1985-12-14 443,400
1985-12-21 458,200
1985-12-28 548,200
1986-01-04 547,500
1986-01-11 803,900
1986-01-18 568,800
1986-01-25 395,700
1986-02-01 425,400
1986-02-08 438,100
1986-02-15 374,200
1986-02-22 382,200
1986-03-01 381,200
1986-03-08 371,700
1986-03-15 361,600
1986-03-22 363,100
1986-03-29 333,300
1986-04-05 366,100
1986-04-12 386,100
1986-04-19 348,700
1986-04-26 335,100
1986-05-03 333,600
1986-05-10 343,800
1986-05-17 319,000
1986-05-24 321,700
1986-05-31 278,700
1986-06-07 342,200
1986-06-14 324,700
1986-06-21 327,400
1986-06-28 336,100
1986-07-05 377,400
1986-07-12 456,200
1986-07-19 402,400
1986-07-26 370,700
1986-08-02 370,900
1986-08-09 376,900
1986-08-16 326,000
1986-08-23 310,200
1986-08-30 307,100
1986-09-06 283,700
1986-09-13 320,800
1986-09-20 315,800
1986-09-27 294,200
1986-10-04 328,900
1986-10-11 357,700
1986-10-18 313,000
1986-10-25 332,400
1986-11-01 334,100
1986-11-08 357,600
1986-11-15 347,400
1986-11-22 410,600
1986-11-29 350,900
1986-12-06 462,700
1986-12-13 438,600
1986-12-20 423,800
1986-12-27 483,900
1987-01-03 483,977
1987-01-10 710,493
1987-01-17 545,768
1987-01-24 412,977
1987-01-31 435,743
1987-02-07 444,240
1987-02-14 359,219
1987-02-21 332,930
1987-02-28 355,357
1987-03-07 343,065
1987-03-14 321,153
1987-03-21 313,104
1987-03-28 288,648
1987-04-04 308,940
1987-04-11 344,364
1987-04-18 305,201
1987-04-25 285,566
1987-05-02 277,726
1987-05-09 276,773
1987-05-16 283,832
1987-05-23 286,150
1987-05-30 242,793
1987-06-06 299,672
1987-06-13 281,043
1987-06-20 285,191
1987-06-27 294,288
1987-07-04 321,855
1987-07-11 402,706
1987-07-18 361,491
1987-07-25 339,756
1987-08-01 309,433
1987-08-08 296,403
1987-08-15 256,647
1987-08-22 245,058
1987-08-29 243,829
1987-09-05 255,589
1987-09-12 210,375
1987-09-19 243,651
1987-09-26 242,206
1987-10-03 244,736
1987-10-10 291,075
1987-10-17 242,157
1987-10-24 271,190
1987-10-31 261,036
1987-11-07 306,340
1987-11-14 286,334
1987-11-21 354,037
1987-11-28 288,614
1987-12-05 412,297
1987-12-12 372,869
1987-12-19 384,763
1987-12-26 397,287
1988-01-02 465,503
1988-01-09 654,620
1988-01-16 577,975
1988-01-23 412,685
1988-01-30 394,776
1988-02-06 380,906
1988-02-13 334,833
1988-02-20 315,497
1988-02-27 324,517
1988-03-05 312,409
1988-03-12 294,321
1988-03-19 275,545
1988-03-26 269,000
1988-04-02 256,607
1988-04-09 319,713
1988-04-16 273,160
1988-04-23 272,440
1988-04-30 247,619
1988-05-07 267,315
1988-05-14 257,101
1988-05-21 259,640
1988-05-28 255,852
1988-06-04 235,308
1988-06-11 268,052
1988-06-18 264,100
1988-06-25 268,770
1988-07-02 290,079
1988-07-09 335,780
1988-07-16 377,872
1988-07-23 384,920
1988-07-30 311,475
1988-08-06 293,718
1988-08-13 261,066
1988-08-20 253,359
1988-08-27 241,809
1988-09-03 243,944
1988-09-10 220,226
1988-09-17 247,250
1988-09-24 236,230
1988-10-01 226,453
1988-10-08 276,732
1988-10-15 237,722
1988-10-22 264,201
1988-10-29 265,794
1988-11-05 293,412
1988-11-12 257,201
1988-11-19 335,818
1988-11-26 281,841
1988-12-03 391,406
1988-12-10 354,028
1988-12-17 354,768
1988-12-24 413,175
1988-12-31 474,226
1989-01-07 544,138
1989-01-14 519,727
1989-01-21 364,499
1989-01-28 361,331
1989-02-04 340,647
1989-02-11 365,301
1989-02-18 317,676
1989-02-25 288,690
1989-03-04 333,669
1989-03-11 325,019
1989-03-18 291,112
1989-03-25 276,369
1989-04-01 275,799
1989-04-08 321,723
1989-04-15 275,240
1989-04-22 271,002
1989-04-29 247,646
1989-05-06 275,425
1989-05-13 275,507
1989-05-20 260,543
1989-05-27 266,146
1989-06-03 243,246
1989-06-10 295,499
1989-06-17 285,589
1989-06-24 295,338
1989-07-01 319,577
1989-07-08 364,594
1989-07-15 423,847
1989-07-22 365,026
1989-07-29 320,773
1989-08-05 311,584
1989-08-12 291,429
1989-08-19 261,419
1989-08-26 254,488
1989-09-02 259,540
1989-09-09 239,989
1989-09-16 271,903
1989-09-23 262,895
1989-09-30 265,310
1989-10-07 375,972
1989-10-14 284,584
1989-10-21 315,473
1989-10-28 317,538
1989-11-04 336,759
1989-11-11 303,556
1989-11-18 377,814
1989-11-25 316,458
1989-12-02 443,684
1989-12-09 426,514
1989-12-16 420,795
1989-12-23 534,261
1989-12-30 515,926
1990-01-06 581,679
1990-01-13 730,995
1990-01-20 485,424
1990-01-27 440,748
1990-02-03 432,922
1990-02-10 429,764
1990-02-17 364,616
1990-02-24 341,969
1990-03-03 361,937
1990-03-10 355,935
1990-03-17 325,164
1990-03-24 306,391
1990-03-31 297,117
1990-04-07 372,079
1990-04-14 315,624
1990-04-21 324,936
1990-04-28 294,785
1990-05-05 304,160
1990-05-12 299,266
1990-05-19 287,082
1990-05-26 295,476
1990-06-02 273,910
1990-06-09 321,727
1990-06-16 305,690
1990-06-23 316,999
1990-06-30 326,407
1990-07-07 419,256
1990-07-14 448,952
1990-07-21 407,676
1990-07-28 353,149
1990-08-04 336,997
1990-08-11 330,678
1990-08-18 313,804
1990-08-25 302,267
1990-09-01 305,510
1990-09-08 277,768
1990-09-15 323,246
1990-09-22 306,549
1990-09-29 308,080
1990-10-06 361,538
1990-10-13 356,203
1990-10-20 387,444
1990-10-27 394,598
1990-11-03 424,771
1990-11-10 463,874
1990-11-17 433,003
1990-11-24 422,676
1990-12-01 568,583
1990-12-08 574,323
1990-12-15 523,403
1990-12-22 637,449
1990-12-29 649,471
1991-01-05 651,775
1991-01-12 872,742
1991-01-19 691,092
1991-01-26 511,360
1991-02-02 563,060
1991-02-09 574,760
1991-02-16 498,200
1991-02-23 492,325
1991-03-02 504,023
1991-03-09 514,410
1991-03-16 470,801
1991-03-23 477,877
1991-03-30 412,904
1991-04-06 448,082
1991-04-13 459,364
1991-04-20 433,912
1991-04-27 385,153
1991-05-04 384,458
1991-05-11 382,113
1991-05-18 366,492
1991-05-25 365,117
1991-06-01 320,632
1991-06-08 397,682
1991-06-15 369,074
1991-06-22 371,232
1991-06-29 370,372
1991-07-06 427,161
1991-07-13 517,888
1991-07-20 454,655
1991-07-27 408,098
1991-08-03 397,522
1991-08-10 385,740
1991-08-17 344,969
1991-08-24 329,287
1991-08-31 328,040
1991-09-07 302,187
1991-09-14 342,419
1991-09-21 333,110
1991-09-28 334,206
1991-10-05 366,862
1991-10-12 388,370
1991-10-19 344,189
1991-10-26 380,253
1991-11-02 427,789
1991-11-09 473,432
1991-11-16 417,766
1991-11-23 503,032
1991-11-30 433,180
1991-12-07 610,113
1991-12-14 554,059
1991-12-21 555,747
1991-12-28 625,772
1992-01-04 652,046
1992-01-11 882,118
1992-01-18 687,914
1992-01-25 504,838
1992-02-01 508,594
1992-02-08 537,238
1992-02-15 469,794
1992-02-22 429,723
1992-02-29 454,987
1992-03-07 434,426
1992-03-14 417,282
1992-03-21 413,180
1992-03-28 370,883
1992-04-04 393,384
1992-04-11 412,948
1992-04-18 366,621
1992-04-25 364,454
1992-05-02 363,794
1992-05-09 364,100
1992-05-16 341,425
1992-05-23 343,432
1992-05-30 305,080
1992-06-06 374,978
1992-06-13 369,067
1992-06-20 369,995
1992-06-27 370,373
1992-07-04 395,505
1992-07-11 506,050
1992-07-18 452,468
1992-07-25 554,590
1992-08-01 382,138
1992-08-08 366,092
1992-08-15 322,729
1992-08-22 312,436
1992-08-29 309,806
1992-09-05 339,006
1992-09-12 299,189
1992-09-19 345,093
1992-09-26 315,455
1992-10-03 326,938
1992-10-10 353,504
1992-10-17 310,235
1992-10-24 333,005
1992-10-31 331,922
1992-11-07 392,213
1992-11-14 348,011
1992-11-21 401,972
1992-11-28 317,218
1992-12-05 449,726
1992-12-12 424,677
1992-12-19 396,619
1992-12-26 392,612
1993-01-02 487,466
1993-01-09 704,930
1993-01-16 558,516
1993-01-23 410,944
1993-01-30 397,000
1993-02-06 384,707
1993-02-13 344,520
1993-02-20 345,116
1993-02-27 367,412
1993-03-06 364,185
1993-03-13 335,154
1993-03-20 315,473
1993-03-27 330,512
1993-04-03 331,871
1993-04-10 346,648
1993-04-17 321,564
1993-04-24 310,916
1993-05-01 285,098
1993-05-08 301,906
1993-05-15 287,944
1993-05-22 285,444
1993-05-29 291,206
1993-06-05 273,411
1993-06-12 308,535
1993-06-19 304,843
1993-06-26 301,549
1993-07-03 334,335
1993-07-10 362,425
1993-07-17 402,348
1993-07-24 418,260
1993-07-31 320,155
1993-08-07 314,579
1993-08-14 277,263
1993-08-21 270,913
1993-08-28 254,231
1993-09-04 270,528
1993-09-11 238,902
1993-09-18 280,903
1993-09-25 265,510
1993-10-02 263,636
1993-10-09 338,726
1993-10-16 288,699
1993-10-23 321,509
1993-10-30 309,359
1993-11-06 365,280
1993-11-13 310,455
1993-11-20 377,935
1993-11-27 306,788
1993-12-04 431,210
1993-12-11 398,560
1993-12-18 382,583
1993-12-25 398,084
1994-01-01 481,735
1994-01-08 676,076
1994-01-15 571,816
1994-01-22 427,570
1994-01-29 481,458
1994-02-05 429,800
1994-02-12 385,594
1994-02-19 368,626
1994-02-26 307,194
1994-03-05 355,250
1994-03-12 331,023
1994-03-19 308,038
1994-03-26 292,661
1994-04-02 289,631
1994-04-09 361,348
1994-04-16 327,166
1994-04-23 298,620
1994-04-30 285,837
1994-05-07 332,414
1994-05-14 303,190
1994-05-21 299,324
1994-05-28 291,797
1994-06-04 273,849
1994-06-11 309,033
1994-06-18 298,198
1994-06-25 305,863
1994-07-02 327,262
1994-07-09 394,428
1994-07-16 443,698
1994-07-23 354,495
1994-07-30 295,979
1994-08-06 304,363
1994-08-13 277,614
1994-08-20 262,131
1994-08-27 257,299
1994-09-03 270,561
1994-09-10 237,526
1994-09-17 264,553
1994-09-24 251,191
1994-10-01 255,588
1994-10-08 322,522
1994-10-15 272,742
1994-10-22 296,646
1994-10-29 291,557
1994-11-05 338,561
1994-11-12 298,030
1994-11-19 366,719
1994-11-26 295,729
1994-12-03 412,824
1994-12-10 397,238
1994-12-17 376,210
1994-12-24 423,387
1994-12-31 482,735
1995-01-07 612,648
1995-01-14 608,872
1995-01-21 400,772
1995-01-28 396,457
1995-02-04 381,813
1995-02-11 387,408
1995-02-18 356,237
1995-02-25 316,927
1995-03-04 342,015
1995-03-11 339,580
1995-03-18 319,218
1995-03-25 305,471
1995-04-01 294,031
1995-04-08 356,914
1995-04-15 318,030
1995-04-22 317,072
1995-04-29 305,594
1995-05-06 325,398
1995-05-13 311,646
1995-05-20 316,305
1995-05-27 314,442
1995-06-03 286,566
1995-06-10 340,606
1995-06-17 337,812
1995-06-24 324,411
1995-07-01 341,207
1995-07-08 428,632
1995-07-15 491,891
1995-07-22 409,319
1995-07-29 311,708
1995-08-05 310,703
1995-08-12 296,712
1995-08-19 286,017
1995-08-26 272,182
1995-09-02 278,703
1995-09-09 266,145
1995-09-16 304,323
1995-09-23 272,431
1995-09-30 269,067
1995-10-07 345,311
1995-10-14 306,465
1995-10-21 322,856
1995-10-28 332,061
1995-11-04 383,687
1995-11-11 335,181
1995-11-18 425,889
1995-11-25 336,269
1995-12-02 474,548
1995-12-09 421,109
1995-12-16 423,450
1995-12-23 490,349
1995-12-30 513,686
1996-01-06 596,010
1996-01-13 637,910
1996-01-20 510,820
1996-01-27 492,966
1996-02-03 433,693
1996-02-10 440,961
1996-02-17 395,332
1996-02-24 347,053
1996-03-02 368,044
1996-03-09 355,818
1996-03-16 357,070
1996-03-23 396,731
1996-03-30 342,023
1996-04-06 353,032
1996-04-13 343,654
1996-04-20 336,033
1996-04-27 291,957
1996-05-04 298,195
1996-05-11 303,532
1996-05-18 287,891
1996-05-25 287,622
1996-06-01 266,116
1996-06-08 329,099
1996-06-15 307,141
1996-06-22 312,226
1996-06-29 315,615
1996-07-06 382,989
1996-07-13 449,510
1996-07-20 360,385
1996-07-27 294,762
1996-08-03 283,216
1996-08-10 285,795
1996-08-17 265,742
1996-08-24 259,677
1996-08-31 251,425
1996-09-07 238,893
1996-09-14 272,464
1996-09-21 273,232
1996-09-28 261,251
1996-10-05 292,029
1996-10-12 306,521
1996-10-19 271,934
1996-10-26 311,965
1996-11-02 320,827
1996-11-09 340,240
1996-11-16 330,730
1996-11-23 383,512
1996-11-30 328,186
1996-12-07 444,305
1996-12-14 404,436
1996-12-21 429,566
1996-12-28 520,650
1997-01-04 541,210
1997-01-11 654,473
1997-01-18 513,913
1997-01-25 385,310
1997-02-01 380,099
1997-02-08 370,766
1997-02-15 320,374
1997-02-22 309,202
1997-03-01 317,339
1997-03-08 314,787
1997-03-15 296,698
1997-03-22 291,463
1997-03-29 268,823
1997-04-05 311,186
1997-04-12 329,663
1997-04-19 286,593
1997-04-26 295,166
1997-05-03 295,629
1997-05-10 278,052
1997-05-17 267,251
1997-05-24 264,697
1997-05-31 248,167
1997-06-07 309,928
1997-06-14 302,577
1997-06-21 290,720
1997-06-28 298,299
1997-07-05 372,574
1997-07-12 434,598
1997-07-19 339,250
1997-07-26 281,794
1997-08-02 273,471
1997-08-09 289,083
1997-08-16 272,910
1997-08-23 255,236
1997-08-30 250,205
1997-09-06 224,948
1997-09-13 253,456
1997-09-20 246,061
1997-09-27 237,214
1997-10-04 260,705
1997-10-11 286,436
1997-10-18 255,634
1997-10-25 272,593
1997-11-01 293,086
1997-11-08 322,842
1997-11-15 311,499
1997-11-22 341,845
1997-11-29 309,788
1997-12-06 402,699
1997-12-13 374,107
1997-12-20 368,823
1997-12-27 445,345
1998-01-03 479,854
1998-01-10 682,016
1998-01-17 512,837
1998-01-24 355,092
1998-01-31 357,976
1998-02-07 368,113
1998-02-14 328,354
1998-02-21 313,367
1998-02-28 313,480
1998-03-07 305,542
1998-03-14 298,302
1998-03-21 293,692
1998-03-28 272,808
1998-04-04 288,484
1998-04-11 294,014
1998-04-18 288,059
1998-04-25 278,220
1998-05-02 261,089
1998-05-09 270,108
1998-05-16 262,107
1998-05-23 259,125
1998-05-30 248,550
1998-06-06 289,495
1998-06-13 293,195
1998-06-20 322,017
1998-06-27 348,842
1998-07-04 379,734
1998-07-11 428,977
1998-07-18 364,767
1998-07-25 314,782
1998-08-01 277,621
1998-08-08 279,621
1998-08-15 246,823
1998-08-22 237,999
1998-08-29 233,516
1998-09-05 255,938
1998-09-12 217,454
1998-09-19 237,609
1998-09-26 220,668
1998-10-03 246,284
1998-10-10 300,862
1998-10-17 257,172
1998-10-24 275,574
1998-10-31 281,932
1998-11-07 332,611
1998-11-14 315,504
1998-11-21 338,501
1998-11-28 295,041
1998-12-05 421,605
1998-12-12 355,872
1998-12-19 344,452
1998-12-26 442,200
1999-01-02 508,983
1999-01-09 713,805
1999-01-16 514,082
1999-01-23 364,737
1999-01-30 349,733
1999-02-06 344,947
1999-02-13 320,679
1999-02-20 286,130
1999-02-27 297,918
1999-03-06 297,325
1999-03-13 289,813
1999-03-20 275,453
1999-03-27 260,817
1999-04-03 263,516
1999-04-10 327,621
1999-04-17 286,018
1999-04-24 263,835
1999-05-01 252,190
1999-05-08 274,268
1999-05-15 251,063
1999-05-22 250,360
1999-05-29 260,517
1999-06-05 256,922
1999-06-12 267,582
1999-06-19 267,825
1999-06-26 269,755
1999-07-03 303,758
1999-07-10 364,078
1999-07-17 369,123
1999-07-24 293,348
1999-07-31 254,195
1999-08-07 259,805
1999-08-14 236,658
1999-08-21 226,061
1999-08-28 219,278
1999-09-04 235,849
1999-09-11 204,302
1999-09-18 219,070
1999-09-25 232,486
1999-10-02 246,445
1999-10-09 278,925
1999-10-16 234,580
1999-10-23 250,864
1999-10-30 257,767
1999-11-06 297,136
1999-11-13 262,607
1999-11-20 309,248
1999-11-27 268,255
1999-12-04 378,735
1999-12-11 318,175
1999-12-18 329,649
1999-12-25 377,695
2000-01-01 439,912
2000-01-08 606,897
2000-01-15 442,494
2000-01-22 328,841
2000-01-29 332,740
2000-02-05 365,245
2000-02-12 311,897
2000-02-19 281,256
2000-02-26 258,962
2000-03-04 283,024
2000-03-11 255,109
2000-03-18 242,139
2000-03-25 239,835
2000-04-01 229,520
2000-04-08 274,130
2000-04-15 237,218
2000-04-22 240,266
2000-04-29 249,458
2000-05-06 259,546
2000-05-13 231,706
2000-05-20 234,599
2000-05-27 239,836
2000-06-03 242,991
2000-06-10 267,752
2000-06-17 265,617
2000-06-24 273,344
2000-07-01 280,979
2000-07-08 363,793
2000-07-15 377,982
2000-07-22 296,255
2000-07-29 253,466
2000-08-05 266,151
2000-08-12 261,358
2000-08-19 251,844
2000-08-26 239,030
2000-09-02 242,375
2000-09-09 229,954
2000-09-16 245,991
2000-09-23 222,219
2000-09-30 227,249
2000-10-07 292,784
2000-10-14 255,082
2000-10-21 263,445
2000-10-28 269,489
2000-11-04 342,414
2000-11-11 294,727
2000-11-18 374,160
2000-11-25 321,859
2000-12-02 447,262
2000-12-09 390,088
2000-12-16 402,476
2000-12-23 481,720
2000-12-30 568,973
2001-01-06 558,768
2001-01-13 599,562
2001-01-20 398,188
2001-01-27 447,386
2001-02-03 424,696
2001-02-10 396,151
2001-02-17 345,841
2001-02-24 357,591
2001-03-03 379,286
2001-03-10 377,210
2001-03-17 351,497
2001-03-24 334,747
2001-03-31 328,576
2001-04-07 397,282
2001-04-14 346,981
2001-04-21 369,745
2001-04-28 353,831
2001-05-05 336,319
2001-05-12 331,765
2001-05-19 338,374
2001-05-26 346,231
2001-06-02 335,765
2001-06-09 397,015
2001-06-16 354,526
2001-06-23 351,770
2001-06-30 375,885
2001-07-07 526,826
2001-07-14 524,139
2001-07-21 406,038
2001-07-28 332,957
2001-08-04 341,660
2001-08-11 333,042
2001-08-18 317,046
2001-08-25 307,850
2001-09-01 319,016
2001-09-08 309,567
2001-09-15 317,245
2001-09-22 353,611
2001-09-29 400,400
2001-10-06 441,754
2001-10-13 426,881
2001-10-20 429,542
2001-10-27 436,901
2001-11-03 443,971
2001-11-10 456,366
2001-11-17 420,259
2001-11-24 438,893
2001-12-01 605,916
2001-12-08 491,836
2001-12-15 440,906
2001-12-22 529,570
2001-12-29 647,045
2002-01-05 637,343
2002-01-12 799,246
2002-01-19 558,297
2002-01-26 431,690
2002-02-02 445,552
2002-02-09 438,611
2002-02-16 376,573
2002-02-23 367,504
2002-03-02 385,272
2002-03-09 386,992
2002-03-16 352,045
2002-03-23 366,372
2002-03-30 386,296
2002-04-06 432,384
2002-04-13 428,834
2002-04-20 385,151
2002-04-27 367,350
2002-05-04 362,681
2002-05-11 358,286
2002-05-18 348,887
2002-05-25 346,439
2002-06-01 309,183
2002-06-08 378,613
2002-06-15 356,096
2002-06-22 358,959
2002-06-29 358,658
2002-07-06 456,716
2002-07-13 506,718
2002-07-20 394,586
2002-07-27 338,441
2002-08-03 326,356
2002-08-10 332,673
2002-08-17 313,869
2002-08-24 314,852
2002-08-31 310,864
2002-09-07 318,361
2002-09-14 337,577
2002-09-21 317,264
2002-09-28 319,063
2002-10-05 365,613
2002-10-12 385,689
2002-10-19 349,927
2002-10-26 375,591
2002-11-02 397,346
2002-11-09 427,078
2002-11-16 372,829
2002-11-23 436,549
2002-11-30 385,788
2002-12-07 547,430
2002-12-14 486,258
2002-12-21 483,449
2002-12-28 620,929
2003-01-04 620,004
2003-01-11 724,111
2003-01-18 542,563
2003-01-25 434,888
2003-02-01 449,286
2003-02-08 439,520
2003-02-15 398,291
2003-02-22 387,536
2003-03-01 429,782
2003-03-08 414,568
2003-03-15 389,909
2003-03-22 361,492
2003-03-29 371,692
2003-04-05 394,160
2003-04-12 434,911
2003-04-19 399,180
2003-04-26 401,342
2003-05-03 377,383
2003-05-10 364,287
2003-05-17 362,276
2003-05-24 359,500
2003-05-31 351,890
2003-06-07 421,190
2003-06-14 383,371
2003-06-21 376,560
2003-06-28 394,214
2003-07-05 483,401
2003-07-12 552,621
2003-07-19 429,381
2003-07-26 348,382
2003-08-02 333,770
2003-08-09 348,207
2003-08-16 312,087
2003-08-23 313,058
2003-08-30 319,362
2003-09-06 322,501
2003-09-13 328,414
2003-09-20 301,217
2003-09-27 304,968
2003-10-04 337,880
2003-10-11 368,876
2003-10-18 328,572
2003-10-25 352,117
2003-11-01 345,573
2003-11-08 397,387
2003-11-15 347,719
2003-11-22 397,990
2003-11-29 357,811
2003-12-06 486,202
2003-12-13 412,627
2003-12-20 424,192
2003-12-27 516,493
2004-01-03 552,815
2004-01-10 677,897
2004-01-17 490,763
2004-01-24 382,262
2004-01-31 406,298
2004-02-07 433,234
2004-02-14 341,634
2004-02-21 328,171
2004-02-28 342,140
2004-03-06 339,007
2004-03-13 312,067
2004-03-20 304,462
2004-03-27 296,776
2004-04-03 304,249
2004-04-10 350,739
2004-04-17 334,965
2004-04-24 313,686
2004-05-01 283,236
2004-05-08 292,754
2004-05-15 297,061
2004-05-22 293,974
2004-05-29 304,067
2004-06-05 308,229
2004-06-12 313,930
2004-06-19 322,481
2004-06-26 318,746
2004-07-03 349,920
2004-07-10 444,531
2004-07-17 394,372
2004-07-24 313,225
2004-07-31 282,128
2004-08-07 291,611
2004-08-14 262,936
2004-08-21 274,433
2004-08-28 276,308
2004-09-04 274,930
2004-09-11 250,568
2004-09-18 275,846
2004-09-25 282,729
2004-10-02 279,591
2004-10-09 338,711
2004-10-16 279,846
2004-10-23 317,573
2004-10-30 305,546
2004-11-06 351,404
2004-11-13 311,901
2004-11-20 355,954
2004-11-27 320,690
2004-12-04 473,570
2004-12-11 370,604
2004-12-18 374,749
2004-12-25 446,699
2005-01-01 540,927
2005-01-08 693,776
2005-01-15 467,862
2005-01-22 360,583
2005-01-29 364,704
2005-02-05 347,391
2005-02-12 309,290
2005-02-19 303,814
2005-02-26 290,776
2005-03-05 332,067
2005-03-12 307,061
2005-03-19 290,719
2005-03-26 291,378
2005-04-02 294,994
2005-04-09 339,709
2005-04-16 285,657
2005-04-23 299,891
2005-04-30 290,824
2005-05-07 297,347
2005-05-14 275,524
2005-05-21 276,761
2005-05-28 304,306
2005-06-04 289,914
2005-06-11 315,938
2005-06-18 289,831
2005-06-25 286,681
2005-07-02 327,268
2005-07-09 427,323
2005-07-16 374,665
2005-07-23 295,026
2005-07-30 261,906
2005-08-06 269,746
2005-08-13 257,151
2005-08-20 252,016
2005-08-27 251,642
2005-09-03 271,613
2005-09-10 322,387
2005-09-17 346,204
2005-09-24 292,435
2005-10-01 313,847
2005-10-08 380,093
2005-10-15 303,158
2005-10-22 304,733
2005-10-29 294,376
2005-11-05 340,491
2005-11-12 283,564
2005-11-19 368,859
2005-11-26 290,730
2005-12-03 444,600
2005-12-10 391,961
2005-12-17 359,108
2005-12-24 433,397
2005-12-31 475,889
2006-01-07 555,114
2006-01-14 439,873
2006-01-21 317,926
2006-01-28 318,805
2006-02-04 321,527
2006-02-11 310,078
2006-02-18 269,571
2006-02-25 272,478
2006-03-04 301,867
2006-03-11 294,764
2006-03-18 269,237
2006-03-25 265,370
2006-04-01 253,985
2006-04-08 314,696
2006-04-15 268,472
2006-04-22 291,349
2006-04-29 279,715
2006-05-06 317,239
2006-05-13 288,972
2006-05-20 277,168
2006-05-27 292,714
2006-06-03 260,263
2006-06-10 285,892
2006-06-17 277,441
2006-06-24 287,503
2006-07-01 304,638
2006-07-08 418,363
2006-07-15 377,115
2006-07-22 288,875
2006-07-29 259,974
2006-08-05 275,430
2006-08-12 256,259
2006-08-19 252,357
2006-08-26 251,275
2006-09-02 259,539
2006-09-09 240,231
2006-09-16 267,036
2006-09-23 261,396
2006-09-30 249,288
2006-10-07 307,646
2006-10-14 271,863
2006-10-21 291,372
2006-10-28 301,079
2006-11-04 326,711
2006-11-11 286,151
2006-11-18 367,690
2006-11-25 323,509
2006-12-02 448,898
2006-12-09 384,123
2006-12-16 361,672
2006-12-23 425,357
2006-12-30 499,979
2007-01-06 506,059
2007-01-13 506,709
2007-01-20 367,583
2007-01-27 359,959
2007-02-03 339,018
2007-02-10 363,018
2007-02-17 305,945
2007-02-24 299,000
2007-03-03 320,194
2007-03-10 298,927
2007-03-17 277,187
2007-03-24 273,432
2007-03-31 268,218
2007-04-07 328,266
2007-04-14 317,917
2007-04-21 303,984
2007-04-28 267,672
2007-05-05 274,801
2007-05-12 258,516
2007-05-19 270,446
2007-05-26 273,397
2007-06-02 263,527
2007-06-09 302,368
2007-06-16 290,951
2007-06-23 292,583
2007-06-30 300,348
2007-07-07 417,554
2007-07-14 383,839
2007-07-21 298,366
2007-07-28 257,426
2007-08-04 270,563
2007-08-11 266,420
2007-08-18 257,573
2007-08-25 266,179
2007-09-01 257,454
2007-09-08 245,526
2007-09-15 261,971
2007-09-22 247,643
2007-09-29 255,431
2007-10-06 298,317
2007-10-13 306,519
2007-10-20 307,675
2007-10-27 303,357
2007-11-03 325,831
2007-11-10 351,760
2007-11-17 323,124
2007-11-24 324,047
2007-12-01 462,902
2007-12-08 423,130
2007-12-15 393,042
2007-12-22 456,280
2007-12-29 507,908
2008-01-05 522,700
2008-01-12 547,943
2008-01-19 415,397
2008-01-26 369,498
2008-02-02 380,234
2008-02-09 377,595
2008-02-16 325,886
2008-02-23 330,013
2008-03-01 345,287
2008-03-08 341,364
2008-03-15 335,909
2008-03-22 316,208
2008-03-29 342,189
2008-04-05 357,209
2008-04-12 370,960
2008-04-19 328,334
2008-04-26 337,854
2008-05-03 335,533
2008-05-10 325,479
2008-05-17 319,817
2008-05-24 326,627
2008-05-31 300,989
2008-06-07 373,033
2008-06-14 349,254
2008-06-21 358,158
2008-06-28 368,544
2008-07-05 401,672
2008-07-12 476,071
2008-07-19 403,607
2008-07-26 374,182
2008-08-02 381,887
2008-08-09 372,807
2008-08-16 342,164
2008-08-23 344,255
2008-08-30 360,485
2008-09-06 336,131
2008-09-13 381,720
2008-09-20 397,610
2008-09-27 392,121
2008-10-04 426,786
2008-10-11 454,100
2008-10-18 416,114
2008-10-25 449,429
2008-11-01 466,373
2008-11-08 539,812
2008-11-15 513,047
2008-11-22 609,128
2008-11-29 537,230
2008-12-06 760,481
2008-12-13 629,867
2008-12-20 719,691
2008-12-27 717,000
2009-01-03 731,958
2009-01-10 956,791
2009-01-17 763,987
2009-01-24 620,143
2009-01-31 682,176
2009-02-07 710,152
2009-02-14 619,951
2009-02-21 605,668
2009-02-28 645,827
2009-03-07 652,635
2009-03-14 601,192
2009-03-21 590,067
2009-03-28 599,299
2009-04-04 623,279
2009-04-11 610,522
2009-04-18 596,564
2009-04-25 583,457
2009-05-02 536,648
2009-05-09 570,412
2009-05-16 540,925
2009-05-23 538,311
2009-05-30 500,380
2009-06-06 581,092
2009-06-13 562,449
2009-06-20 572,425
2009-06-27 563,387
2009-07-04 585,963
2009-07-11 677,038
2009-07-18 590,730
2009-07-25 516,351
2009-08-01 470,988
2009-08-08 486,586
2009-08-15 461,780
2009-08-22 460,998
2009-08-29 460,525
2009-09-05 470,079
2009-09-12 414,557
2009-09-19 441,311
2009-09-26 449,620
2009-10-03 456,233
2009-10-10 513,852
2009-10-17 464,985
2009-10-24 499,374
2009-10-31 487,714
2009-11-07 537,230
2009-11-14 479,350
2009-11-21 547,022
2009-11-28 462,090
2009-12-05 673,097
2009-12-12 561,655
2009-12-19 571,378
2009-12-26 561,852
2010-01-02 651,215
2010-01-09 825,891
2010-01-16 659,173
2010-01-23 507,651
2010-01-30 538,617
2010-02-06 512,463
2010-02-13 482,078
2010-02-20 458,160
2010-02-27 474,662
2010-03-06 462,679
2010-03-13 439,061
2010-03-20 413,067
2010-03-27 412,710
2010-04-03 421,130
2010-04-10 514,136
2010-04-17 436,814
2010-04-24 429,196
2010-05-01 399,350
2010-05-08 414,327
2010-05-15 414,572
2010-05-22 410,778
2010-05-29 418,873
2010-06-05 398,864
2010-06-12 448,305
2010-06-19 427,080
2010-06-26 444,712
2010-07-03 470,366
2010-07-10 515,991
2010-07-17 502,065
2010-07-24 413,679
2010-07-31 402,140
2010-08-07 425,471
2010-08-14 405,484
2010-08-21 384,955
2010-08-28 383,135
2010-09-04 381,863
2010-09-11 341,791
2010-09-18 382,341
2010-09-25 372,551
2010-10-02 373,681
2010-10-09 462,667
2010-10-16 394,016
2010-10-23 408,489
2010-10-30 421,097
2010-11-06 452,657
2010-11-13 409,548
2010-11-20 464,817
2010-11-27 412,922
2010-12-04 585,711
2010-12-11 491,776
2010-12-18 495,548
2010-12-25 525,710
2011-01-01 578,904
2011-01-08 773,499
2011-01-15 549,688
2011-01-22 485,950
2011-01-29 464,775
2011-02-05 440,706
2011-02-12 424,400
2011-02-19 380,985
2011-02-26 353,797
2011-03-05 407,299
2011-03-12 371,721
2011-03-19 354,457
2011-03-26 357,457
2011-04-02 353,817
2011-04-09 448,029
2011-04-16 381,834
2011-04-23 387,867
2011-04-30 415,974
2011-05-07 397,737
2011-05-14 361,573
2011-05-21 376,632
2011-05-28 381,497
2011-06-04 366,816
2011-06-11 400,608
2011-06-18 394,286
2011-06-25 406,633
2011-07-02 425,640
2011-07-09 473,963
2011-07-16 470,086
2011-07-23 369,207
2011-07-30 341,103
2011-08-06 354,408
2011-08-13 346,014
2011-08-20 344,870
2011-08-27 336,761
2011-09-03 348,582
2011-09-10 328,868
2011-09-17 353,820
2011-09-24 328,073
2011-10-01 332,394
2011-10-08 405,906
2011-10-15 357,562
2011-10-22 377,156
2011-10-29 369,647
2011-11-05 402,532
2011-11-12 363,016
2011-11-19 440,157
2011-11-26 372,640
2011-12-03 528,793
2011-12-10 435,863
2011-12-17 421,103
2011-12-24 497,689
2011-12-31 540,057
2012-01-07 646,219
2012-01-14 525,422
2012-01-21 416,880
2012-01-28 422,287
2012-02-04 401,365
2012-02-11 365,014
2012-02-18 346,659
2012-02-25 334,242
2012-03-03 368,433
2012-03-10 340,102
2012-03-17 319,498
2012-03-24 323,373
2012-03-31 315,800
2012-04-07 390,064
2012-04-14 370,482
2012-04-21 370,632
2012-04-28 333,476
2012-05-05 341,080
2012-05-12 325,094
2012-05-19 330,427
2012-05-26 346,260
2012-06-02 324,385
2012-06-09 376,610
2012-06-16 364,548
2012-06-23 370,521
2012-06-30 369,826
2012-07-07 442,192
2012-07-14 455,260
2012-07-21 340,780
2012-07-28 312,931
2012-08-04 320,219
2012-08-11 317,680
2012-08-18 311,857
2012-08-25 312,542
2012-09-01 309,537
2012-09-08 299,729
2012-09-15 330,454
2012-09-22 303,685
2012-09-29 301,046
2012-10-06 329,925
2012-10-13 362,730
2012-10-20 345,227
2012-10-27 339,924
2012-11-03 361,823
2012-11-10 478,551
2012-11-17 403,636
2012-11-24 358,865
2012-12-01 500,163
2012-12-08 429,191
2012-12-15 401,431
2012-12-22 457,584
2012-12-29 490,126
2013-01-05 557,424
2013-01-12 558,047
2013-01-19 437,360
2013-01-26 369,567
2013-02-02 388,708
2013-02-09 361,759
2013-02-16 351,087
2013-02-23 310,512
2013-03-02 335,794
2013-03-09 317,661
2013-03-16 301,471
2013-03-23 316,133
2013-03-30 317,494
2013-04-06 356,935
2013-04-13 359,415
2013-04-20 326,264
2013-04-27 301,622
2013-05-04 301,602
2013-05-11 320,253
2013-05-18 303,357
2013-05-25 319,508
2013-06-01 294,608
2013-06-08 332,964
2013-06-15 336,970
2013-06-22 336,901
2013-06-29 335,424
2013-07-06 383,811
2013-07-13 410,974
2013-07-20 340,457
2013-07-27 281,692
2013-08-03 288,861
2013-08-10 282,756
2013-08-17 281,164
2013-08-24 279,803
2013-08-31 269,359
2013-09-07 229,648
2013-09-14 272,946
2013-09-21 255,087
2013-09-28 252,196
2013-10-05 335,937
2013-10-12 360,957
2013-10-19 312,037
2013-10-26 325,326
2013-11-02 331,867
2013-11-09 364,167
2013-11-16 327,053
2013-11-23 369,197
2013-11-30 321,896
2013-12-07 463,413
2013-12-14 414,613
2013-12-21 418,272
2013-12-28 452,664
2014-01-04 488,537
2014-01-11 534,966
2014-01-18 416,116
2014-01-25 357,806
2014-02-01 357,742
2014-02-08 360,338
2014-02-15 322,761
2014-02-22 312,665
2014-03-01 317,832
2014-03-08 302,311
2014-03-15 285,970
2014-03-22 274,072
2014-03-29 294,862
2014-04-05 299,162
2014-04-12 318,793
2014-04-19 299,182
2014-04-26 318,127
2014-05-03 288,748
2014-05-10 270,738
2014-05-17 287,398
2014-05-24 275,412
2014-05-31 264,133
2014-06-07 313,371
2014-06-14 301,195
2014-06-21 305,029
2014-06-28 305,791
2014-07-05 322,753
2014-07-12 370,559
2014-07-19 287,049
2014-07-26 257,625
2014-08-02 247,877
2014-08-09 269,468
2014-08-16 249,463
2014-08-23 249,006
2014-08-30 249,780
2014-09-06 234,755
2014-09-13 242,318
2014-09-20 239,780
2014-09-27 227,571
2014-10-04 257,545
2014-10-11 273,756
2014-10-18 256,166
2014-10-25 271,331
2014-11-01 266,921
2014-11-08 309,338
2014-11-15 286,115
2014-11-22 357,202
2014-11-29 294,389
2014-12-06 389,284
2014-12-13 327,827
2014-12-20 340,827
2014-12-27 389,757
2015-01-03 439,342
2015-01-10 529,685
2015-01-17 383,538
2015-01-24 281,885
2015-01-31 306,643
2015-02-07 324,158
2015-02-14 277,904
2015-02-21 280,639
2015-02-28 315,566
2015-03-07 277,925
2015-03-14 260,242
2015-03-21 248,032
2015-03-28 239,748
2015-04-04 253,533
2015-04-11 308,173
2015-04-18 279,797
2015-04-25 250,780
2015-05-02 236,421
2015-05-09 242,882
2015-05-16 243,612
2015-05-23 253,454
2015-05-30 230,676
2015-06-06 275,619
2015-06-13 258,764
2015-06-20 263,199
2015-06-27 274,646
2015-07-04 303,585
2015-07-11 344,471
2015-07-18 262,949
2015-07-25 230,314
2015-08-01 224,104
2015-08-08 239,326
2015-08-15 229,251
2015-08-22 226,649
2015-08-29 230,079
2015-09-05 232,507
2015-09-12 198,903
2015-09-19 219,342
2015-09-26 215,116
2015-10-03 227,176
2015-10-10 256,522
2015-10-17 232,860
2015-10-24 245,365
2015-10-31 258,440
2015-11-07 291,098
2015-11-14 264,816
2015-11-21 305,424
2015-11-28 262,628
2015-12-05 384,491
2015-12-12 313,276
2015-12-19 319,641
2015-12-26 346,542
2016-01-02 405,368
2016-01-09 502,904
2016-01-16 378,747
2016-01-23 295,936
2016-01-30 311,940
2016-02-06 290,796
2016-02-13 258,380
2016-02-20 248,870
2016-02-27 265,802
2016-03-05 247,628
2016-03-12 236,888
2016-03-19 230,882
2016-03-26 235,716
2016-04-02 245,035
2016-04-09 270,419
2016-04-16 242,400
2016-04-23 245,040
2016-04-30 243,392
2016-05-07 261,899
2016-05-14 244,869
2016-05-21 240,798
2016-05-28 246,740
2016-06-04 232,300
2016-06-11 266,277
2016-06-18 247,968
2016-06-25 263,662
2016-07-02 267,437
2016-07-09 298,673
2016-07-16 268,526
2016-07-23 231,925
2016-07-30 219,202
2016-08-06 231,542
2016-08-13 219,570
2016-08-20 217,011
2016-08-27 215,688
2016-09-03 217,715
2016-09-10 193,291
2016-09-17 205,649
2016-09-24 198,455
2016-10-01 200,456
2016-10-08 238,581
2016-10-15 233,633
2016-10-22 237,314
2016-10-29 245,751
2016-11-05 258,608
2016-11-12 223,770
2016-11-19 287,794
2016-11-26 249,774
2016-12-03 351,580
2016-12-10 305,268
2016-12-17 315,068
2016-12-24 343,213
2016-12-31 350,561
2017-01-07 414,742
2017-01-14 352,799
2017-01-21 284,030
2017-01-28 280,983
2017-02-04 259,713
2017-02-11 245,886
2017-02-18 239,322
2017-02-25 212,829
2017-03-04 243,959
2017-03-11 222,227
2017-03-18 224,693
2017-03-25 228,269
2017-04-01 208,347
2017-04-08 239,823
2017-04-15 225,864
2017-04-22 241,611
2017-04-29 210,955
2017-05-06 215,040
2017-05-13 206,905
2017-05-20 210,544
2017-05-27 232,138
2017-06-03 212,696
2017-06-10 234,652
2017-06-17 228,883
2017-06-24 239,635
2017-07-01 252,886
2017-07-08 284,329
2017-07-15 257,763
2017-07-22 220,455
2017-07-29 198,776
2017-08-05 211,924
2017-08-12 198,280
2017-08-19 195,130
2017-08-26 196,227
2017-09-02 250,627
2017-09-09 211,923
2017-09-16 212,313
2017-09-23 212,987
2017-09-30 204,180
2017-10-07 229,241
2017-10-14 205,592
2017-10-21 216,004
2017-10-28 215,977
2017-11-04 242,111
2017-11-11 236,654
2017-11-18 275,004
2017-11-25 224,851
2017-12-02 326,052
2017-12-09 282,055
2017-12-16 287,479
2017-12-23 325,180
2017-12-30 351,500
2018-01-06 403,930
2018-01-13 354,708
2018-01-20 260,432
2018-01-27 268,197
2018-02-03 243,422
2018-02-10 233,252
2018-02-17 212,609
2018-02-24 196,294
2018-03-03 225,893
2018-03-10 205,185
2018-03-17 198,649
2018-03-24 195,433
2018-03-31 201,057
2018-04-07 231,759
2018-04-14 226,090
2018-04-21 200,139
2018-04-28 186,451
2018-05-05 190,262
2018-05-12 195,214
2018-05-19 207,043
2018-05-26 202,846
2018-06-02 191,523
2018-06-09 217,289
2018-06-16 206,023
2018-06-23 222,766
2018-06-30 231,539
2018-07-07 264,869
2018-07-14 232,238
2018-07-21 201,288
2018-07-28 179,880
2018-08-04 185,174
2018-08-11 180,038
2018-08-18 173,331
2018-08-25 175,745
2018-09-01 173,607
2018-09-08 162,640
2018-09-15 173,624
2018-09-22 172,930
2018-09-29 171,816
2018-10-06 193,936
2018-10-13 190,501
2018-10-20 198,733
2018-10-27 198,530
2018-11-03 214,814
2018-11-10 235,981
2018-11-17 226,576
2018-11-24 218,658
2018-12-01 317,936
2018-12-08 261,525
2018-12-15 255,195
2018-12-22 291,581
2018-12-29 327,388
2019-01-05 350,681
2019-01-12 343,678
2019-01-19 269,369
2019-01-26 250,580
2019-02-02 254,263
2019-02-09 242,762
2019-02-16 210,679
2019-02-23 203,049
2019-03-02 220,540
2019-03-09 209,302
2019-03-16 194,335
2019-03-23 190,023
2019-03-30 183,775
2019-04-06 196,071
2019-04-13 196,364
2019-04-20 211,762
2019-04-27 204,755
2019-05-04 204,033
2019-05-11 188,264
2019-05-18 191,931
2019-05-25 198,194
2019-06-01 189,577
2019-06-08 220,186
2019-06-15 205,921
2019-06-22 225,819
2019-06-29 224,565
2019-07-06 231,995
2019-07-13 243,621
2019-07-20 196,382
2019-07-27 178,897
2019-08-03 179,879
2019-08-10 186,914
2019-08-17 171,386
2019-08-24 176,867
2019-08-31 179,516
2019-09-07 160,342
2019-09-14 173,134
2019-09-21 175,394
2019-09-28 172,968
2019-10-05 188,106
2019-10-12 201,677
2019-10-19 186,748
2019-10-26 198,733
2019-11-02 205,625
2019-11-09 238,996
2019-11-16 227,892
2019-11-23 252,428
2019-11-30 216,827
2019-12-07 317,866
2019-12-14 270,547
2019-12-21 287,243
2019-12-28 312,524
2020-01-04 335,480
2020-01-11 338,550
2020-01-18 282,088
2020-01-25 229,002
2020-02-01 224,664
2020-02-08 219,601
2020-02-15 209,336
2020-02-22 199,278
2020-02-29 216,982
2020-03-07 200,382
2020-03-14 251,416
2020-03-21 2,920,162
2020-03-28 6,015,821
2020-04-04 6,211,406
2020-04-11 4,965,046
2020-04-18 4,281,648
2020-04-25 3,515,439
2020-05-02 2,855,560
2020-05-09 2,614,093
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.

Note: Due to the scale of the chart and rapid increase in initial unemployment insurance (UI) claims, the initial UI claims for the last eight weeks appear to align vertically. These reports only include regular state unemployment insurance claims and do not include claims from the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program. Shaded areas denote recessions.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, May 14, 2020

Copy the code below to embed this chart on your website.

Some good news is that regular state UI claims have declined in each of the last five weeks. Though last week’s number is still close to three times the worst week of the Great Recession, the improvement is welcome. However, regular state UI claims do not include people who applied for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA), the federal program that extends unemployment compensation coverage to many workers who are out of work because of the coronavirus but are not eligible for regular UI—people like independent contractors, gig workers, and people who had to leave their job to take care of a child whose school closed. It took quite some time for the PUA programs to get set up in most states, but they are now largely operational. The Department of Labor (DOL) reports that 3.4 million people had had PUA claims processed by April 25, and another 2.6 million have filed initial PUA claims on top of that.

Last Friday, the monthly employment situation report showed that the U.S. labor market saw a net decline of 20.5 million jobs between mid-March and mid-April. (Note, that number is not just layoffs where people filed for UI—it also accounts for a drop in hires, job losses where people didn’t file for UI, quits, and worker deaths.) The monthly employment numbers are from a survey that is taken mid-month. Today’s weekly UI claims numbers show that things have further deteriorated—drastically—since mid-April. An additional roughly 9.0 million people have applied for regular UI and 2.6 million have applied for PUA since that time. The May jobs number is going to be grim. And of course, workers aren’t just losing their jobs. Our health care system ties health insurance to work, so millions of workers have likely already lost their employer-provided health insurance.

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As economic forecasts worsen, up to $1 trillion in federal aid to state and local governments could be needed by the end of 2021

Key takeaways:

  • Congress should prioritize federal aid to state and local governments in the next relief and recovery legislation.
  • New estimates show that the economic shock of the coronavirus could lead to a revenue shortfall of nearly $1 trillion by 2021 for state and local governments.
  • Unemployment is forecast to be quite elevated even by the end of 2021, and so federal aid should continue as long as economic conditions warrant and not be set by arbitrary timelines.

As the next round of legislative relief and recovery packages are debated, federal aid to state and local governments has emerged as a high priority. This aid is absolutely crucial for avoiding a deep and prolonged recession.

The revenue shortfall facing state and local governments stemming from the collapse in economic activity—driven by the shock of the coronavirus—could reach nearly $1 trillion by the end of 2021. And even at the end of 2021, recent economic projections indicate that unless more relief and recovery is passed, the unemployment rate could still sit at just under 10%. In short, all facets of relief and recovery—including substantial aid to state and local governments—could well be needed for a long time, and their continuation should be tied explicitly to economic conditions and not to arbitrary timelines.

Tim Bartik at the Upjohn Institute has released updated projections of the revenue shortfall facing state and local governments. His projections are transparent and are largely based on estimated parameters from publicly available academic research. Bartik finds that if the recent projections for the path of the unemployment rate estimated by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) come to pass, state and local governments will be facing a revenue shortfall of nearly $1 trillion by the end of 2021.*

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Updated state unemployment numbers: Large shares of the labor force have filed for unemployment in every state

The Department of Labor released the most recent unemployment insurance (UI) claims data yesterday, showing that another 2.8 million people filed for unemployment last week (not seasonally adjusted). In the past seven weeks, more than 30 million workers applied for UI benefits across the country, or nearly one in five workers.

Despite most states seeing a decline in UI claims filed relative to last week, six states saw increases in UI claims. Maine saw the largest percent increase in claims (111.1%) compared with the prior week, followed by Maryland (72.1%), New Mexico (38.9%), Oklahoma (30.0%), New Jersey (21.6%), and Connecticut (9.5%).

After California, Texas residents filed the second most UI claims last week, followed by Georgia. This comes after several states have allowed restaurants and similar businesses to reopen, including many in the South and Midwest, indicating that state policymakers are risking a greater outbreak with very little of the economic benefits they had expected.

Figure A and Table 1 below compare UI claims filed last week with the prior week and the pre-virus period, in both level and percent terms. It also shows the cumulative number of unemployment claims since March 7 and that number as a share of each state’s labor force. In three states, almost a third of the workforce filed an initial claim during the past two months: Kentucky (32.3%), Hawaii (31.7%), and Georgia (31.1%).

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The pandemic sparked more appreciation for teachers, but will it give them a voice in education and their working conditions?

This year’s National Teacher Appreciation Week is happening under the unprecedented hardships that the COVID-19 pandemic has imposed on us. The health emergency forced the closing of schools all over the country, sending over 55 million K-12 students and about four million teachers home for the remainder of the school year.

But amidst the pain so many are enduring is a bright spot: Some teachers feel the appreciation is deeper than ever before.

With so much at stakes in the aftermath of this crisis, this can be an opportunity to turn that appreciation into the fuel that will finally restore the prestige of the teaching profession and improve teachers’ working conditions.

Overnight, the pandemic imposed a radical switch to remote teaching and learning that many hoped would be temporary. We soon learned, however, the school closings would last indefinitely as the country coped with the most severe worldwide public health crisis of our lifetimes complete with dramatic economic consequences.

With the support from parents and communities, teachers and students are carrying on with their respective endeavors as well as they can. In watching them, we’re all reminded of what learning and teaching entails: the mysteries embedded in each of the subjects, the lectures, the assignments, the projects, the questions, among so many others. But we’ve also realized that teaching goes beyond these day-in-and-day-out activities in the countless moments when we saw teachers go beyond the call of duty.Read more

What to watch on jobs day: Job losses in April may set U.S. employment levels back 20 years

Key takeaways:

  • Job losses in the last two months likely set us back two decades.
  • Aggregate weekly work hours will continue to fall precipitously.
  • Don’t be misled by stronger-than-expected nominal wage growth.
  • The unemployment rate will exceed the high-water mark in the Great Recession. Black unemployment could hit 20% in April.
  • The employment-to-population ratio, or the share of the population with a job, will drop sharply.

On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will release the latest monthly employment situation report for April and, based on the weekly numbers of workers who’ve applied for unemployment insurance, the labor market losses will be enormous. Last month’s report was just the tip of the iceberg of the labor market devastation experienced across the country over the last several weeks. By the reference week for the April report, an astounding 24.4 million workers had applied for claims. At the same time, millions more have been unsuccessful at filing claims either because they couldn’t get through or found the process too difficult.

Workers have been laid off, furloughed, or have needed to leave their jobs for COVID-19-related reasons. Because of the uncertainty in how many workers have lost their jobs and how they will be counted in the latest statistics—and uncertainty about how many workers have not been hired because job openings have dried up in this crisis—there are a wide range of projections for what we will see on Friday.

Here, I’m going to unpack a few of the key statistics and speculate on just how deep and wide-reaching this recession already is for workers across the economy.

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Nearly one in five workers applied for state unemployment insurance benefits in the last seven weeks: Congress must act to mitigate harm from unprecedented joblessness

A previously unimaginable number of workers have applied for state unemployment insurance (UI) benefits as a result of the coronavirus shock. In the last seven weeks alone, more than 30 million workers have applied for unemployment compensation. That is nearly one in five workers. And it is nearly five times the worst seven-week stretch of the Great Recession.

These figures do not include people who applied for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA), the new federal program that extends unemployment compensation coverage to many workers who are not eligible for regular UI but are nevertheless out of work as a result of the virus—people like independent contractors, gig workers, and people who had to leave their job to take care of a child whose school closed. It took a while for the PUA programs to get set up, but they are now operational in many states. With today’s data release, the Department of Labor (DOL) began providing PUA claims numbers, reporting that nearly a million people had had PUA claims processed by April 18, and at least another 1.4 million had filed PUA claims since that time.

It is worth noting that the DOL reports that 33.5 million workers applied for regular state unemployment compensation during the last seven weeks on a “seasonally adjusted” basis, compared with 30.7 million on an unadjusted basis. Seasonal adjustments are usually helpful—they are used to even out seasonal changes in claims that have nothing to do with the underlying strength or weakness of the labor market, typically providing a clearer picture of underlying trends. However, the way DOL does seasonal adjustments is distortionary at a time like this, so I focus on unadjusted numbers here.

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Congress must include worker protections in the next coronavirus relief bill: We need an Essential Workers Bill of Rights

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, Congress has now passed four separate relief and recovery measures allocating trillions of dollars in aid, but none have provided meaningful protections to working people. Workers continue to be required to work without protective gear. Sick workers continue to lack access to paid sick leave. And when workers try and speak up for themselves and each other, they are fired. Workers are dying as a result.

Even a global pandemic has not been enough for policymakers to place the needs of working people ahead of corporate interests. As Congress turns its attention to another relief and recovery package, it must prioritize policies and investments that help working families mitigate the economic and public health disaster they are experiencing.

In the last six weeks, nearly 28 million workers have applied for unemployment insurance (UI). That is more than one in six workers and over five times the worst period of the Great Recession. All else equal, this level of job loss would translate into an unemployment rate of 20.5%. Further, 12.7 million workers have likely lost their employer-provided health insurance since the beginning of the pandemic.

Congress must act and pass legislation that is responsive to the magnitude of this crisis and direct assistance to the tens of millions of working families most impacted by the public health and economic emergencies.

The Essential Workers Bill of Rights, introduced by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), would provide front-line workers—including nurses, grocery and drug store workers, janitors, public transit workers, child care workers, and postal workers—the protections they need while providing essential services during the coronavirus pandemic. The following are key worker protections that should be included in the next coronavirus relief bill.

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The extra $600 in unemployment insurance has been the best response yet to the economic shock of the coronavirus and should be extended

The CARES Act, the $2 trillion-plus package to provide economic relief and recovery from the coronavirus shock in early April was, for many reasons, deeply imperfect. But the modifications the CARES Act made to the nation’s unemployment insurance (UI) system are an utterly crucial lifeline for tens of millions of American workers. Besides temporarily expanding the eligibility criteria for who qualifies for unemployment benefits through the end of the year and providing an additional 13 weeks of state UI benefits, the CARES Act also provided an extra $600 per week in UI payments through the end of July.

This $600 top-up has been fiercely criticized by some since the Act passed—e.g., Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) stated that it would be extended past July only “over our dead bodies”—but the criticism is either ill-informed or in bad faith. The extra $600 has been by far the most effective part our economic policy response to the coronavirus shock. It is likely improving—not degrading—labor market efficiency, and we should build on this and make the nation’s unemployment insurance system well-resourced and far more generous even in normal times.

The history of how a flat $600 in additional UI benefits was agreed upon by policymakers is straightforward, if depressing. In normal times, these benefits are stingy, typically replacing between one-third and one-half of a typical worker’s weekly wage. For decades, too many economists and policymakers have labored under a number of wrong preconceptions about the labor market, and one of the most damaging was that decent jobs were plentiful and easy to get, and the only thing keeping potential workers out of these jobs for any stretch of time was workers’ own motivation, which could be sapped if benefits were too generous. It was the old and dumb idea that the U.S. social safety net—despite being by far the stingiest in the advanced world—had become a too-comfortable “hammock.” (For what it’s worth, the evidence from the aftermath of the Great Recession reveals that extended UI benefits had little or no effect on whether a worker found a job—meaning it wasn’t UI benefits that were keeping workers out of work—it was a lack of demand for workers.)

The economic shock of the coronavirus was an event so obviously unrelated to the motivations of individual workers that policymakers were willing to substantially (if temporarily) increase the generosity of unemployment benefits. Our preference would have been for a 100% replacement rate up to a quite generous maximum benefit. But decades of disinvestment in the administrative capacity of state UI offices left them incapable of flexibly calculating each new applicant’s benefit amount with a 100% replacement rate. (Case in point: most offices are still using the 1970s-era programming language COBOL to run their computers). State offices are capable of administering a flat-rate increase, however. So, policymakers in Congress came up with a smart and compassionate second-best solution of picking a flat-rate boost to benefits that would leave the average worker (and most workers overall) with 100% of their pre-crisis earnings.

But the necessity of the one-size-fits-all approach means that workers who earned less than the average worker before the crisis will receive benefits that are somewhat higher than 100% of their previous wage. Many conservatives claim this is somehow an economic disaster. They’re wrong—it’s actually great.

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Thank you, D.C. Board of Elections, for making voting easier: I dedicate my favorite rap song to you

As I awoke today, preparing myself for another workday by listening to music, one of my favorite songs “Foldin Clothes” by J. Cole had me “feeling like best version of me so happy,” just one of the great lyrics from the rap song.

Why was I so happy? I got an email from the D.C. Board of Elections describing voting procedures that were much easier than in my home state of Louisiana, which recently passed an election plan that limits who has access to mail-in ballots. The email invited me, a new resident to Washington, to request a mail-in ballot for the 2020 election cycle which could be done one of six ways: online, email, fax, mail, phone, or in person.

Anyone who knows me knows I love to talk about voting. My dissertation examined the history of voting in America, including how the ghosts of lynchings still suppress the black vote in this country today. With all that’s going on to suppress minorities from voting—most recently the outrage of the Supreme Court’s refusal to extend the deadline for mail-in voting in Wisconsin in the middle of the pandemic—it’s been exhausting to keep beating the voting rights drum.

Every time I mention the importance of updating our voting methods, I am met with opposition. “You want people to vote by mail?! ONLINE?! There is no way it can be done securely,” many say. Regardless of the evidence I’ve provided that it has already been done securely in several states, people still resist the idea of adding more voting options nationally.

Well, turns out it’s not that difficult after all. D.C., which has had its own voting issues, is trying to make the process easier.

So, I’m dedicating “Foldin Clothes” to the D.C. elections leadership because they’re “doing the right thing.” I was able to download the Vote 4 DC app and it “felt so much better than doing the wrong thing” of not using the latest technology to make voting more accessible. To my surprise, this app allowed me to request a mail-in-ballot in less than two minutes! Having several options to request a ballot, including online options, “saved me some time and alleviated stress from my mind” of having to vote in person during a pandemic.

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Updated state unemployment numbers: More than a quarter of the workforce has filed for unemployment in six states

Another 3.5 million U.S. workers filed for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits last week, according to the Department of Labor’s most recent data released this morning (not seasonally adjusted). In the past six weeks, nearly 28 million, or one in six, workers applied for UI benefits across the country.

Despite most states seeing a decline in UI claims filed relative to last week, eight states continued to see increases in UI claims. Last week, Washington saw the largest percent increase in claims (74.6%) compared with the prior week, followed by Oregon (25.6%) and Nevada (14.0%).

Figure A and Table 1 allow you to compare state UI claims filed last week with the prior week and the pre-virus period, in both level and percent terms. It also shows the cumulative number of unemployment claims since March 7 and that number as a share of each state’s labor force.

Figure A

New and cumulative jobless claims by state: Unemployment insurance (UI) claims filed during the week ending April 25, change in claims , and total claims as share of state labor force

State Initial claims filed % change from the prior week Level change from the prior week % change from pre-virus period Level change from pre-virus period Sum of initial claims for the seven weeks ending April 25 Sum of initial claims as a share of labor force
Alabama 64,170 -3.4% -2,262 2,944% 62,062 408,551 18.2%
Alaska 11,187 -8.3% -1,014 1,225% 10,343 72,726 21.1%
Arizona 52,098 -28.1% -20,359 1,487% 48,815 477,646 13.2%
Arkansas 16,745 -34.1% -8,659 1,032% 15,266 178,277 13.0%
California 328,042 -37.9% -200,318 703% 287,170 3,732,952 19.1%
Colorado 38,367 -43.3% -29,272 1,915% 36,463 340,837 10.7%
Connecticut 33,037 -67.9% -69,771 1,180% 30,456 265,126 13.7%
Delaware 7,754 -17.9% -1,692 1,258% 7,183 79,694 16.3%
Washington D.C. 8,158 -5.6% -481 1,695% 7,704 73,644 17.8%
Florida 432,465 -14.6% -74,205 8,435% 427,398 1,598,699 15.3%
Georgia 264,818 7.2% 17,815 4,847% 259,465 1,372,939 26.6%
Hawaii 22,615 -15.0% -3,976 1,891% 21,479 196,024 29.3%
Idaho 8,268 -36.5% -4,755 651% 7,167 118,284 13.3%
Illinois 81,245 -21.1% -21,691 765% 71,854 829,787 13.0%
Indiana 57,397 -21.1% -15,359 2,188% 54,889 572,443 16.9%
Iowa 28,827 7.2% 1,926 1,136% 26,494 262,958 15.0%
Kansas 28,054 -8.3% -2,542 1,639% 26,441 217,477 14.5%
Kentucky 90,824 -12.7% -13,157 3,530% 88,322 593,614 28.5%
Louisiana 66,167 -28.0% -25,756 3,824% 64,481 510,457 24.2%
Maine 7,478 -36.5% -4,291 864% 6,702 109,508 15.8%
Maryland 36,471 -24.8% -12,024 1,221% 33,711 389,521 11.9%
Massachusetts 70,714 -12.7% -10,255 1,067% 64,656 732,467 19.1%
Michigan 81,312 -40.5% -55,395 1,372% 75,788 1,266,459 25.6%
Minnesota 53,561 -28.4% -21,268 1,422% 50,042 560,661 18.0%
Mississippi 35,843 -2.9% -1,070 4,230% 35,015 203,037 15.9%
Missouri 52,403 -12.1% -7,199 1,625% 49,365 456,142 14.7%
Montana 6,619 -40.8% -4,557 747% 5,838 90,243 16.8%
Nebraska 8,197 -32.9% -4,025 1,513% 7,689 104,972 10.1%
Nevada 45,043 14.0% 5,547 1,852% 42,736 393,061 25.2%
New Hampshire 14,347 -29.7% -6,067 2,443% 13,783 160,635 20.6%
New Jersey 71,017 -49.3% -69,122 768% 62,838 898,947 19.7%
New Mexico 13,712 0.7% 91 1,836% 13,004 119,331 12.4%
New York 218,912 6.7% 13,728 1,088% 200,482 1,624,114 17.0%
North Carolina 97,232 -8.5% -9,034 3,680% 94,660 750,836 14.7%
North Dakota 6,996 -13.3% -1,069 1,568% 6,577 57,583 14.2%
Ohio 90,760 -17.4% -19,070 1,143% 83,460 1,063,741 18.2%
Oklahoma 42,577 -8.8% -4,119 2,661% 41,035 275,794 15.0%
Oregon 46,722 25.6% 9,513 1,076% 42,750 283,121 13.4%
Pennsylvania 131,282 -32.5% -63,312 940% 118,661 1,635,951 24.9%
Rhode Island 13,138 -27.3% -4,940 1,070% 12,015 146,723 26.3%
South Carolina 65,159 -12.4% -9,203 3,251% 63,215 415,635 17.4%
South Dakota 5,389 1.8% 94 2,857% 5,207 33,933 7.3%
Tennessee 43,792 -34.9% -23,434 2,078% 41,782 428,370 12.7%
Texas 254,199 -9.5% -26,562 1,860% 241,228 1,572,171 11.1%
Utah 11,830 -39.8% -7,819 1,082% 10,829 138,561 8.5%
Vermont 4,971 -24.7% -1,627 708% 4,356 56,781 16.7%
Virginia 74,043 -10.5% -8,686 2,703% 71,402 570,240 12.8%
Washington 145,757 74.6% 62,282 2,301% 139,687 871,937 22.0%
West Virginia 29,576 -36.7% -17,179 2,517% 28,446 124,693 15.5%
Wisconsin 49,910 -10.7% -5,973 783% 44,256 447,771 14.4%
Wyoming 2,886 -34.1% -1,495 480% 2,388 30,170 10.3%

Notes: Initial claims for the week ending April 25 reflect advance state claims, not seasonally adjusted. For comparisons with the “pre-virus period,” we use a four-week average of initial claims for the weeks ending February 15–March 7, 2020. For comparisons to the size of the labor force, we use February 2020 levels.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, April 30, 2020

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12.7 million workers have likely lost employer-provided health insurance since the coronavirus shock began

These estimates were updated on May 14, 2020. See the updated estimates.

Since the economic fallout of the coronavirus shock began in early March, the number of workers laid-off or furloughed—as measured by new claims for unemployment insurance (UI)—has skyrocketed. We have used data from states that track UI claims by industry to get a rough estimate of how many workers are at high risk of losing their employer-provided health insurance (EPHI) over this as well.

The methodology is described in this blog post, and the underlying data (which has begun to include more and more states tracking UI claims by industry) can be found here. Table 1 below shows UI claims by industry across states that collect this data, and also shows employer-provided health insurance (EPHI) coverage rates in those industries in 2018. As of April 30, just under 28 million workers had been laid off or furloughed since early March. We find that this translates into likely EPHI losses of 12.7 million.

Because the United States is unique among rich countries in tying health insurance benefits to employment, many of the newly unemployed will suddenly face prohibitively costly insurance options. A comprehensive policy solution would be to extend Medicare and Medicaid to all those suffering job losses during the pandemic period, with the federal government funding this expansion. It has been proposed that the federal government pay for all of COBRA coverage so that workers who are laid off or furloughed may continue their employer-provided coverage. While this policy proposal will help many workers continue coverage, in some states it will not help workers from small businesses with fewer than 20 employees, who are not eligible for COBRA.

The linkage between specific jobs and the availability of health insurance is a prime source of inefficiency and inequity in the U.S. health system. It is especially terrifying for workers to lose their health insurance as a result of, and during, an ongoing pandemic.

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Nearly 28 million workers applied for unemployment insurance benefits in the last six weeks: Congress must act to mitigate harm from unprecedented joblessness

The number of workers applying for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits has risen to never-before-seen levels as a result of the coronavirus shock. In the last six weeks, nearly 28 million workers have applied for unemployment compensation. That is more than one in six workers, and over five times the worst period of the Great Recession.

I should note that the Department of Labor (DOL) reports that 30.3 million workers applied for UI during the last six weeks on a “seasonally adjusted” basis, compared with 27.9 million on an unadjusted basis. Seasonal adjustments are typically helpful—they are used to even out seasonal changes in claims that have nothing to do with the underlying strength or weakness of the labor market, providing a clearer picture of underlying trends. However, the way DOL does seasonal adjustments is distortionary at a time like this, so I focus on unadjusted numbers here.

All else equal, job loss of the magnitude reflected in the UI claims of the last six weeks would translate into an unemployment rate of 20.5%. It’s worth remembering that unemployment hits different racial groups differently as a result of things like occupational segregation, differences in access to educational credentials, discrimination, and other labor market disparities related to race. In our economy, in good times and bad, the white unemployment rate tends to be about 0.9 times the overall unemployment rate, and the black unemployment rate tends to be about 1.8 times the overall unemployment rate. That means that an overall unemployment rate of 20.5% would translate into a white unemployment rate of 18.4% and a black unemployment rate of 36.8%.

However, the official unemployment rates, when they are released, will likely not reflect all coronavirus-related layoffs. This is due to the fact that jobless workers are only counted as unemployed if they are available to work and actively seeking work. That means many workers who lose their job as a result of the virus will be counted as dropping out of the labor force instead of as unemployed, because they are unable to search for work due to the lockdown, or because they are not available to work because they are, for example, caring for children whose day care has closed. March data suggest that roughly half of workers who are out of work as a result of the virus will be counted as unemployed, and half are being counted as dropping out of the labor force.

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Unemployment filing failures: New survey confirms that millions of jobless were unable to file an unemployment insurance claim

Millions of the newly jobless are going without benefits as the unemployment system buckles under the weight of new claims, according to our new national survey, conducted in mid-April.

For every 10 people who said they successfully filed for unemployment benefits during the previous four weeks:

  • Three to four additional people tried to apply but could not get through the system to make a claim.
  • Two additional people did not try to apply because it was too difficult to do so.

These findings imply the official count of unemployment insurance claims likely drastically understates the extent of employment reductions and the need for economic relief during the coronavirus crisis. To quantify the undercount, we look at the 21.5 million workers who filed for unemployment benefits from March 22 to April 18. Our results suggest:

  • An additional 7.8 to 12.2 million people could have filed for benefits had the process been easier.
  • After accounting for these workers—who applied but could not get through or did not try because of the difficult process—about half of potential UI applicants are actually receiving benefits.

When we extrapolate our survey findings to the full five weeks of UI claims since March 15, we estimate that an additional 8.9–13.9 million people could have filed for benefits had the process been easier.

These findings on the millions of frustrated filers and the UI system’s low payment rate highlight the need for policies to improve rather than hinder the UI application process. At a minimum, states should presume everyone is eligible and immediately pay benefits, only verifying eligibility and reviewing claims after the unprecedented wave of claims slows down.

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The next coronavirus relief package should provide aid to state and local governments, protect employed and unemployed workers, and invest in our democracy

Key takeaways:

  • Congress has passed a series of bills to mitigate the harm of the coronavirus. However, they haven’t been enough to help working people. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that, without additional relief, the unemployment rate will average 16% in the third quarter of 2020 and 10.1% in 2021.
  • The next recovery and relief bill should include $500 billion in aid to state and local governments, make additional investments in unemployment compensation, protect workers’ paychecks, include worker protections, invest in our democracy, and more.

In response to the coronavirus, Congress has passed a series of bills allocating more than $2 trillion to relief and recovery programs. However, these measures have been insufficient in scope and magnitude to address the severity of the economic and public health crisis we are experiencing. Further, lawmakers have failed to include key provisions that would address the needs of working families in this crisis. As a result of these policy missteps, the relief and recovery measures have not done nearly enough to mitigate the level of pain working people are experiencing or to ensure that the economy can get back on track after the shutdown period is over. It is critical that Congress correct its failures in future relief packages. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that without additional relief, the unemployment rate will average 16% in the third quarter of this year. As a point of comparison, the highest the unemployment rate reached in the Great Recession was 10%, and it reached that level for only one month. CBO projects that without additional relief, the unemployment rate will average 10.1% for the entire calendar year 2021.

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Trump executive order to suspend immigration would reduce green cards by nearly one-third if extended for a full year

President Trump’s April 22 executive order to “suspend immigration” has the potential to reduce the number of migrants who can obtain green cards, i.e., become lawful permanent residents (LPRs), by hundreds of thousands if it remains in place for a substantial period of time beyond its initial 60-day duration.

Table 1 lists the categories of green cards that are affected by Trump’s executive order, along with the number of green cards that were issued in 2019 in each of those categories to applicants who were “new arrivals,” meaning they applied for their green cards from abroad. (The executive order does not suspend green cards for applicants who already reside in the United States.)

As Table 1 shows, there were one million total green cards issued during all of 2019, and 316,000 green cards issued under the categories suspended by Trump’s new executive order. The executive order is initially valid for 60 days (two months); a 60-day suspension of these categories would result in an estimated reduction of 52,600 green cards, or a reduction of 5.1% of all green cards relative to the total number issued in 2019.

However, it is impossible to know whether the executive order will remain in place for just two months, multiple years, or somewhere in between. Each additional 60 days would reduce the number by an additional 52,600, or an additional 5.1% of the annual green card total. If the executive order remains in force for one full year, it would result in a reduction of 316,000 green cards, or 31%, nearly one-third, of the one million green cards issued in 2019.

Table 1

Green cards would fall by 31% under Trump’s executive order: Number of people applying from abroad who became U.S. lawful permanent residents in 2019 in the categories suspended by Trump’s April 2020 executive order

Immigrant class of admission, new arrivals only Number in 2019
Immediate relatives of U.S. citizens
Parents 66,782
Family-sponsored preferences
First: Unmarried sons/daughters of U.S. citizens and their children 20,866
Second: Spouses, children, and unmarried sons/daughters of alien residents; children of spouses of alien residents 85,089
Third: Married sons/daughters of U.S. citizens and their spouses and children 22,874
Fourth: Brothers/sisters of U.S. citizens (at least 21 years of age) and their spouses and children 56,083
Employment-based preferences
First: Priority workers, and their spouses and children 2,238
Second: Professionals with advanced degrees or aliens of exceptional ability, and their spouses and children 3,432
Third: Skilled workers, professionals, and unskilled workers, and their spouses and children 13,522
Fourth: Certain special immigrants, and their spouses and children 2,080
Diversity Immigrant Visa program 42,437
Children born abroad to alien residents 59
Other 356
Total in suspended categories 315,818
Total green cards issued, all categories 1,030,990
Suspended categories as a percentage of total green cards 31%

Notes: New arrivals represents applicants for lawful permanent resident status who are residing outside of the United States, usually in the country of origin. “Other” category primarily consists of those admitted under special legislation.

Source: Author’s analysis of U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Legal Immigration and Adjustment of Status Report Fiscal Year 2019, Quarter 4, Table 1B.

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New state unemployment numbers show workers continue to file unemployment claims in daunting numbers

Correction: This blog post was updated on 4/24/20 with the correct data in Figure A and Table 1. The figure and table initially had the wrong data for the percent change from the previous week. We regret the error. 

The Department of Labor released the most recent unemployment insurance (UI) claims data this morning, which shows that another 4.3 million people filed for UI benefits last week (not seasonally adjusted). More people filed for UI in the last week alone than during the worst five-week stretch of the Great Recession. In the past five weeks, more than 24 million workers have applied for UI benefits across the country.

Last week, Connecticut (102,757), Florida (505,137), and West Virginia (46,251) experienced their highest level of initial UI claims filings ever, each seeing the number of claims approximately triple over the week. Last week, Florida saw the largest percent increase in claims (9,869%) relative to the pre-virus period of any state. Florida residents also filed the second most UI claims last week, followed by Texas and Georgia.

Figure A compares UI claims filed last week with filings in the pre-virus period, showing that all states, especially many in the South, continue to struggle. Eight of the 10 states that had the highest percent change in initial UI claims relative to the pre-virus period are in the South: Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, and West Virginia.

Figure A

Initial unemployment insurance claims filed during the week ending April 18, by state

State Initial claims filed Percent change from the prior week Level change from the prior week Percent change from pre-virus period Level change from pre-virus period Sum of initial claims for the six weeks ending April 18
Alabama 65,431 -14.3% -11,083 3,004% 63,323 344,381
Alaska 13,027 1.6% 194 1,443% 12,183 61,539
Arizona 71,843 -26.5% -26,074 2,088% 68,560 425,548
Arkansas 24,236 -28.7% -10,225 1,538% 22,757 161,532
California 533,568 -19.4% -127,112 1,205% 492,696 3,404,910
Colorado 68,667 -35.3% -36,933 3,506% 66,763 302,470
Connecticut 102,757 201.9% 68,758 3,881% 100,176 232,089
Delaware 9,294 -28.8% -3,812 1,528% 8,723 71,940
Washington D.C. 8,591 -13.4% -1,335 1,790% 8,137 65,486
Florida 505,137 180.8% 326,251 9,869% 500,070 1,166,234
Georgia 243,677 -22.7% -72,578 4,452% 238,324 1,108,121
Hawaii 26,477 -23.4% -8,126 2,231% 25,341 173,409
Idaho 12,456 -29.7% -5,508 1,031% 11,355 110,016
Illinois 102,736 -27.1% -38,224 994% 93,345 748,542
Indiana 75,483 -36.0% -40,999 2,909% 72,975 515,046
Iowa 27,912 -38.7% -16,988 1,097% 25,579 234,131
Kansas 31,920 2.4% 723 1,879% 30,307 189,423
Kentucky 103,548 -10.6% -12,296 4,039% 101,046 502,790
Louisiana 92,039 15.4% 12,270 5,359% 90,353 444,290
Maine 11,446 -12.7% -1,719 1,375% 10,670 102,030
Maryland 46,676 -22.9% -14,409 1,591% 43,916 353,050
Massachusetts 80,345 -22.0% -22,844 1,226% 74,287 661,753
Michigan 134,119 -38.5% -85,500 2,328% 128,595 1,185,147
Minnesota 74,873 -19.7% -18,304 2,027% 71,354 507,100
Mississippi 35,843 -19.3% -8,835 4,230% 35,015 167,194
Missouri 52,678 -41.6% -42,524 1,634% 49,640 403,739
Montana 10,509 -21.7% -3,099 1,245% 9,728 83,624
Nebraska 12,340 -24.9% -4,057 2,328% 11,832 96,775
Nevada 40,909 -32.6% -19,145 1,673% 38,602 348,018
New Hampshire 19,110 -19.2% -4,859 3,287% 18,546 146,288
New Jersey 139,277 -0.9% -1,281 1,603% 131,098 827,930
New Mexico 13,338 -28.5% -5,422 1,783% 12,630 105,619
New York 204,716 -48.0% -189,517 1,011% 186,286 1,405,202
North Carolina 104,515 -24.2% -33,889 3,964% 101,943 653,604
North Dakota 9,042 -15.1% -1,437 2,055% 8,623 50,587
Ohio 108,801 -31.1% -49,487 1,390% 101,501 972,981
Oklahoma 40,297 -14.3% -7,785 2,513% 38,755 233,217
Oregon 35,101 -31.8% -17,372 784% 31,129 236,399
Pennsylvania 198,081 -17.1% -40,274 1,469% 185,460 1,504,669
Rhode Island 17,578 -22.4% -5,031 1,466% 16,455 132,985
South Carolina 73,116 -16.6% -14,785 3,660% 71,172 350,476
South Dakota 5,128 -16.7% -1,064 2,714% 4,946 28,544
Tennessee 68,968 -6.5% -4,661 3,331% 66,958 384,578
Texas 280,406 2.4% 6,504 2,062% 267,435 1,317,972
Utah 19,751 -19.8% -4,866 1,873% 18,750 126,731
Vermont 6,434 -31.7% -3,064 945% 5,819 51,810
Virginia 84,387 -20.9% -21,890 3,095% 81,746 496,197
Washington 89,105 -42.2% -60,980 1,368% 83,035 726,180
West Virginia 46,251 212.9% 31,811 3,993% 45,121 95,117
Wisconsin 55,886 -20.2% -14,117 888% 50,232 397,861
Wyoming 3,321 -24.4% -1,413 567% 2,823 27,284

Notes: Initial claims for the week ending April 18 reflect advance state claims, not seasonally adjusted. For comparisons with the “pre-virus period,” we use a four-week average of initial claims for the weeks ending February 15–March 7, 2020.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, April 23, 2020

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In the last five weeks, more than 24 million workers applied for unemployment insurance benefits

In the last five weeks, the number of workers applying for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits has skyrocketed to well over 20 times what it was in the pre-coronavirus period, and over five times the worst five-week stretch of the Great Recession. For comparison, in the period before the coronavirus hit, just over a million workers would apply for UI in a typical five-week span, and in the worst five-week stretch of the Great Recession, it was less than four million. In the last five weeks, it was more than 24 million. That means more than one in seven workers applied for UI. (It should be noted that using seasonally adjusted numbers, the Department of Labor [DOL] reports that 26.5 million workers applied for UI during the last five weeks, and using unadjusted numbers, they report that 24.4 million workers applied for benefits. I focus on the unadjusted numbers because, while seasonal adjustments are typically helpful—they are used to even out seasonal changes in claims that have nothing to do with the underlying strength or weakness of the labor market—the way DOL does seasonal adjustments is somewhat distortionary at a time like this).

Figure A

Weekly initial unemployment insurance claims: Not seasonally adjusted, 1967–present

Week ending Initial claims
1967-01-07 346,000
1967-01-14 334,000
1967-01-21 277,000
1967-01-28 252,000
1967-02-04 274,000
1967-02-11 276,000
1967-02-18 247,000
1967-02-25 248,000
1967-03-04 326,000
1967-03-11 240,000
1967-03-18 225,000
1967-03-25 215,000
1967-04-01 223,000
1967-04-08 251,000
1967-04-15 289,000
1967-04-22 218,000
1967-04-29 216,000
1967-05-06 221,000
1967-05-13 188,000
1967-05-20 177,000
1967-05-27 170,000
1967-06-03 175,000
1967-06-10 188,000
1967-06-17 176,000
1967-06-24 178,000
1967-07-01 206,000
1967-07-08 322,000
1967-07-15 309,000
1967-07-22 282,000
1967-07-29 243,000
1967-08-05 250,000
1967-08-12 193,000
1967-08-19 174,000
1967-08-26 160,000
1967-09-02 163,000
1967-09-09 156,000
1967-09-16 165,000
1967-09-23 155,000
1967-09-30 154,000
1967-10-07 195,000
1967-10-14 159,000
1967-10-21 181,000
1967-10-28 174,000
1967-11-04 204,000
1967-11-11 201,000
1967-11-18 209,000
1967-11-25 200,000
1967-12-02 228,000
1967-12-09 258,000
1967-12-16 241,000
1967-12-23 289,000
1967-12-30 332,000
1968-01-06 357,000
1968-01-13 373,000
1968-01-20 293,000
1968-01-27 242,000
1968-02-03 308,000
1968-02-10 257,000
1968-02-17 214,000
1968-02-24 199,000
1968-03-02 198,000
1968-03-09 208,000
1968-03-16 179,000
1968-03-23 175,000
1968-03-30 165,000
1968-04-06 184,000
1968-04-13 167,000
1968-04-20 165,000
1968-04-27 216,000
1968-05-04 180,000
1968-05-11 164,000
1968-05-18 156,000
1968-05-25 148,000
1968-06-01 139,000
1968-06-08 149,000
1968-06-15 154,000
1968-06-22 152,000
1968-06-29 173,000
1968-07-06 266,000
1968-07-13 242,000
1968-07-20 216,000
1968-07-27 238,000
1968-08-03 235,000
1968-08-10 222,000
1968-08-17 160,000
1968-08-24 148,000
1968-08-31 139,000
1968-09-07 135,000
1968-09-14 141,000
1968-09-21 142,000
1968-09-28 143,000
1968-10-05 153,000
1968-10-12 151,000
1968-10-19 151,000
1968-10-26 152,000
1968-11-02 161,000
1968-11-09 174,000
1968-11-16 196,000
1968-11-23 211,000
1968-11-30 180,000
1968-12-07 223,000
1968-12-14 233,000
1968-12-21 243,000
1968-12-28 333,000
1969-01-04 290,000
1969-01-11 337,000
1969-01-18 265,000
1969-01-25 236,000
1969-02-01 250,000
1969-02-08 248,000
1969-02-15 219,000
1969-02-22 199,000
1969-03-01 206,000
1969-03-08 195,000
1969-03-15 179,000
1969-03-22 158,000
1969-03-29 157,000
1969-04-05 170,000
1969-04-12 187,000
1969-04-19 168,000
1969-04-26 151,000
1969-05-03 150,000
1969-05-10 157,000
1969-05-17 141,000
1969-05-24 138,000
1969-05-31 135,000
1969-06-07 148,000
1969-06-14 145,000
1969-06-21 155,000
1969-06-28 177,000
1969-07-05 267,000
1969-07-12 271,000
1969-07-19 246,000
1969-07-26 221,000
1969-08-02 223,000
1969-08-09 210,000
1969-08-16 168,000
1969-08-23 154,000
1969-08-30 144,000
1969-09-06 133,000
1969-09-13 149,000
1969-09-20 147,000
1969-09-27 147,000
1969-10-04 159,000
1969-10-11 168,000
1969-10-18 155,000
1969-10-25 171,000
1969-11-01 174,000
1969-11-08 206,000
1969-11-15 196,000
1969-11-22 230,000
1969-11-29 219,000
1969-12-06 247,000
1969-12-13 264,000
1969-12-20 289,000
1969-12-27 320,000
1970-01-03 344,000
1970-01-10 429,000
1970-01-17 386,000
1970-01-24 316,000
1970-01-31 293,000
1970-02-07 324,000
1970-02-14 308,000
1970-02-21 285,000
1970-02-28 241,000
1970-03-07 270,000
1970-03-14 258,000
1970-03-21 233,000
1970-03-28 236,000
1970-04-04 250,000
1970-04-11 300,000
1970-04-18 339,000
1970-04-25 299,000
1970-05-02 278,000
1970-05-09 279,000
1970-05-16 242,000
1970-05-23 231,000
1970-05-30 224,000
1970-06-06 234,000
1970-06-13 242,000
1970-06-20 245,000
1970-06-27 247,000
1970-07-04 309,000
1970-07-11 369,000
1970-07-18 353,000
1970-07-25 329,000
1970-08-01 293,000
1970-08-08 278,000
1970-08-15 257,000
1970-08-22 238,000
1970-08-29 220,000
1970-09-05 240,000
1970-09-12 207,000
1970-09-19 247,000
1970-09-26 256,000
1970-10-03 284,000
1970-10-10 287,000
1970-10-17 259,000
1970-10-24 280,000
1970-10-31 283,000
1970-11-07 333,000
1970-11-14 307,000
1970-11-21 333,000
1970-11-28 354,000
1970-12-05 378,000
1970-12-12 370,000
1970-12-19 354,000
1970-12-26 451,000
1971-01-02 443,000
1971-01-09 500,000
1971-01-16 452,000
1971-01-23 399,000
1971-01-30 353,000
1971-02-06 375,000
1971-02-13 333,000
1971-02-20 286,000
1971-02-27 289,000
1971-03-06 306,000
1971-03-13 275,000
1971-03-20 260,000
1971-03-27 261,000
1971-04-03 267,000
1971-04-10 278,000
1971-04-17 257,000
1971-04-24 248,000
1971-05-01 237,000
1971-05-08 260,000
1971-05-15 230,000
1971-05-22 231,000
1971-05-29 231,000
1971-06-05 232,000
1971-06-12 244,000
1971-06-19 249,000
1971-06-26 247,000
1971-07-03 288,000
1971-07-10 335,000
1971-07-17 367,000
1971-07-24 342,000
1971-07-31 340,000
1971-08-07 362,000
1971-08-14 282,000
1971-08-21 252,000
1971-08-28 228,000
1971-09-04 268,000
1971-09-11 219,000
1971-09-18 230,000
1971-09-25 236,000
1971-10-02 238,000
1971-10-09 280,000
1971-10-16 233,000
1971-10-23 251,000
1971-10-30 241,000
1971-11-06 297,000
1971-11-13 289,000
1971-11-20 291,000
1971-11-27 284,000
1971-12-04 372,000
1971-12-11 348,000
1971-12-18 329,000
1971-12-25 340,000
1972-01-01 405,000
1972-01-08 479,000
1972-01-15 395,000
1972-01-22 347,000
1972-01-29 326,000
1972-02-05 342,000
1972-02-12 318,000
1972-02-19 279,000
1972-02-26 252,000
1972-03-04 263,000
1972-03-11 257,000
1972-03-18 241,000
1972-03-25 231,000
1972-04-01 224,000
1972-04-08 271,000
1972-04-15 237,000
1972-04-22 223,000
1972-04-29 214,000
1972-05-06 234,000
1972-05-13 218,000
1972-05-20 210,000
1972-05-27 209,000
1972-06-03 198,000
1972-06-10 224,000
1972-06-17 227,000
1972-06-24 240,000
1972-07-01 327,000
1972-07-08 364,000
1972-07-15 367,000
1972-07-22 299,000
1972-07-29 266,000
1972-08-05 256,000
1972-08-12 220,000
1972-08-19 203,000
1972-08-26 195,000
1972-09-02 192,000
1972-09-09 178,000
1972-09-16 196,000
1972-09-23 193,000
1972-09-30 192,000
1972-10-07 233,000
1972-10-14 202,000
1972-10-21 214,000
1972-10-28 196,000
1972-11-04 242,000
1972-11-11 236,000
1972-11-18 280,000
1972-11-25 238,000
1972-12-02 268,000
1972-12-09 317,000
1972-12-16 323,000
1972-12-23 327,000
1972-12-30 338,000
1973-01-06 345,000
1973-01-13 412,000
1973-01-20 324,000
1973-01-27 267,000
1973-02-03 285,000
1973-02-10 276,000
1973-02-17 242,000
1973-02-24 220,000
1973-03-03 233,000
1973-03-10 227,000
1973-03-17 212,000
1973-03-24 209,000
1973-03-31 193,000
1973-04-07 244,000
1973-04-14 212,000
1973-04-21 211,000
1973-04-28 194,000
1973-05-05 214,000
1973-05-12 198,000
1973-05-19 189,000
1973-05-26 190,000
1973-06-02 173,000
1973-06-09 210,000
1973-06-16 198,000
1973-06-23 206,000
1973-06-30 215,000
1973-07-07 309,000
1973-07-14 270,000
1973-07-21 259,000
1973-07-28 265,000
1973-08-04 262,000
1973-08-11 238,000
1973-08-18 207,000
1973-08-25 190,000
1973-09-01 180,000
1973-09-08 177,000
1973-09-15 186,000
1973-09-22 187,000
1973-09-29 191,000
1973-10-06 210,000
1973-10-13 207,000
1973-10-20 208,000
1973-10-27 200,000
1973-11-03 230,000
1973-11-10 277,000
1973-11-17 261,000
1973-11-24 237,000
1973-12-01 299,000
1973-12-08 345,000
1973-12-15 340,000
1973-12-22 429,000
1973-12-29 461,000
1974-01-05 405,000
1974-01-12 584,000
1974-01-19 465,000
1974-01-26 373,000
1974-02-02 381,000
1974-02-09 459,000
1974-02-16 352,000
1974-02-23 296,000
1974-03-02 313,000
1974-03-09 310,000
1974-03-16 293,000
1974-03-23 285,000
1974-03-30 279,000
1974-04-06 288,000
1974-04-13 278,000
1974-04-20 256,000
1974-04-27 235,000
1974-05-04 243,000
1974-05-11 249,000
1974-05-18 238,000
1974-05-25 246,000
1974-06-01 209,000
1974-06-08 267,000
1974-06-15 255,000
1974-06-22 266,000
1974-06-29 285,000
1974-07-06 350,000
1974-07-13 351,000
1974-07-20 325,000
1974-07-27 333,000
1974-08-03 340,000
1974-08-10 318,000
1974-08-17 269,000
1974-08-24 260,000
1974-08-31 259,000
1974-09-07 253,000
1974-09-14 271,000
1974-09-21 283,000
1974-09-28 279,000
1974-10-05 325,000
1974-10-12 358,000
1974-10-19 324,000
1974-10-26 357,000
1974-11-02 375,000
1974-11-09 435,000
1974-11-16 450,000
1974-11-23 532,000
1974-11-30 524,000
1974-12-07 693,000
1974-12-14 637,000
1974-12-21 677,000
1974-12-28 813,000
1975-01-04 681,000
1975-01-11 969,000
1975-01-18 850,000
1975-01-25 729,000
1975-02-01 699,000
1975-02-08 691,000
1975-02-15 608,000
1975-02-22 567,000
1975-03-01 568,000
1975-03-08 569,000
1975-03-15 494,000
1975-03-22 499,000
1975-03-29 477,000
1975-04-05 505,000
1975-04-12 496,000
1975-04-19 456,000
1975-04-26 429,000
1975-05-03 420,000
1975-05-10 432,000
1975-05-17 410,000
1975-05-24 391,000
1975-05-31 360,000
1975-06-07 443,000
1975-06-14 422,000
1975-06-21 428,000
1975-06-28 407,000
1975-07-05 460,000
1975-07-12 517,000
1975-07-19 481,000
1975-07-26 471,000
1975-08-02 462,000
1975-08-09 429,000
1975-08-16 367,000
1975-08-23 353,000
1975-08-30 332,000
1975-09-06 331,000
1975-09-13 341,000
1975-09-20 336,000
1975-09-27 342,000
1975-10-04 365,000
1975-10-11 385,000
1975-10-18 332,000
1975-10-25 372,000
1975-11-01 378,000
1975-11-08 414,000
1975-11-15 371,000
1975-11-22 419,000
1975-11-29 403,000
1975-12-06 487,000
1975-12-13 456,000
1975-12-20 463,000
1975-12-27 573,000
1976-01-03 540,000
1976-01-10 708,000
1976-01-17 563,000
1976-01-24 486,000
1976-01-31 450,000
1976-02-07 452,000
1976-02-14 391,000
1976-02-21 367,000
1976-02-28 353,000
1976-03-06 366,000
1976-03-13 343,000
1976-03-20 330,000
1976-03-27 314,000
1976-04-03 334,000
1976-04-10 366,000
1976-04-17 316,000
1976-04-24 311,000
1976-05-01 313,000
1976-05-08 345,000
1976-05-15 308,000
1976-05-22 311,000
1976-05-29 310,000
1976-06-05 307,000
1976-06-12 351,000
1976-06-19 342,000
1976-06-26 339,000
1976-07-03 401,000
1976-07-10 445,000
1976-07-17 455,000
1976-07-24 418,000
1976-07-31 401,000
1976-08-07 373,000
1976-08-14 329,000
1976-08-21 320,000
1976-08-28 301,000
1976-09-04 321,000
1976-09-11 280,000
1976-09-18 320,000
1976-09-25 327,000
1976-10-02 332,000
1976-10-09 388,000
1976-10-16 325,000
1976-10-23 361,000
1976-10-30 370,000
1976-11-06 387,000
1976-11-13 363,000
1976-11-20 430,000
1976-11-27 369,000
1976-12-04 500,000
1976-12-11 494,000
1976-12-18 434,000
1976-12-25 466,000
1977-01-01 558,000
1977-01-08 685,000
1977-01-15 597,000
1977-01-22 589,000
1977-01-29 518,000
1977-02-05 704,000
1977-02-12 552,000
1977-02-19 422,000
1977-02-26 360,000
1977-03-05 367,000
1977-03-12 335,000
1977-03-19 321,000
1977-03-26 298,000
1977-04-02 296,000
1977-04-09 367,000
1977-04-16 316,000
1977-04-23 314,000
1977-04-30 305,000
1977-05-07 333,000
1977-05-14 309,000
1977-05-21 293,000
1977-05-28 298,000
1977-06-04 283,000
1977-06-11 308,000
1977-06-18 310,000
1977-06-25 321,000
1977-07-02 348,000
1977-07-09 431,000
1977-07-16 424,000
1977-07-23 391,000
1977-07-30 380,000
1977-08-06 379,000
1977-08-13 319,000
1977-08-20 298,000
1977-08-27 282,000
1977-09-03 289,000
1977-09-10 260,000
1977-09-17 289,000
1977-09-24 293,000
1977-10-01 275,000
1977-10-08 345,000
1977-10-15 287,000
1977-10-22 322,000
1977-10-29 309,000
1977-11-05 352,000
1977-11-12 310,000
1977-11-19 367,000
1977-11-26 342,000
1977-12-03 430,000
1977-12-10 448,000
1977-12-17 412,000
1977-12-24 450,000
1977-12-31 535,000
1978-01-07 559,000
1978-01-14 579,000
1978-01-21 500,000
1978-01-28 445,000
1978-02-04 447,000
1978-02-11 438,000
1978-02-18 455,000
1978-02-25 372,000
1978-03-04 360,000
1978-03-11 342,000
1978-03-18 302,000
1978-03-25 280,000
1978-04-01 278,000
1978-04-08 338,000
1978-04-15 279,000
1978-04-22 277,000
1978-04-29 269,000
1978-05-06 291,000
1978-05-13 268,000
1978-05-20 266,000
1978-05-27 256,000
1978-06-03 242,000
1978-06-10 292,000
1978-06-17 287,000
1978-06-24 297,000
1978-07-01 347,000
1978-07-08 428,000
1978-07-15 421,000
1978-07-22 387,000
1978-07-29 371,000
1978-08-05 376,000
1978-08-12 326,000
1978-08-19 287,000
1978-08-26 264,000
1978-09-02 249,000
1978-09-09 246,000
1978-09-16 262,000
1978-09-23 254,000
1978-09-30 249,000
1978-10-07 323,000
1978-10-14 262,000
1978-10-21 287,000
1978-10-28 280,000
1978-11-04 302,000
1978-11-11 286,000
1978-11-18 345,000
1978-11-25 350,000
1978-12-02 427,000
1978-12-09 427,000
1978-12-16 390,000
1978-12-23 447,000
1978-12-30 515,000
1979-01-06 559,000
1979-01-13 680,000
1979-01-20 488,000
1979-01-27 423,000
1979-02-03 424,000
1979-02-10 418,000
1979-02-17 384,000
1979-02-24 364,000
1979-03-03 358,000
1979-03-10 346,000
1979-03-17 315,000
1979-03-24 296,000
1979-03-31 300,000
1979-04-07 449,000
1979-04-14 424,000
1979-04-21 340,000
1979-04-28 303,000
1979-05-05 307,000
1979-05-12 290,000
1979-05-19 280,000
1979-05-26 287,000
1979-06-02 262,000
1979-06-09 322,000
1979-06-16 312,000
1979-06-23 343,000
1979-06-30 366,000
1979-07-07 458,000
1979-07-14 446,000
1979-07-21 445,000
1979-07-28 417,000
1979-08-04 428,000
1979-08-11 360,000
1979-08-18 329,000
1979-08-25 313,000
1979-09-01 312,000
1979-09-08 285,000
1979-09-15 311,000
1979-09-22 309,000
1979-09-29 303,000
1979-10-06 379,000
1979-10-13 335,000
1979-10-20 342,000
1979-10-27 353,000
1979-11-03 372,000
1979-11-10 392,000
1979-11-17 401,000
1979-11-24 379,000
1979-12-01 513,000
1979-12-08 521,000
1979-12-15 455,000
1979-12-22 580,000
1979-12-29 596,000
1980-01-05 574,000
1980-01-12 804,000
1980-01-19 648,000
1980-01-26 515,000
1980-02-02 471,000
1980-02-09 493,000
1980-02-16 418,000
1980-02-23 415,000
1980-03-01 407,000
1980-03-08 413,000
1980-03-15 398,000
1980-03-22 392,000
1980-03-29 399,000
1980-04-05 451,000
1980-04-12 535,000
1980-04-19 495,000
1980-04-26 482,000
1980-05-03 491,000
1980-05-10 526,000
1980-05-17 539,000
1980-05-24 525,000
1980-05-31 477,000
1980-06-07 562,000
1980-06-14 511,000
1980-06-21 529,000
1980-06-28 563,000
1980-07-05 584,000
1980-07-12 643,000
1980-07-19 628,000
1980-07-26 569,000
1980-08-02 536,000
1980-08-09 494,000
1980-08-16 435,000
1980-08-23 410,000
1980-08-30 397,000
1980-09-06 374,000
1980-09-13 414,000
1980-09-20 381,000
1980-09-27 363,000
1980-10-04 410,000
1980-10-11 417,000
1980-10-18 355,000
1980-10-25 384,000
1980-11-01 395,000
1980-11-08 416,000
1980-11-15 403,000
1980-11-22 440,000
1980-11-29 407,000
1980-12-06 534,000
1980-12-13 481,000
1980-12-20 499,000
1980-12-27 546,000
1981-01-03 580,000
1981-01-10 839,000
1981-01-17 638,000
1981-01-24 521,000
1981-01-31 490,000
1981-02-07 500,000
1981-02-14 439,000
1981-02-21 430,000
1981-02-28 432,000
1981-03-07 414,000
1981-03-14 385,000
1981-03-21 365,000
1981-03-28 356,000
1981-04-04 383,000
1981-04-11 401,000
1981-04-18 350,000
1981-04-25 379,000
1981-05-02 342,000
1981-05-09 369,000
1981-05-16 340,000
1981-05-23 342,000
1981-05-30 301,000
1981-06-06 384,000
1981-06-13 367,000
1981-06-20 376,000
1981-06-27 387,000
1981-07-04 430,000
1981-07-11 516,000
1981-07-18 481,000
1981-07-25 429,000
1981-08-01 444,000
1981-08-08 419,000
1981-08-15 369,000
1981-08-22 351,000
1981-08-29 352,000
1981-09-05 396,000
1981-09-12 331,000
1981-09-19 392,000
1981-09-26 392,000
1981-10-03 416,000
1981-10-10 476,000
1981-10-17 408,000
1981-10-24 450,000
1981-10-31 479,000
1981-11-07 534,000
1981-11-14 483,000
1981-11-21 522,000
1981-11-28 535,000
1981-12-05 726,000
1981-12-12 657,000
1981-12-19 644,000
1981-12-26 702,000
1982-01-02 694,300
1982-01-09 1,073,500
1982-01-16 761,700
1982-01-23 771,200
1982-01-30 692,300
1982-02-06 671,000
1982-02-13 532,800
1982-02-20 522,900
1982-02-27 536,300
1982-03-06 566,300
1982-03-13 515,100
1982-03-20 510,500
1982-03-27 501,500
1982-04-03 516,600
1982-04-10 606,300
1982-04-17 540,300
1982-04-24 518,600
1982-05-01 475,600
1982-05-08 516,500
1982-05-15 486,500
1982-05-22 486,300
1982-05-29 485,800
1982-06-05 478,600
1982-06-12 541,600
1982-06-19 508,100
1982-06-26 507,700
1982-07-03 594,400
1982-07-10 631,400
1982-07-17 647,000
1982-07-24 576,100
1982-07-31 562,600
1982-08-07 569,200
1982-08-14 536,400
1982-08-21 510,400
1982-08-28 502,300
1982-09-04 537,600
1982-09-11 467,700
1982-09-18 559,500
1982-09-25 535,000
1982-10-02 565,600
1982-10-09 638,100
1982-10-16 540,300
1982-10-23 577,600
1982-10-30 576,800
1982-11-06 604,800
1982-11-13 546,700
1982-11-20 650,400
1982-11-27 574,100
1982-12-04 709,400
1982-12-11 638,200
1982-12-18 598,000
1982-12-25 653,600
1983-01-01 745,100
1983-01-08 976,600
1983-01-15 773,600
1983-01-22 650,600
1983-01-29 597,700
1983-02-05 594,200
1983-02-12 525,100
1983-02-19 506,300
1983-02-26 448,700
1983-03-05 497,400
1983-03-12 459,700
1983-03-19 427,500
1983-03-26 422,100
1983-04-02 423,000
1983-04-09 509,700
1983-04-16 464,800
1983-04-23 431,300
1983-04-30 399,900
1983-05-07 435,000
1983-05-14 385,200
1983-05-21 380,300
1983-05-28 373,000
1983-06-04 351,100
1983-06-11 390,100
1983-06-18 369,200
1983-06-25 383,500
1983-07-02 397,400
1983-07-09 451,900
1983-07-16 459,400
1983-07-23 428,300
1983-07-30 383,400
1983-08-06 382,500
1983-08-13 382,300
1983-08-20 356,900
1983-08-27 323,600
1983-09-03 328,800
1983-09-10 288,700
1983-09-17 326,900
1983-09-24 324,700
1983-10-01 318,500
1983-10-08 390,500
1983-10-15 319,900
1983-10-22 354,900
1983-10-29 356,400
1983-11-05 398,200
1983-11-12 347,300
1983-11-19 431,900
1983-11-26 362,900
1983-12-03 458,400
1983-12-10 442,900
1983-12-17 414,600
1983-12-24 496,800
1983-12-31 558,900
1984-01-07 621,600
1984-01-14 637,900
1984-01-21 475,100
1984-01-28 448,500
1984-02-04 408,400
1984-02-11 381,500
1984-02-18 349,300
1984-02-25 329,100
1984-03-03 350,500
1984-03-10 344,000
1984-03-17 323,500
1984-03-24 317,600
1984-03-31 291,400
1984-04-07 390,300
1984-04-14 330,800
1984-04-21 326,500
1984-04-28 309,300
1984-05-05 318,900
1984-05-12 312,100
1984-05-19 294,200
1984-05-26 292,700
1984-06-02 268,700
1984-06-09 333,800
1984-06-16 309,900
1984-06-23 316,800
1984-06-30 329,000
1984-07-07 432,500
1984-07-14 435,900
1984-07-21 396,200
1984-07-28 343,800
1984-08-04 348,100
1984-08-11 328,100
1984-08-18 321,000
1984-08-25 303,300
1984-09-01 303,500
1984-09-08 289,300
1984-09-15 320,700
1984-09-22 313,200
1984-09-29 304,700
1984-10-06 373,300
1984-10-13 353,200
1984-10-20 378,700
1984-10-27 380,500
1984-11-03 413,400
1984-11-10 397,500
1984-11-17 370,800
1984-11-24 387,000
1984-12-01 494,700
1984-12-08 477,900
1984-12-15 443,700
1984-12-22 482,300
1984-12-29 527,500
1985-01-05 568,300
1985-01-12 770,000
1985-01-19 537,700
1985-01-26 478,300
1985-02-02 452,400
1985-02-09 473,300
1985-02-16 404,700
1985-02-23 379,000
1985-03-02 377,300
1985-03-09 389,200
1985-03-16 360,500
1985-03-23 346,700
1985-03-30 329,100
1985-04-06 398,000
1985-04-13 397,500
1985-04-20 351,800
1985-04-27 324,700
1985-05-04 335,600
1985-05-11 339,100
1985-05-18 324,900
1985-05-25 328,500
1985-06-01 293,500
1985-06-08 368,900
1985-06-15 339,200
1985-06-22 339,500
1985-06-29 349,800
1985-07-06 409,500
1985-07-13 481,500
1985-07-20 413,700
1985-07-27 358,700
1985-08-03 365,800
1985-08-10 358,200
1985-08-17 319,400
1985-08-24 314,800
1985-08-31 317,600
1985-09-07 304,700
1985-09-14 332,900
1985-09-21 317,600
1985-09-28 301,600
1985-10-05 355,600
1985-10-12 358,000
1985-10-19 331,000
1985-10-26 375,700
1985-11-02 375,300
1985-11-09 404,100
1985-11-16 380,300
1985-11-23 423,100
1985-11-30 384,700
1985-12-07 504,200
1985-12-14 443,400
1985-12-21 458,200
1985-12-28 548,200
1986-01-04 547,500
1986-01-11 803,900
1986-01-18 568,800
1986-01-25 395,700
1986-02-01 425,400
1986-02-08 438,100
1986-02-15 374,200
1986-02-22 382,200
1986-03-01 381,200
1986-03-08 371,700
1986-03-15 361,600
1986-03-22 363,100
1986-03-29 333,300
1986-04-05 366,100
1986-04-12 386,100
1986-04-19 348,700
1986-04-26 335,100
1986-05-03 333,600
1986-05-10 343,800
1986-05-17 319,000
1986-05-24 321,700
1986-05-31 278,700
1986-06-07 342,200
1986-06-14 324,700
1986-06-21 327,400
1986-06-28 336,100
1986-07-05 377,400
1986-07-12 456,200
1986-07-19 402,400
1986-07-26 370,700
1986-08-02 370,900
1986-08-09 376,900
1986-08-16 326,000
1986-08-23 310,200
1986-08-30 307,100
1986-09-06 283,700
1986-09-13 320,800
1986-09-20 315,800
1986-09-27 294,200
1986-10-04 328,900
1986-10-11 357,700
1986-10-18 313,000
1986-10-25 332,400
1986-11-01 334,100
1986-11-08 357,600
1986-11-15 347,400
1986-11-22 410,600
1986-11-29 350,900
1986-12-06 462,700
1986-12-13 438,600
1986-12-20 423,800
1986-12-27 483,900
1987-01-03 483,977
1987-01-10 710,493
1987-01-17 545,768
1987-01-24 412,977
1987-01-31 435,743
1987-02-07 444,240
1987-02-14 359,219
1987-02-21 332,930
1987-02-28 355,357
1987-03-07 343,065
1987-03-14 321,153
1987-03-21 313,104
1987-03-28 288,648
1987-04-04 308,940
1987-04-11 344,364
1987-04-18 305,201
1987-04-25 285,566
1987-05-02 277,726
1987-05-09 276,773
1987-05-16 283,832
1987-05-23 286,150
1987-05-30 242,793
1987-06-06 299,672
1987-06-13 281,043
1987-06-20 285,191
1987-06-27 294,288
1987-07-04 321,855
1987-07-11 402,706
1987-07-18 361,491
1987-07-25 339,756
1987-08-01 309,433
1987-08-08 296,403
1987-08-15 256,647
1987-08-22 245,058
1987-08-29 243,829
1987-09-05 255,589
1987-09-12 210,375
1987-09-19 243,651
1987-09-26 242,206
1987-10-03 244,736
1987-10-10 291,075
1987-10-17 242,157
1987-10-24 271,190
1987-10-31 261,036
1987-11-07 306,340
1987-11-14 286,334
1987-11-21 354,037
1987-11-28 288,614
1987-12-05 412,297
1987-12-12 372,869
1987-12-19 384,763
1987-12-26 397,287
1988-01-02 465,503
1988-01-09 654,620
1988-01-16 577,975
1988-01-23 412,685
1988-01-30 394,776
1988-02-06 380,906
1988-02-13 334,833
1988-02-20 315,497
1988-02-27 324,517
1988-03-05 312,409
1988-03-12 294,321
1988-03-19 275,545
1988-03-26 269,000
1988-04-02 256,607
1988-04-09 319,713
1988-04-16 273,160
1988-04-23 272,440
1988-04-30 247,619
1988-05-07 267,315
1988-05-14 257,101
1988-05-21 259,640
1988-05-28 255,852
1988-06-04 235,308
1988-06-11 268,052
1988-06-18 264,100
1988-06-25 268,770
1988-07-02 290,079
1988-07-09 335,780
1988-07-16 377,872
1988-07-23 384,920
1988-07-30 311,475
1988-08-06 293,718
1988-08-13 261,066
1988-08-20 253,359
1988-08-27 241,809
1988-09-03 243,944
1988-09-10 220,226
1988-09-17 247,250
1988-09-24 236,230
1988-10-01 226,453
1988-10-08 276,732
1988-10-15 237,722
1988-10-22 264,201
1988-10-29 265,794
1988-11-05 293,412
1988-11-12 257,201
1988-11-19 335,818
1988-11-26 281,841
1988-12-03 391,406
1988-12-10 354,028
1988-12-17 354,768
1988-12-24 413,175
1988-12-31 474,226
1989-01-07 544,138
1989-01-14 519,727
1989-01-21 364,499
1989-01-28 361,331
1989-02-04 340,647
1989-02-11 365,301
1989-02-18 317,676
1989-02-25 288,690
1989-03-04 333,669
1989-03-11 325,019
1989-03-18 291,112
1989-03-25 276,369
1989-04-01 275,799
1989-04-08 321,723
1989-04-15 275,240
1989-04-22 271,002
1989-04-29 247,646
1989-05-06 275,425
1989-05-13 275,507
1989-05-20 260,543
1989-05-27 266,146
1989-06-03 243,246
1989-06-10 295,499
1989-06-17 285,589
1989-06-24 295,338
1989-07-01 319,577
1989-07-08 364,594
1989-07-15 423,847
1989-07-22 365,026
1989-07-29 320,773
1989-08-05 311,584
1989-08-12 291,429
1989-08-19 261,419
1989-08-26 254,488
1989-09-02 259,540
1989-09-09 239,989
1989-09-16 271,903
1989-09-23 262,895
1989-09-30 265,310
1989-10-07 375,972
1989-10-14 284,584
1989-10-21 315,473
1989-10-28 317,538
1989-11-04 336,759
1989-11-11 303,556
1989-11-18 377,814
1989-11-25 316,458
1989-12-02 443,684
1989-12-09 426,514
1989-12-16 420,795
1989-12-23 534,261
1989-12-30 515,926
1990-01-06 581,679
1990-01-13 730,995
1990-01-20 485,424
1990-01-27 440,748
1990-02-03 432,922
1990-02-10 429,764
1990-02-17 364,616
1990-02-24 341,969
1990-03-03 361,937
1990-03-10 355,935
1990-03-17 325,164
1990-03-24 306,391
1990-03-31 297,117
1990-04-07 372,079
1990-04-14 315,624
1990-04-21 324,936
1990-04-28 294,785
1990-05-05 304,160
1990-05-12 299,266
1990-05-19 287,082
1990-05-26 295,476
1990-06-02 273,910
1990-06-09 321,727
1990-06-16 305,690
1990-06-23 316,999
1990-06-30 326,407
1990-07-07 419,256
1990-07-14 448,952
1990-07-21 407,676
1990-07-28 353,149
1990-08-04 336,997
1990-08-11 330,678
1990-08-18 313,804
1990-08-25 302,267
1990-09-01 305,510
1990-09-08 277,768
1990-09-15 323,246
1990-09-22 306,549
1990-09-29 308,080
1990-10-06 361,538
1990-10-13 356,203
1990-10-20 387,444
1990-10-27 394,598
1990-11-03 424,771
1990-11-10 463,874
1990-11-17 433,003
1990-11-24 422,676
1990-12-01 568,583
1990-12-08 574,323
1990-12-15 523,403
1990-12-22 637,449
1990-12-29 649,471
1991-01-05 651,775
1991-01-12 872,742
1991-01-19 691,092
1991-01-26 511,360
1991-02-02 563,060
1991-02-09 574,760
1991-02-16 498,200
1991-02-23 492,325
1991-03-02 504,023
1991-03-09 514,410
1991-03-16 470,801
1991-03-23 477,877
1991-03-30 412,904
1991-04-06 448,082
1991-04-13 459,364
1991-04-20 433,912
1991-04-27 385,153
1991-05-04 384,458
1991-05-11 382,113
1991-05-18 366,492
1991-05-25 365,117
1991-06-01 320,632
1991-06-08 397,682
1991-06-15 369,074
1991-06-22 371,232
1991-06-29 370,372
1991-07-06 427,161
1991-07-13 517,888
1991-07-20 454,655
1991-07-27 408,098
1991-08-03 397,522
1991-08-10 385,740
1991-08-17 344,969
1991-08-24 329,287
1991-08-31 328,040
1991-09-07 302,187
1991-09-14 342,419
1991-09-21 333,110
1991-09-28 334,206
1991-10-05 366,862
1991-10-12 388,370
1991-10-19 344,189
1991-10-26 380,253
1991-11-02 427,789
1991-11-09 473,432
1991-11-16 417,766
1991-11-23 503,032
1991-11-30 433,180
1991-12-07 610,113
1991-12-14 554,059
1991-12-21 555,747
1991-12-28 625,772
1992-01-04 652,046
1992-01-11 882,118
1992-01-18 687,914
1992-01-25 504,838
1992-02-01 508,594
1992-02-08 537,238
1992-02-15 469,794
1992-02-22 429,723
1992-02-29 454,987
1992-03-07 434,426
1992-03-14 417,282
1992-03-21 413,180
1992-03-28 370,883
1992-04-04 393,384
1992-04-11 412,948
1992-04-18 366,621
1992-04-25 364,454
1992-05-02 363,794
1992-05-09 364,100
1992-05-16 341,425
1992-05-23 343,432
1992-05-30 305,080
1992-06-06 374,978
1992-06-13 369,067
1992-06-20 369,995
1992-06-27 370,373
1992-07-04 395,505
1992-07-11 506,050
1992-07-18 452,468
1992-07-25 554,590
1992-08-01 382,138
1992-08-08 366,092
1992-08-15 322,729
1992-08-22 312,436
1992-08-29 309,806
1992-09-05 339,006
1992-09-12 299,189
1992-09-19 345,093
1992-09-26 315,455
1992-10-03 326,938
1992-10-10 353,504
1992-10-17 310,235
1992-10-24 333,005
1992-10-31 331,922
1992-11-07 392,213
1992-11-14 348,011
1992-11-21 401,972
1992-11-28 317,218
1992-12-05 449,726
1992-12-12 424,677
1992-12-19 396,619
1992-12-26 392,612
1993-01-02 487,466
1993-01-09 704,930
1993-01-16 558,516
1993-01-23 410,944
1993-01-30 397,000
1993-02-06 384,707
1993-02-13 344,520
1993-02-20 345,116
1993-02-27 367,412
1993-03-06 364,185
1993-03-13 335,154
1993-03-20 315,473
1993-03-27 330,512
1993-04-03 331,871
1993-04-10 346,648
1993-04-17 321,564
1993-04-24 310,916
1993-05-01 285,098
1993-05-08 301,906
1993-05-15 287,944
1993-05-22 285,444
1993-05-29 291,206
1993-06-05 273,411
1993-06-12 308,535
1993-06-19 304,843
1993-06-26 301,549
1993-07-03 334,335
1993-07-10 362,425
1993-07-17 402,348
1993-07-24 418,260
1993-07-31 320,155
1993-08-07 314,579
1993-08-14 277,263
1993-08-21 270,913
1993-08-28 254,231
1993-09-04 270,528
1993-09-11 238,902
1993-09-18 280,903
1993-09-25 265,510
1993-10-02 263,636
1993-10-09 338,726
1993-10-16 288,699
1993-10-23 321,509
1993-10-30 309,359
1993-11-06 365,280
1993-11-13 310,455
1993-11-20 377,935
1993-11-27 306,788
1993-12-04 431,210
1993-12-11 398,560
1993-12-18 382,583
1993-12-25 398,084
1994-01-01 481,735
1994-01-08 676,076
1994-01-15 571,816
1994-01-22 427,570
1994-01-29 481,458
1994-02-05 429,800
1994-02-12 385,594
1994-02-19 368,626
1994-02-26 307,194
1994-03-05 355,250
1994-03-12 331,023
1994-03-19 308,038
1994-03-26 292,661
1994-04-02 289,631
1994-04-09 361,348
1994-04-16 327,166
1994-04-23 298,620
1994-04-30 285,837
1994-05-07 332,414
1994-05-14 303,190
1994-05-21 299,324
1994-05-28 291,797
1994-06-04 273,849
1994-06-11 309,033
1994-06-18 298,198
1994-06-25 305,863
1994-07-02 327,262
1994-07-09 394,428
1994-07-16 443,698
1994-07-23 354,495
1994-07-30 295,979
1994-08-06 304,363
1994-08-13 277,614
1994-08-20 262,131
1994-08-27 257,299
1994-09-03 270,561
1994-09-10 237,526
1994-09-17 264,553
1994-09-24 251,191
1994-10-01 255,588
1994-10-08 322,522
1994-10-15 272,742
1994-10-22 296,646
1994-10-29 291,557
1994-11-05 338,561
1994-11-12 298,030
1994-11-19 366,719
1994-11-26 295,729
1994-12-03 412,824
1994-12-10 397,238
1994-12-17 376,210
1994-12-24 423,387
1994-12-31 482,735
1995-01-07 612,648
1995-01-14 608,872
1995-01-21 400,772
1995-01-28 396,457
1995-02-04 381,813
1995-02-11 387,408
1995-02-18 356,237
1995-02-25 316,927
1995-03-04 342,015
1995-03-11 339,580
1995-03-18 319,218
1995-03-25 305,471
1995-04-01 294,031
1995-04-08 356,914
1995-04-15 318,030
1995-04-22 317,072
1995-04-29 305,594
1995-05-06 325,398
1995-05-13 311,646
1995-05-20 316,305
1995-05-27 314,442
1995-06-03 286,566
1995-06-10 340,606
1995-06-17 337,812
1995-06-24 324,411
1995-07-01 341,207
1995-07-08 428,632
1995-07-15 491,891
1995-07-22 409,319
1995-07-29 311,708
1995-08-05 310,703
1995-08-12 296,712
1995-08-19 286,017
1995-08-26 272,182
1995-09-02 278,703
1995-09-09 266,145
1995-09-16 304,323
1995-09-23 272,431
1995-09-30 269,067
1995-10-07 345,311
1995-10-14 306,465
1995-10-21 322,856
1995-10-28 332,061
1995-11-04 383,687
1995-11-11 335,181
1995-11-18 425,889
1995-11-25 336,269
1995-12-02 474,548
1995-12-09 421,109
1995-12-16 423,450
1995-12-23 490,349
1995-12-30 513,686
1996-01-06 596,010
1996-01-13 637,910
1996-01-20 510,820
1996-01-27 492,966
1996-02-03 433,693
1996-02-10 440,961
1996-02-17 395,332
1996-02-24 347,053
1996-03-02 368,044
1996-03-09 355,818
1996-03-16 357,070
1996-03-23 396,731
1996-03-30 342,023
1996-04-06 353,032
1996-04-13 343,654
1996-04-20 336,033
1996-04-27 291,957
1996-05-04 298,195
1996-05-11 303,532
1996-05-18 287,891
1996-05-25 287,622
1996-06-01 266,116
1996-06-08 329,099
1996-06-15 307,141
1996-06-22 312,226
1996-06-29 315,615
1996-07-06 382,989
1996-07-13 449,510
1996-07-20 360,385
1996-07-27 294,762
1996-08-03 283,216
1996-08-10 285,795
1996-08-17 265,742
1996-08-24 259,677
1996-08-31 251,425
1996-09-07 238,893
1996-09-14 272,464
1996-09-21 273,232
1996-09-28 261,251
1996-10-05 292,029
1996-10-12 306,521
1996-10-19 271,934
1996-10-26 311,965
1996-11-02 320,827
1996-11-09 340,240
1996-11-16 330,730
1996-11-23 383,512
1996-11-30 328,186
1996-12-07 444,305
1996-12-14 404,436
1996-12-21 429,566
1996-12-28 520,650
1997-01-04 541,210
1997-01-11 654,473
1997-01-18 513,913
1997-01-25 385,310
1997-02-01 380,099
1997-02-08 370,766
1997-02-15 320,374
1997-02-22 309,202
1997-03-01 317,339
1997-03-08 314,787
1997-03-15 296,698
1997-03-22 291,463
1997-03-29 268,823
1997-04-05 311,186
1997-04-12 329,663
1997-04-19 286,593
1997-04-26 295,166
1997-05-03 295,629
1997-05-10 278,052
1997-05-17 267,251
1997-05-24 264,697
1997-05-31 248,167
1997-06-07 309,928
1997-06-14 302,577
1997-06-21 290,720
1997-06-28 298,299
1997-07-05 372,574
1997-07-12 434,598
1997-07-19 339,250
1997-07-26 281,794
1997-08-02 273,471
1997-08-09 289,083
1997-08-16 272,910
1997-08-23 255,236
1997-08-30 250,205
1997-09-06 224,948
1997-09-13 253,456
1997-09-20 246,061
1997-09-27 237,214
1997-10-04 260,705
1997-10-11 286,436
1997-10-18 255,634
1997-10-25 272,593
1997-11-01 293,086
1997-11-08 322,842
1997-11-15 311,499
1997-11-22 341,845
1997-11-29 309,788
1997-12-06 402,699
1997-12-13 374,107
1997-12-20 368,823
1997-12-27 445,345
1998-01-03 479,854
1998-01-10 682,016
1998-01-17 512,837
1998-01-24 355,092
1998-01-31 357,976
1998-02-07 368,113
1998-02-14 328,354
1998-02-21 313,367
1998-02-28 313,480
1998-03-07 305,542
1998-03-14 298,302
1998-03-21 293,692
1998-03-28 272,808
1998-04-04 288,484
1998-04-11 294,014
1998-04-18 288,059
1998-04-25 278,220
1998-05-02 261,089
1998-05-09 270,108
1998-05-16 262,107
1998-05-23 259,125
1998-05-30 248,550
1998-06-06 289,495
1998-06-13 293,195
1998-06-20 322,017
1998-06-27 348,842
1998-07-04 379,734
1998-07-11 428,977
1998-07-18 364,767
1998-07-25 314,782
1998-08-01 277,621
1998-08-08 279,621
1998-08-15 246,823
1998-08-22 237,999
1998-08-29 233,516
1998-09-05 255,938
1998-09-12 217,454
1998-09-19 237,609
1998-09-26 220,668
1998-10-03 246,284
1998-10-10 300,862
1998-10-17 257,172
1998-10-24 275,574
1998-10-31 281,932
1998-11-07 332,611
1998-11-14 315,504
1998-11-21 338,501
1998-11-28 295,041
1998-12-05 421,605
1998-12-12 355,872
1998-12-19 344,452
1998-12-26 442,200
1999-01-02 508,983
1999-01-09 713,805
1999-01-16 514,082
1999-01-23 364,737
1999-01-30 349,733
1999-02-06 344,947
1999-02-13 320,679
1999-02-20 286,130
1999-02-27 297,918
1999-03-06 297,325
1999-03-13 289,813
1999-03-20 275,453
1999-03-27 260,817
1999-04-03 263,516
1999-04-10 327,621
1999-04-17 286,018
1999-04-24 263,835
1999-05-01 252,190
1999-05-08 274,268
1999-05-15 251,063
1999-05-22 250,360
1999-05-29 260,517
1999-06-05 256,922
1999-06-12 267,582
1999-06-19 267,825
1999-06-26 269,755
1999-07-03 303,758
1999-07-10 364,078
1999-07-17 369,123
1999-07-24 293,348
1999-07-31 254,195
1999-08-07 259,805
1999-08-14 236,658
1999-08-21 226,061
1999-08-28 219,278
1999-09-04 235,849
1999-09-11 204,302
1999-09-18 219,070
1999-09-25 232,486
1999-10-02 246,445
1999-10-09 278,925
1999-10-16 234,580
1999-10-23 250,864
1999-10-30 257,767
1999-11-06 297,136
1999-11-13 262,607
1999-11-20 309,248
1999-11-27 268,255
1999-12-04 378,735
1999-12-11 318,175
1999-12-18 329,649
1999-12-25 377,695
2000-01-01 439,912
2000-01-08 606,897
2000-01-15 442,494
2000-01-22 328,841
2000-01-29 332,740
2000-02-05 365,245
2000-02-12 311,897
2000-02-19 281,256
2000-02-26 258,962
2000-03-04 283,024
2000-03-11 255,109
2000-03-18 242,139
2000-03-25 239,835
2000-04-01 229,520
2000-04-08 274,130
2000-04-15 237,218
2000-04-22 240,266
2000-04-29 249,458
2000-05-06 259,546
2000-05-13 231,706
2000-05-20 234,599
2000-05-27 239,836
2000-06-03 242,991
2000-06-10 267,752
2000-06-17 265,617
2000-06-24 273,344
2000-07-01 280,979
2000-07-08 363,793
2000-07-15 377,982
2000-07-22 296,255
2000-07-29 253,466
2000-08-05 266,151
2000-08-12 261,358
2000-08-19 251,844
2000-08-26 239,030
2000-09-02 242,375
2000-09-09 229,954
2000-09-16 245,991
2000-09-23 222,219
2000-09-30 227,249
2000-10-07 292,784
2000-10-14 255,082
2000-10-21 263,445
2000-10-28 269,489
2000-11-04 342,414
2000-11-11 294,727
2000-11-18 374,160
2000-11-25 321,859
2000-12-02 447,262
2000-12-09 390,088
2000-12-16 402,476
2000-12-23 481,720
2000-12-30 568,973
2001-01-06 558,768
2001-01-13 599,562
2001-01-20 398,188
2001-01-27 447,386
2001-02-03 424,696
2001-02-10 396,151
2001-02-17 345,841
2001-02-24 357,591
2001-03-03 379,286
2001-03-10 377,210
2001-03-17 351,497
2001-03-24 334,747
2001-03-31 328,576
2001-04-07 397,282
2001-04-14 346,981
2001-04-21 369,745
2001-04-28 353,831
2001-05-05 336,319
2001-05-12 331,765
2001-05-19 338,374
2001-05-26 346,231
2001-06-02 335,765
2001-06-09 397,015
2001-06-16 354,526
2001-06-23 351,770
2001-06-30 375,885
2001-07-07 526,826
2001-07-14 524,139
2001-07-21 406,038
2001-07-28 332,957
2001-08-04 341,660
2001-08-11 333,042
2001-08-18 317,046
2001-08-25 307,850
2001-09-01 319,016
2001-09-08 309,567
2001-09-15 317,245
2001-09-22 353,611
2001-09-29 400,400
2001-10-06 441,754
2001-10-13 426,881
2001-10-20 429,542
2001-10-27 436,901
2001-11-03 443,971
2001-11-10 456,366
2001-11-17 420,259
2001-11-24 438,893
2001-12-01 605,916
2001-12-08 491,836
2001-12-15 440,906
2001-12-22 529,570
2001-12-29 647,045
2002-01-05 637,343
2002-01-12 799,246
2002-01-19 558,297
2002-01-26 431,690
2002-02-02 445,552
2002-02-09 438,611
2002-02-16 376,573
2002-02-23 367,504
2002-03-02 385,272
2002-03-09 386,992
2002-03-16 352,045
2002-03-23 366,372
2002-03-30 386,296
2002-04-06 432,384
2002-04-13 428,834
2002-04-20 385,151
2002-04-27 367,350
2002-05-04 362,681
2002-05-11 358,286
2002-05-18 348,887
2002-05-25 346,439
2002-06-01 309,183
2002-06-08 378,613
2002-06-15 356,096
2002-06-22 358,959
2002-06-29 358,658
2002-07-06 456,716
2002-07-13 506,718
2002-07-20 394,586
2002-07-27 338,441
2002-08-03 326,356
2002-08-10 332,673
2002-08-17 313,869
2002-08-24 314,852
2002-08-31 310,864
2002-09-07 318,361
2002-09-14 337,577
2002-09-21 317,264
2002-09-28 319,063
2002-10-05 365,613
2002-10-12 385,689
2002-10-19 349,927
2002-10-26 375,591
2002-11-02 397,346
2002-11-09 427,078
2002-11-16 372,829
2002-11-23 436,549
2002-11-30 385,788
2002-12-07 547,430
2002-12-14 486,258
2002-12-21 483,449
2002-12-28 620,929
2003-01-04 620,004
2003-01-11 724,111
2003-01-18 542,563
2003-01-25 434,888
2003-02-01 449,286
2003-02-08 439,520
2003-02-15 398,291
2003-02-22 387,536
2003-03-01 429,782
2003-03-08 414,568
2003-03-15 389,909
2003-03-22 361,492
2003-03-29 371,692
2003-04-05 394,160
2003-04-12 434,911
2003-04-19 399,180
2003-04-26 401,342
2003-05-03 377,383
2003-05-10 364,287
2003-05-17 362,276
2003-05-24 359,500
2003-05-31 351,890
2003-06-07 421,190
2003-06-14 383,371
2003-06-21 376,560
2003-06-28 394,214
2003-07-05 483,401
2003-07-12 552,621
2003-07-19 429,381
2003-07-26 348,382
2003-08-02 333,770
2003-08-09 348,207
2003-08-16 312,087
2003-08-23 313,058
2003-08-30 319,362
2003-09-06 322,501
2003-09-13 328,414
2003-09-20 301,217
2003-09-27 304,968
2003-10-04 337,880
2003-10-11 368,876
2003-10-18 328,572
2003-10-25 352,117
2003-11-01 345,573
2003-11-08 397,387
2003-11-15 347,719
2003-11-22 397,990
2003-11-29 357,811
2003-12-06 486,202
2003-12-13 412,627
2003-12-20 424,192
2003-12-27 516,493
2004-01-03 552,815
2004-01-10 677,897
2004-01-17 490,763
2004-01-24 382,262
2004-01-31 406,298
2004-02-07 433,234
2004-02-14 341,634
2004-02-21 328,171
2004-02-28 342,140
2004-03-06 339,007
2004-03-13 312,067
2004-03-20 304,462
2004-03-27 296,776
2004-04-03 304,249
2004-04-10 350,739
2004-04-17 334,965
2004-04-24 313,686
2004-05-01 283,236
2004-05-08 292,754
2004-05-15 297,061
2004-05-22 293,974
2004-05-29 304,067
2004-06-05 308,229
2004-06-12 313,930
2004-06-19 322,481
2004-06-26 318,746
2004-07-03 349,920
2004-07-10 444,531
2004-07-17 394,372
2004-07-24 313,225
2004-07-31 282,128
2004-08-07 291,611
2004-08-14 262,936
2004-08-21 274,433
2004-08-28 276,308
2004-09-04 274,930
2004-09-11 250,568
2004-09-18 275,846
2004-09-25 282,729
2004-10-02 279,591
2004-10-09 338,711
2004-10-16 279,846
2004-10-23 317,573
2004-10-30 305,546
2004-11-06 351,404
2004-11-13 311,901
2004-11-20 355,954
2004-11-27 320,690
2004-12-04 473,570
2004-12-11 370,604
2004-12-18 374,749
2004-12-25 446,699
2005-01-01 540,927
2005-01-08 693,776
2005-01-15 467,862
2005-01-22 360,583
2005-01-29 364,704
2005-02-05 347,391
2005-02-12 309,290
2005-02-19 303,814
2005-02-26 290,776
2005-03-05 332,067
2005-03-12 307,061
2005-03-19 290,719
2005-03-26 291,378
2005-04-02 294,994
2005-04-09 339,709
2005-04-16 285,657
2005-04-23 299,891
2005-04-30 290,824
2005-05-07 297,347
2005-05-14 275,524
2005-05-21 276,761
2005-05-28 304,306
2005-06-04 289,914
2005-06-11 315,938
2005-06-18 289,831
2005-06-25 286,681
2005-07-02 327,268
2005-07-09 427,323
2005-07-16 374,665
2005-07-23 295,026
2005-07-30 261,906
2005-08-06 269,746
2005-08-13 257,151
2005-08-20 252,016
2005-08-27 251,642
2005-09-03 271,613
2005-09-10 322,387
2005-09-17 346,204
2005-09-24 292,435
2005-10-01 313,847
2005-10-08 380,093
2005-10-15 303,158
2005-10-22 304,733
2005-10-29 294,376
2005-11-05 340,491
2005-11-12 283,564
2005-11-19 368,859
2005-11-26 290,730
2005-12-03 444,600
2005-12-10 391,961
2005-12-17 359,108
2005-12-24 433,397
2005-12-31 475,889
2006-01-07 555,114
2006-01-14 439,873
2006-01-21 317,926
2006-01-28 318,805
2006-02-04 321,527
2006-02-11 310,078
2006-02-18 269,571
2006-02-25 272,478
2006-03-04 301,867
2006-03-11 294,764
2006-03-18 269,237
2006-03-25 265,370
2006-04-01 253,985
2006-04-08 314,696
2006-04-15 268,472
2006-04-22 291,349
2006-04-29 279,715
2006-05-06 317,239
2006-05-13 288,972
2006-05-20 277,168
2006-05-27 292,714
2006-06-03 260,263
2006-06-10 285,892
2006-06-17 277,441
2006-06-24 287,503
2006-07-01 304,638
2006-07-08 418,363
2006-07-15 377,115
2006-07-22 288,875
2006-07-29 259,974
2006-08-05 275,430
2006-08-12 256,259
2006-08-19 252,357
2006-08-26 251,275
2006-09-02 259,539
2006-09-09 240,231
2006-09-16 267,036
2006-09-23 261,396
2006-09-30 249,288
2006-10-07 307,646
2006-10-14 271,863
2006-10-21 291,372
2006-10-28 301,079
2006-11-04 326,711
2006-11-11 286,151
2006-11-18 367,690
2006-11-25 323,509
2006-12-02 448,898
2006-12-09 384,123
2006-12-16 361,672
2006-12-23 425,357
2006-12-30 499,979
2007-01-06 506,059
2007-01-13 506,709
2007-01-20 367,583
2007-01-27 359,959
2007-02-03 339,018
2007-02-10 363,018
2007-02-17 305,945
2007-02-24 299,000
2007-03-03 320,194
2007-03-10 298,927
2007-03-17 277,187
2007-03-24 273,432
2007-03-31 268,218
2007-04-07 328,266
2007-04-14 317,917
2007-04-21 303,984
2007-04-28 267,672
2007-05-05 274,801
2007-05-12 258,516
2007-05-19 270,446
2007-05-26 273,397
2007-06-02 263,527
2007-06-09 302,368
2007-06-16 290,951
2007-06-23 292,583
2007-06-30 300,348
2007-07-07 417,554
2007-07-14 383,839
2007-07-21 298,366
2007-07-28 257,426
2007-08-04 270,563
2007-08-11 266,420
2007-08-18 257,573
2007-08-25 266,179
2007-09-01 257,454
2007-09-08 245,526
2007-09-15 261,971
2007-09-22 247,643
2007-09-29 255,431
2007-10-06 298,317
2007-10-13 306,519
2007-10-20 307,675
2007-10-27 303,357
2007-11-03 325,831
2007-11-10 351,760
2007-11-17 323,124
2007-11-24 324,047
2007-12-01 462,902
2007-12-08 423,130
2007-12-15 393,042
2007-12-22 456,280
2007-12-29 507,908
2008-01-05 522,700
2008-01-12 547,943
2008-01-19 415,397
2008-01-26 369,498
2008-02-02 380,234
2008-02-09 377,595
2008-02-16 325,886
2008-02-23 330,013
2008-03-01 345,287
2008-03-08 341,364
2008-03-15 335,909
2008-03-22 316,208
2008-03-29 342,189
2008-04-05 357,209
2008-04-12 370,960
2008-04-19 328,334
2008-04-26 337,854
2008-05-03 335,533
2008-05-10 325,479
2008-05-17 319,817
2008-05-24 326,627
2008-05-31 300,989
2008-06-07 373,033
2008-06-14 349,254
2008-06-21 358,158
2008-06-28 368,544
2008-07-05 401,672
2008-07-12 476,071
2008-07-19 403,607
2008-07-26 374,182
2008-08-02 381,887
2008-08-09 372,807
2008-08-16 342,164
2008-08-23 344,255
2008-08-30 360,485
2008-09-06 336,131
2008-09-13 381,720
2008-09-20 397,610
2008-09-27 392,121
2008-10-04 426,786
2008-10-11 454,100
2008-10-18 416,114
2008-10-25 449,429
2008-11-01 466,373
2008-11-08 539,812
2008-11-15 513,047
2008-11-22 609,128
2008-11-29 537,230
2008-12-06 760,481
2008-12-13 629,867
2008-12-20 719,691
2008-12-27 717,000
2009-01-03 731,958
2009-01-10 956,791
2009-01-17 763,987
2009-01-24 620,143
2009-01-31 682,176
2009-02-07 710,152
2009-02-14 619,951
2009-02-21 605,668
2009-02-28 645,827
2009-03-07 652,635
2009-03-14 601,192
2009-03-21 590,067
2009-03-28 599,299
2009-04-04 623,279
2009-04-11 610,522
2009-04-18 596,564
2009-04-25 583,457
2009-05-02 536,648
2009-05-09 570,412
2009-05-16 540,925
2009-05-23 538,311
2009-05-30 500,380
2009-06-06 581,092
2009-06-13 562,449
2009-06-20 572,425
2009-06-27 563,387
2009-07-04 585,963
2009-07-11 677,038
2009-07-18 590,730
2009-07-25 516,351
2009-08-01 470,988
2009-08-08 486,586
2009-08-15 461,780
2009-08-22 460,998
2009-08-29 460,525
2009-09-05 470,079
2009-09-12 414,557
2009-09-19 441,311
2009-09-26 449,620
2009-10-03 456,233
2009-10-10 513,852
2009-10-17 464,985
2009-10-24 499,374
2009-10-31 487,714
2009-11-07 537,230
2009-11-14 479,350
2009-11-21 547,022
2009-11-28 462,090
2009-12-05 673,097
2009-12-12 561,655
2009-12-19 571,378
2009-12-26 561,852
2010-01-02 651,215
2010-01-09 825,891
2010-01-16 659,173
2010-01-23 507,651
2010-01-30 538,617
2010-02-06 512,463
2010-02-13 482,078
2010-02-20 458,160
2010-02-27 474,662
2010-03-06 462,679
2010-03-13 439,061
2010-03-20 413,067
2010-03-27 412,710
2010-04-03 421,130
2010-04-10 514,136
2010-04-17 436,814
2010-04-24 429,196
2010-05-01 399,350
2010-05-08 414,327
2010-05-15 414,572
2010-05-22 410,778
2010-05-29 418,873
2010-06-05 398,864
2010-06-12 448,305
2010-06-19 427,080
2010-06-26 444,712
2010-07-03 470,366
2010-07-10 515,991
2010-07-17 502,065
2010-07-24 413,679
2010-07-31 402,140
2010-08-07 425,471
2010-08-14 405,484
2010-08-21 384,955
2010-08-28 383,135
2010-09-04 381,863
2010-09-11 341,791
2010-09-18 382,341
2010-09-25 372,551
2010-10-02 373,681
2010-10-09 462,667
2010-10-16 394,016
2010-10-23 408,489
2010-10-30 421,097
2010-11-06 452,657
2010-11-13 409,548
2010-11-20 464,817
2010-11-27 412,922
2010-12-04 585,711
2010-12-11 491,776
2010-12-18 495,548
2010-12-25 525,710
2011-01-01 578,904
2011-01-08 773,499
2011-01-15 549,688
2011-01-22 485,950
2011-01-29 464,775
2011-02-05 440,706
2011-02-12 424,400
2011-02-19 380,985
2011-02-26 353,797
2011-03-05 407,299
2011-03-12 371,721
2011-03-19 354,457
2011-03-26 357,457
2011-04-02 353,817
2011-04-09 448,029
2011-04-16 381,834
2011-04-23 387,867
2011-04-30 415,974
2011-05-07 397,737
2011-05-14 361,573
2011-05-21 376,632
2011-05-28 381,497
2011-06-04 366,816
2011-06-11 400,608
2011-06-18 394,286
2011-06-25 406,633
2011-07-02 425,640
2011-07-09 473,963
2011-07-16 470,086
2011-07-23 369,207
2011-07-30 341,103
2011-08-06 354,408
2011-08-13 346,014
2011-08-20 344,870
2011-08-27 336,761
2011-09-03 348,582
2011-09-10 328,868
2011-09-17 353,820
2011-09-24 328,073
2011-10-01 332,394
2011-10-08 405,906
2011-10-15 357,562
2011-10-22 377,156
2011-10-29 369,647
2011-11-05 402,532
2011-11-12 363,016
2011-11-19 440,157
2011-11-26 372,640
2011-12-03 528,793
2011-12-10 435,863
2011-12-17 421,103
2011-12-24 497,689
2011-12-31 540,057
2012-01-07 646,219
2012-01-14 525,422
2012-01-21 416,880
2012-01-28 422,287
2012-02-04 401,365
2012-02-11 365,014
2012-02-18 346,659
2012-02-25 334,242
2012-03-03 368,433
2012-03-10 340,102
2012-03-17 319,498
2012-03-24 323,373
2012-03-31 315,800
2012-04-07 390,064
2012-04-14 370,482
2012-04-21 370,632
2012-04-28 333,476
2012-05-05 341,080
2012-05-12 325,094
2012-05-19 330,427
2012-05-26 346,260
2012-06-02 324,385
2012-06-09 376,610
2012-06-16 364,548
2012-06-23 370,521
2012-06-30 369,826
2012-07-07 442,192
2012-07-14 455,260
2012-07-21 340,780
2012-07-28 312,931
2012-08-04 320,219
2012-08-11 317,680
2012-08-18 311,857
2012-08-25 312,542
2012-09-01 309,537
2012-09-08 299,729
2012-09-15 330,454
2012-09-22 303,685
2012-09-29 301,046
2012-10-06 329,925
2012-10-13 362,730
2012-10-20 345,227
2012-10-27 339,924
2012-11-03 361,823
2012-11-10 478,551
2012-11-17 403,636
2012-11-24 358,865
2012-12-01 500,163
2012-12-08 429,191
2012-12-15 401,431
2012-12-22 457,584
2012-12-29 490,126
2013-01-05 557,424
2013-01-12 558,047
2013-01-19 437,360
2013-01-26 369,567
2013-02-02 388,708
2013-02-09 361,759
2013-02-16 351,087
2013-02-23 310,512
2013-03-02 335,794
2013-03-09 317,661
2013-03-16 301,471
2013-03-23 316,133
2013-03-30 317,494
2013-04-06 356,935
2013-04-13 359,415
2013-04-20 326,264
2013-04-27 301,622
2013-05-04 301,602
2013-05-11 320,253
2013-05-18 303,357
2013-05-25 319,508
2013-06-01 294,608
2013-06-08 332,964
2013-06-15 336,970
2013-06-22 336,901
2013-06-29 335,424
2013-07-06 383,811
2013-07-13 410,974
2013-07-20 340,457
2013-07-27 281,692
2013-08-03 288,861
2013-08-10 282,756
2013-08-17 281,164
2013-08-24 279,803
2013-08-31 269,359
2013-09-07 229,648
2013-09-14 272,946
2013-09-21 255,087
2013-09-28 252,196
2013-10-05 335,937
2013-10-12 360,957
2013-10-19 312,037
2013-10-26 325,326
2013-11-02 331,867
2013-11-09 364,167
2013-11-16 327,053
2013-11-23 369,197
2013-11-30 321,896
2013-12-07 463,413
2013-12-14 414,613
2013-12-21 418,272
2013-12-28 452,664
2014-01-04 488,537
2014-01-11 534,966
2014-01-18 416,116
2014-01-25 357,806
2014-02-01 357,742
2014-02-08 360,338
2014-02-15 322,761
2014-02-22 312,665
2014-03-01 317,832
2014-03-08 302,311
2014-03-15 285,970
2014-03-22 274,072
2014-03-29 294,862
2014-04-05 299,162
2014-04-12 318,793
2014-04-19 299,182
2014-04-26 318,127
2014-05-03 288,748
2014-05-10 270,738
2014-05-17 287,398
2014-05-24 275,412
2014-05-31 264,133
2014-06-07 313,371
2014-06-14 301,195
2014-06-21 305,029
2014-06-28 305,791
2014-07-05 322,753
2014-07-12 370,559
2014-07-19 287,049
2014-07-26 257,625
2014-08-02 247,877
2014-08-09 269,468
2014-08-16 249,463
2014-08-23 249,006
2014-08-30 249,780
2014-09-06 234,755
2014-09-13 242,318
2014-09-20 239,780
2014-09-27 227,571
2014-10-04 257,545
2014-10-11 273,756
2014-10-18 256,166
2014-10-25 271,331
2014-11-01 266,921
2014-11-08 309,338
2014-11-15 286,115
2014-11-22 357,202
2014-11-29 294,389
2014-12-06 389,284
2014-12-13 327,827
2014-12-20 340,827
2014-12-27 389,757
2015-01-03 439,342
2015-01-10 529,685
2015-01-17 383,538
2015-01-24 281,885
2015-01-31 306,643
2015-02-07 324,158
2015-02-14 277,904
2015-02-21 280,639
2015-02-28 315,566
2015-03-07 277,925
2015-03-14 260,242
2015-03-21 248,032
2015-03-28 239,748
2015-04-04 253,533
2015-04-11 308,173
2015-04-18 279,797
2015-04-25 250,780
2015-05-02 236,421
2015-05-09 242,882
2015-05-16 243,612
2015-05-23 253,454
2015-05-30 230,676
2015-06-06 275,619
2015-06-13 258,764
2015-06-20 263,199
2015-06-27 274,646
2015-07-04 303,585
2015-07-11 344,471
2015-07-18 262,949
2015-07-25 230,314
2015-08-01 224,104
2015-08-08 239,326
2015-08-15 229,251
2015-08-22 226,649
2015-08-29 230,079
2015-09-05 232,507
2015-09-12 198,903
2015-09-19 219,342
2015-09-26 215,116
2015-10-03 227,176
2015-10-10 256,522
2015-10-17 232,860
2015-10-24 245,365
2015-10-31 258,440
2015-11-07 291,098
2015-11-14 264,816
2015-11-21 305,424
2015-11-28 262,628
2015-12-05 384,491
2015-12-12 313,276
2015-12-19 319,641
2015-12-26 346,542
2016-01-02 405,368
2016-01-09 502,904
2016-01-16 378,747
2016-01-23 295,936
2016-01-30 311,940
2016-02-06 290,796
2016-02-13 258,380
2016-02-20 248,870
2016-02-27 265,802
2016-03-05 247,628
2016-03-12 236,888
2016-03-19 230,882
2016-03-26 235,716
2016-04-02 245,035
2016-04-09 270,419
2016-04-16 242,400
2016-04-23 245,040
2016-04-30 243,392
2016-05-07 261,899
2016-05-14 244,869
2016-05-21 240,798
2016-05-28 246,740
2016-06-04 232,300
2016-06-11 266,277
2016-06-18 247,968
2016-06-25 263,662
2016-07-02 267,437
2016-07-09 298,673
2016-07-16 268,526
2016-07-23 231,925
2016-07-30 219,202
2016-08-06 231,542
2016-08-13 219,570
2016-08-20 217,011
2016-08-27 215,688
2016-09-03 217,715
2016-09-10 193,291
2016-09-17 205,649
2016-09-24 198,455
2016-10-01 200,456
2016-10-08 238,581
2016-10-15 233,633
2016-10-22 237,314
2016-10-29 245,751
2016-11-05 258,608
2016-11-12 223,770
2016-11-19 287,794
2016-11-26 249,774
2016-12-03 351,580
2016-12-10 305,268
2016-12-17 315,068
2016-12-24 343,213
2016-12-31 350,561
2017-01-07 414,742
2017-01-14 352,799
2017-01-21 284,030
2017-01-28 280,983
2017-02-04 259,713
2017-02-11 245,886
2017-02-18 239,322
2017-02-25 212,829
2017-03-04 243,959
2017-03-11 222,227
2017-03-18 224,693
2017-03-25 228,269
2017-04-01 208,347
2017-04-08 239,823
2017-04-15 225,864
2017-04-22 241,611
2017-04-29 210,955
2017-05-06 215,040
2017-05-13 206,905
2017-05-20 210,544
2017-05-27 232,138
2017-06-03 212,696
2017-06-10 234,652
2017-06-17 228,883
2017-06-24 239,635
2017-07-01 252,886
2017-07-08 284,329
2017-07-15 257,763
2017-07-22 220,455
2017-07-29 198,776
2017-08-05 211,924
2017-08-12 198,280
2017-08-19 195,130
2017-08-26 196,227
2017-09-02 250,627
2017-09-09 211,923
2017-09-16 212,313
2017-09-23 212,987
2017-09-30 204,180
2017-10-07 229,241
2017-10-14 205,592
2017-10-21 216,004
2017-10-28 215,977
2017-11-04 242,111
2017-11-11 236,654
2017-11-18 275,004
2017-11-25 224,851
2017-12-02 326,052
2017-12-09 282,055
2017-12-16 287,479
2017-12-23 325,180
2017-12-30 351,500
2018-01-06 403,930
2018-01-13 354,708
2018-01-20 260,432
2018-01-27 268,197
2018-02-03 243,422
2018-02-10 233,252
2018-02-17 212,609
2018-02-24 196,294
2018-03-03 225,893
2018-03-10 205,185
2018-03-17 198,649
2018-03-24 195,433
2018-03-31 201,057
2018-04-07 231,759
2018-04-14 226,090
2018-04-21 200,139
2018-04-28 186,451
2018-05-05 190,262
2018-05-12 195,214
2018-05-19 207,043
2018-05-26 202,846
2018-06-02 191,523
2018-06-09 217,289
2018-06-16 206,023
2018-06-23 222,766
2018-06-30 231,539
2018-07-07 264,869
2018-07-14 232,238
2018-07-21 201,288
2018-07-28 179,880
2018-08-04 185,174
2018-08-11 180,038
2018-08-18 173,331
2018-08-25 175,745
2018-09-01 173,607
2018-09-08 162,640
2018-09-15 173,624
2018-09-22 172,930
2018-09-29 171,816
2018-10-06 193,936
2018-10-13 190,501
2018-10-20 198,733
2018-10-27 198,530
2018-11-03 214,814
2018-11-10 235,981
2018-11-17 226,576
2018-11-24 218,658
2018-12-01 317,936
2018-12-08 261,525
2018-12-15 255,195
2018-12-22 291,581
2018-12-29 327,388
2019-01-05 350,681
2019-01-12 343,678
2019-01-19 269,369
2019-01-26 250,580
2019-02-02 254,263
2019-02-09 242,762
2019-02-16 210,679
2019-02-23 203,049
2019-03-02 220,540
2019-03-09 209,302
2019-03-16 194,335
2019-03-23 190,023
2019-03-30 183,775
2019-04-06 196,071
2019-04-13 196,364
2019-04-20 211,762
2019-04-27 204,755
2019-05-04 204,033
2019-05-11 188,264
2019-05-18 191,931
2019-05-25 198,194
2019-06-01 189,577
2019-06-08 220,186
2019-06-15 205,921
2019-06-22 225,819
2019-06-29 224,565
2019-07-06 231,995
2019-07-13 243,621
2019-07-20 196,382
2019-07-27 178,897
2019-08-03 179,879
2019-08-10 186,914
2019-08-17 171,386
2019-08-24 176,867
2019-08-31 179,516
2019-09-07 160,342
2019-09-14 173,134
2019-09-21 175,394
2019-09-28 172,968
2019-10-05 188,106
2019-10-12 201,677
2019-10-19 186,748
2019-10-26 198,733
2019-11-02 205,625
2019-11-09 238,996
2019-11-16 227,892
2019-11-23 252,428
2019-11-30 216,827
2019-12-07 317,866
2019-12-14 270,547
2019-12-21 287,243
2019-12-28 312,524
2020-01-04 335,480
2020-01-11 338,550
2020-01-18 282,088
2020-01-25 229,002
2020-02-01 224,664
2020-02-08 219,601
2020-02-15 209,336
2020-02-22 199,278
2020-02-29 216,982
2020-03-07 200,382
2020-03-14 251,416
2020-03-21 2,920,162
2020-03-28 6,015,821
2020-04-04 6,211,406
2020-04-11 4,964,568
2020-04-18 4,267,395
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.

Note: Due to the scale of the chart and rapid increase in initial unemployment insurance (UI) claims, the initial UI claims for the last five weeks appear to align vertically.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, April 23, 2020

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All else equal, job losses of this magnitude would translate into an unemployment rate of 18.3%. However, the official unemployment rate, when it is released, will likely not reflect all coronavirus-related layoffs. This is due to the fact that jobless workers are only counted as unemployed if they are actively seeking work. That means many workers who lose their job as a result of the virus will be counted as dropping out of the labor force instead of as unemployed, because they are unable to search for work due to the lockdown.

Widespread reports of UI systems collapsing under the weight of so many applications raise the question not only of how many would-be applicants have been frozen out, but also of how many of those who managed to apply are actually receiving benefits. The data to get at that last question are lagged a week, but they show that roughly 71% of applicants are receiving benefits. That is calculated from noting that between March 14 and April 11, the total number of workers receiving benefits (known as “continued claims” or “insured unemployment”) increased by 14.4 million. Over the same period, 20.1 million workers filed unemployment insurance claims. That means that by April 11, only roughly 14.4 million out of 20.1 million new filers, or 71%, were receiving benefits. Applied to the current data, that would mean that roughly 7.0 million UI applicants from the coronavirus period are still waiting to receive their benefits.

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Trump’s corporate-first agenda has weakened worker protections needed to combat the coronavirus

Using the COVID-19 pandemic as cover, the Trump administration is reportedly preparing to take executive action to repeal and suspend federal regulations. This should not be a surprise—one of Trump’s first actions after taking office was to issue an executive order requiring federal agencies to identify at least two existing regulations to “repeal” when proposing a new regulation. Now seizing on the public health crisis and its economic impact as an excuse, the Trump administration is framing this renewed push to deregulate as a necessary policy response to promote economic growth, focusing on repealing and suspending regulations that impact businesses.

Deregulation has long been a central component of the corporate-interest agenda, and the Trump administration has certainly obliged. While the coronavirus was not under anyone’s control, President Trump’s failure to establish strong worker protections during his first term, through laws and regulations, has helped create the crisis millions of essential workers now confront every day on the job. The following are examples of how the Trump administration’s corporate-driven agenda has weakened worker protections needed to combat the coronavirus.

President Trump blocked the Workplace Injury and Illness record-keeping rule, which would have clarified an employer’s obligation under the Occupational Safety and Health Act to maintain accurate records of workplace injuries and illnesses. As a result, OSHA does not require employers to keep accurate records that could be used to identify unsafe, potentially life-threatening working conditions.

President Trump blocked the Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces rule, which would have helped ensure that taxpayer dollars were not awarded to contractors who violate basic labor and employment laws. Without this regulatory safeguard, more than 300,000 workers have been the victims of wage-related labor violations while working under federal contracts in the last decade.

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The extreme jobless numbers will lead to a jump in the unemployment rate, but that won’t tell the whole story

In the four weeks between March 15 and April 11, more than 20 million workers applied for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits. This is more than five times the worst four-week stretch of the Great Recession, which, at the time, was the worst recession the United States had seen since the Great Depression. What are we really up against here?

The situation is unfolding quickly, but one helpful way to understand it is to put the UI numbers in the context of the unemployment rate. When we do that, we find the jump in jobless claims over the last four weeks would have increased the unemployment rate to 15.7%—if everything else (like the rate of hiring and the rate of people voluntarily quitting their jobs) stayed the same—and all the workers who filed for unemployment benefits were counted as unemployed. But everything else definitely did not stay the same, and it is unlikely that all the workers applying for UI were counted as unemployed.

  • Everything else did not stay the same. The overall change in employment over any period is equal to the number of hires over the period minus the number of job “separations” over the period (in the pre-virus period, there were around 5.9 million hires and 5.7 million separations every month). For one, hires drop dramatically in recessions. And secondly, separations are not just job losses where people filed for UI. They can also be job losses where people didn’t file for UI (or were frozen out of the system), or voluntary quits, retirements, or worker deaths. All these parts are moving right now. In other words, there are important elements aside from what shows up in the UI data that go into determining the overall change in employment. As a result, it remains to be seen if the overall employment decline related to the coronavirus will be greater or less than the increase in coronavirus-related jobless claims.
  • Not all workers who filed for unemployment benefits will be counted as unemployed. A worker is counted as unemployed in the monthly unemployment numbers if they are on furlough (i.e., on temporary layoff), or if they don’t have a job but are available to work and are actively seeking work. So, someone who lost their job but is not actively seeking work because the virus makes job search impossible will not be counted as unemployed. And someone who lost their job because they have to care for a child whose school or day care closed would not be counted as unemployed because they are not available to work. Instead, these workers would be counted as dropping out of the labor force. It is difficult to know what share of workers who applied for unemployment insurance benefits will be counted as unemployed, but in the March unemployment data, which showed the leading edge of the impact of the virus, only about half of the drop in employment showed up as an increase in unemployment, and the rest showed up as a drop in the labor force participation rate. If that ratio holds, the unemployment rate will rise only half as much as it “should” in this crisis. (This is why it would be useful to use the employment rate as the metric when determining when pandemic-related relief provisions should trigger off, instead of solely the unemployment rate.)

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Workers Memorial Day highlights Secretary of Labor Scalia’s failure to protect workers during the coronavirus crisis

April 28 is Workers Memorial Day, a day observed around the world to remember those workers killed or injured on the job and to fight for strong safety and health protections for all workers. This fight has never been more critical. The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed a reality many workers have long confronted—workers are routinely forced to work in unsafe conditions, risking their health and safety for a job.

In 2018, the most recent annual data available, more than 5,000 U.S. workers died on the job. Prior to the pandemic, an average of 14 workers died each day of workplace injuries. This does not include workers who died from occupational diseases, estimated to be nearly 100,000 each year. In total, 275 workers died each day in 2018 as the result of workplace injuries and illnesses, and more than 3.5 million workers were injured at work in 2018.

As staggering as these data are, they understate the problem. Widespread underreporting as well as limitations in the injury and illness reporting system mean that many worker injuries remain uncounted. Worker health and safety experts estimate that more than seven million workers suffer workplace injuries and illnesses each year.

The coronavirus pandemic lays bare the long-standing failure of existing U.S. health and safety laws to protect workers. Weak worker protections cost thousands of workers’ lives each year and are now leaving essential workers unprotected on the job during this crisis. Over the last few months alone, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has received thousands of complaints from workers concerned about workplace exposure to COVID-19 and a lack of safeguards on the job.

While policymakers have been quick to highlight the sacrifices and heroic efforts of essential workers at this moment, they have done little to change the system to ensure that these workers are protected on the job. As a result, workers continue to be required to work without protective gear. Sick workers continue to lack access to paid leave. And, when workers try to speak up for themselves and each other, they are fired. Workers are dying as a result.

Instead of looking for ways to address weak health and safety protections for workers in this crisis, Secretary of Labor Eugene Scalia is taking this opportunity to weaken protections for millions of workers. He issued a rule exempting certain firms from being required to provide paid sick and family medical leave to workers, which could rob nine million health care workers and 4.4 million first responders from paid leave protections. Further, Scalia has refused to require employers to follow Centers for Disease Control (CDC) guidance for public businesses.

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Weak labor protections have put Midwestern food processing workers at risk for coronavirus

Earlier this year, our report Race in the Heartland detailed stark and pervasive racial disparities in Midwestern states—tracing these to long-standing patterns of discrimination and segregation in the region and the disproportionate impact of “rust belt” deindustrialization and the collapse of union membership for workers of color. Unsurprisingly, the COVID-19 crisis has magnified these disparities and their consequences. Across the Midwest, residential and occupational segregation put African Americans and Hispanics in the region more at risk. And across the Midwest, public policies—by design and by neglect—do little to address or alleviate that risk.

Workers of color are disproportionately exposed at work. The luxury of working from home is steeply stratified by race and income. African American and Hispanic workers are overrepresented in low-wage direct service occupations; in the 12 states of the Midwest, for example, Hispanic workers make up 7% of the labor force but over 18% of the workforce in building and cleaning services. In Midwestern cities, African American workers are dramatically overrepresented in occupations like child care and public transit. Across the rural Midwest, workers of color make up the majority of the workforce in the concentrations of low-wage food-processing production that dot the landscape.

In all of these settings, workers face both a greater risk of unemployment as the service economy shuts down and a heightened risk of exposure if and where they keep working. These risks are exaggerated in the Midwest, where four states (Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska) are among the five nationwide that still do not have statewide stay-at-home orders. In these states, the list of “essential businesses” is expansive and idiosyncratic, the expectation that workers show up—regardless of the risks—is clear, and the protection offered workers—by public policies or by their places of employment—is virtually nonexistent.

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How Southern state policymakers can strengthen democracy and protect voter health during the coronavirus pandemic

This is the final installment of a three-part series examining the economic and social conditions that impact health outcomes in Southern states, and how these conditions leave communities underprepared to protect front-line workers and communities during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the earlier pieces of this three-part series, we described what actions are especially needed in Southern states to protect public health and front-line workers and communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Here we highlight action that is also needed in the South to address the threats the coronavirus poses to participation in our democracy at the expense of voter and poll worker health. The country witnessed this most recently during the Wisconsin presidential primary election last week. As we describe below, Southern states already face significant challenges to democratic participation. The coronavirus pandemic further heightens the need around the country and especially in the South to address longstanding barriers to free and fair elections, an accurate count for the once-a-decade census, and a legislative process that is accountable to the communities elected officials represent.

Free and fair elections and healthy voters

Today, voter suppression, which disproportionately impacts black and brown people, comes in the form of enforcing strict voter identification laws, disenfranchising people with felony convictions, purging registered voters from voter lists, closing polling locations, and failing to provide required language assistance. In Southern states, these barriers are layered on top of the legacy of Jim Crow, which as our colleague Jhacova Williams demonstrates in her research, continues to stifle rates of black voter registration today.

The coronavirus pandemic creates additional barriers, asking voters to choose between protecting their health and their right to participate in our democracy and compromising the health and safety of poll workers during presidential primary as well as state and local elections. Today, progress for fair and accessible election reforms remains mixed. In Kentucky, the legislature overrode a veto by the governor to create a new voter identification law at the worst possible time. On the other hand, Virginia policymakers have enacted the kinds of voting reforms necessary to strengthen democracy in the wake of the crisis.Virginia’s governor recently signed multiple bills that expanded early voting, repealed voter identification laws, made election day a holiday, expanded absentee voting, and implemented automatic voter registration.

Southern state policymakers and election officials have taken some useful steps to protect public health and limit the spread of the coronavirus by postponing elections. For example, though most states in the South have already had their presidential primary elections, officials in states such as Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, and West Virginia delayed theirs until June. The North Carolina Board of Elections and Mississippi Governor Reeves postponed congressional runoff elections, and other officials in Alabama, Oklahoma, and Texas postponed local elections. In Oklahoma, the secretary of state will identify a new deadline for collecting ballot initiative signatures once the governor indicates that the state’s emergency declaration is over.

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Access to online learning amid coronavirus is far from universal, and children who are poor suffer from a digital divide

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, teachers, parents, school districts, and communities are doing their best to replace in-person with online learning. But as a recent Washington Post article notes, the move to e-learning prompted by school closures has “exposed the technology divides”—with K–12 students who lack the resources they now need to learn at home facing long-term academic disadvantages.

Although the Post article focused on the digital divide in the District of Columbia, this is a national problem.

EPI analysis of data from the most comprehensive study of primary and secondary education in the country illustrates a widespread digital divide based on family income. The data, from the National Center for Education Statistics’ National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) for eighth-graders, show that full access to online learning is far from universal and that students who are poor are less likely to have access to the key tools and experiences they need to attend school online. For example, nearly 16% of eighth-graders overall, and almost a quarter of eighth-graders who are poor, don’t have a desktop or laptop computer at home on which to follow their classes. About 8% of eighth-graders who are not poor lack access to these essential devices. The data also show that low shares of students have teachers with full technological proficiency to teach online. (Poor students are defined as students who are eligible for the federal free or reduced-price lunch program.)

Not all students are set up for online learning and students who are poor have less access to key tools: Share of eighth-graders with access to tool for online learning, by income level, 2017

All students 95.8%
Non-poor 98.4%
Poor 93.0%
All students 84.4%
Non-poor 92.3%
Poor 76.3%
All students 76.3%
Non-poor 81.8%
Poor 70.6%
All students 51.3%
Non-poor 56.1%
Poor 46.4%
All students 43.4%
Non-poor 45.0%
Poor 41.7%
All students 69.2%
Non-poor 71.4%
Poor 66.8%
All students 32.5%
Non-poor 32.5%
Poor 32.6%
All students 19.3%
Non-poor 18.3%
Poor 20.3%
ChartData Download data

The data below can be saved or copied directly into Excel.

Notes: Poor students are students eligible for the federal free or reduced-price lunch programs. Non-poor students are students who are ineligible for those programs. Frequent use of internet at home for homework means every day or almost every day. Students’ teachers were either “already proficient” in, “have not” received training in, or “had received training” in “software applications” and “integrating computers into instruction” in the last two years.

Source: 2017 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), eighth-grade reading sample microdata from the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for Education Statistics

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A coronavirus recovery: How to ensure older workers fully participate

Key takeaways:

  • Because older workers are more likely to be unemployed for long periods, have work-limiting disabilities, and live in areas of the country that were struggling even before the crisis, policies aimed at addressing these problems will especially benefit these workers.
  • While infrastructure spending could help jump-start the post-pandemic recovery, policies must ensure that older workers participate in training and jobs programs related to these investments.
  • Regulatory protections for front-line workers, especially older workers and others at heightened risk for contracting or suffering serious consequences from contagious diseases, need to be strengthened and updated using lessons learned from the pandemic.
  • Employer-provided benefits result in spotty coverage and higher costs for older workers. The United States should catch up to other countries and provide sick leave, paid family leave, and health insurance through government programs rather than leaving these to the discretion of employers.

(See the companion blog post outlining steps needed to protect vulnerable older workers in the economic collapse caused by measures needed to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.)

Once the worst of the outbreak is over and social distancing measures are relaxed, policies to help older workers will be needed to ensure they share in the recovery.

Deficit-financed stimulus spending—needed to quickly bring the economy back to something approaching full employment—will help but not ensure broad-based prosperity. Policymakers also need to address power imbalances between employers and workers and target policies at disadvantaged workers, including unemployed older workers.

Older workers, as I discussed in my last blog post, may find it harder to get back in the job market after layoffs for a number of reasons. They may have health conditions that limit what they can do or they may feel forced to accept large pay cuts because some skills and knowledge they’ve built up aren’t transferable and may be undervalued by prospective employers. Absent policies to help these workers regain their footing, they may become “discouraged workers” who give up on the job search and retire before they’re ready to.

This post lays out a series of policies to address barriers to employment for unemployed older workers and to protect older workers from health and financial risks.

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Updated state unemployment numbers remain astonishingly high: Six states saw record-high levels of initial unemployment claims last week

This morning, the Department of Labor released the latest initial unemployment insurance (UI) claims data, showing that another five million people (not seasonally adjusted) filed for UI last week. In the last four weeks, more than 20 million workers—whose economic security has been upended by the coronavirus crisis and inadequate policy responses—filed for UI.

Last week, Colorado, New York, South Carolina, Connecticut, Mississippi, and West Virginia saw their highest level of initial UI claim filings ever. These six states, along with Florida, Missouri, and North Carolina, saw increases in initial filings compared with the prior week.

Most states had fewer initial UI claims last week than in the week prior, but the number of UI claims remained astonishingly high. California and Michigan—the two states with the largest decline since the week before—still had 661,000 and 219,000 claims filed last week, respectively—the third-highest week on record for both.

Figure A compares UI claims filed last week with filings in the pre-virus period, showing once again that Southern states are faring particularly poorly. Seven of the 10 states that had the highest percent change last week relative to the pre-virus period are Southern: Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, Louisiana, Kentucky, South Carolina, and Alabama.

Figure A

Initial unemployment insurance claims filed during the week ending April 11, by state

State Initial claims filed Percent change from the prior week Level change from prior week Percent change from pre-virus period Level change from pre-virus period Sum of initial claims for the five weeks ending April 11
Alabama 91,079 -14.7% -15,660 4221% 88,971 291,513
Alaska 12,752 -12.6% -1,838 1410% 11,908 50,083
Arizona 97,784 -26.2% -34,644 2878% 94,501 352,344
Arkansas 34,635 -44.2% -27,451 2241% 33,156 135,134
California 660,966 -28.1% -257,848 1517% 620,094 2,882,044
Colorado 105,073 126.8% 58,747 5418% 103,169 235,332
Connecticut 33,962 1.5% 498 1216% 31,381 129,193
Delaware 13,272 -29.6% -5,579 2224% 12,701 62,508
Washington D.C. 9,904 -35.4% -5,425 2079% 9,450 56,777
Florida 181,293 6.7% 11,408 3478% 176,226 660,438
Georgia 317,526 -18.6% -72,606 5831% 312,173 859,063
Hawaii 34,693 -34.7% -18,408 2955% 33,557 146,794
Idaho 17,817 -42.3% -13,087 1518% 16,716 96,279
Illinois 141,049 -29.8% -59,992 1402% 131,658 645,495
Indiana 118,184 -6.9% -8,826 4611% 115,676 446,719
Iowa 46,356 -27.8% -17,838 1887% 44,023 209,697
Kansas 30,769 -37.6% -18,537 1808% 29,156 159,723
Kentucky 115,763 -1.5% -1,812 4527% 113,261 398,295
Louisiana 80,045 -20.4% -20,576 4648% 78,359 352,759
Maine 13,273 -57.1% -17,637 1610% 12,497 90,046
Maryland 60,823 -44.4% -48,666 2103% 58,063 302,474
Massachusetts 103,040 -26.2% -36,607 1601% 96,982 580,011
Michigan 219,320 -43.6% -169,234 3870% 213,796 1,045,553
Minnesota 89,634 -18.7% -20,626 2447% 86,115 428,772
Mississippi 46,160 0.7% 308 5477% 45,332 130,693
Missouri 95,785 4.7% 4,327 3053% 92,747 337,796
Montana 13,437 -36.7% -7,807 1620% 12,656 71,610
Nebraska 16,391 -39.4% -10,663 3125% 15,883 84,665
Nevada 60,180 -24.1% -19,105 2509% 57,873 310,061
New Hampshire 23,936 -38.9% -15,266 4142% 23,372 124,537
New Jersey 140,600 -34.6% -74,236 1619% 132,421 686,971
New Mexico 19,494 -25.4% -6,638 2652% 18,786 92,449
New York 395,949 15.0% 51,498 2048% 377,519 1,201,266
North Carolina 137,934 0.4% 512 5263% 135,362 545,117
North Dakota 10,378 -31.4% -4,747 2374% 9,959 43,398
Ohio 157,218 -30.5% -68,973 2054% 149,918 861,052
Oklahoma 48,977 -19.1% -11,557 3076% 47,435 181,017
Oregon 50,930 -18.9% -11,858 1182% 46,958 195,539
Pennsylvania 238,357 -14.1% -39,283 1788% 225,736 1,313,564
Rhode Island 22,805 -19.3% -5,438 1931% 21,682 115,803
South Carolina 87,686 1.3% 1,113 4409% 85,742 274,653
South Dakota 6,152 -24.4% -1,986 3276% 5,970 23,042
Tennessee 74,772 -33.3% -37,414 3620% 72,762 320,237
Texas 273,567 -13.2% -41,600 2009% 260,596 1,036,521
Utah 24,171 -26.8% -8,869 2314% 23,170 106,738
Vermont 9,478 -42.5% -6,996 1440% 8,863 45,028
Virginia 106,723 -27.6% -40,646 3940% 104,082 415,572
Washington 150,516 -12.1% -20,736 2379% 144,446 648,766
West Virginia 14,595 0.7% 101 1192% 13,465 48,013
Wisconsin 69,884 -33.3% -34,939 1136% 64,230 341,862
Wyoming 4,904 -25.0% -1,639 885% 4,406 22,013

Notes: Initial claims for the week ending April 11 reflect advance state claims, not seasonally adjusted. For comparisons with the “pre-virus period,” we use a four-week average of initial claims for the weeks ending February 15–March 7, 2020.

Source: U.S. Employment and Training Administration, Initial Claims [ICSA], retrieved from Department of Labor (DOL), https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf and https://oui.doleta.gov/unemploy/claims.asp, April 16, 2020

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9.2 million workers likely lost their employer-provided health insurance in the past four weeks

These estimates were updated on May 14, 2020. See the updated estimates.

We estimate that 9.2 million workers were at high risk of losing their employer-provided health insurance in the past four weeks. To avoid prohibitively costly insurance options, the federal government should fund an expansion of Medicare and Medicaid to all those suffering job losses during the pandemic period.

Two weeks ago, when the two-week total of unemployment insurance (UI) initial claims was 8.7 million, we estimated that 3.5 million workers may have lost their health insurance at work. Since then, 11.4 million more workers filed claims for unemployment benefits, bringing the total of UI initial claims over the last four weeks to 20.1 million, currently the most comprehensive measure of the extent of job losses and furloughs due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

We estimate that across all industries where workers have filed UI claims, about 45.7% of workers had their own health insurance provided through their employer. As a result, of the 20.1 million workers who filed initial UI claims in the last four weeks, 9.2 million may have lost coverage through their own employer-provided health insurance (EPHI).

The analysis, described below, combines industry-specific UI claims data for 11 states, representing about 20% of national employment, with national, industry-specific health insurance coverage rates. Using these data, we provide a rough prediction of 9.2 million workers losing EPHI. We can’t say exactly how many people will lose insurance coverage altogether for several reasons. For example, some workers who lose EPHI due to layoffs or hours reductions that trigger UI claims may be able to obtain coverage through health care exchanges set up by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or through Medicaid. Some of this group may also be able to obtain continuing coverage through COBRA, paying out of pocket the full cost of their EPHI coverage. Some workers may be able to obtain coverage through other family members, or if only experiencing a temporary furlough or hours reduction, their employers might continue to pay for coverage. On the other hand, our calculations might understate the loss of health insurance coverage because they do not account for family members who are no longer covered because of the policyholder’s layoff. And, because not all layoffs result in UI claims, we will underestimate the actual magnitude of job losses.

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Women have been hit hard by the coronavirus labor market: Their story is worse than industry-based data suggest

Key findings:

  • The latest payroll employment data for March show that women were the hardest hit by initial job losses in the COVID-19 labor market; women represented 50.0% of payroll employment in February, but represented 58.8% of job losses in March.
  • If women’s share of new unemployment insurance (UI) claims in recent weeks was driven solely by sector-level differences in gender composition, then they would have accounted for roughly 45% of new UI claims, or about 6.8 million new claims.
  • However, relying solely on the gender composition of sectoral unemployment may lead to an underestimate of new UI claims that were filed by women. Using three states that provide direct estimates of the gender composition of new UI claims shows that the female share of these claims is substantially higher than what we estimate by using only the sectoral composition of employment by gender.
  • We estimate that once the overrepresentation of women in sectors with new layoffs is corrected for, between 7.8 and 8.4 million women filed for unemployment insurance in the three weeks ending April 4.

Since March 15, 15.1 million workers in the United States have filed for unemployment insurance. Tomorrow, the latest initial unemployment insurance claims will be released by the Department of Labor for the week ending April 11, and estimates suggest that there could be another 4.5 million initial claims reported. These top-line numbers are vital for understanding what is going on in the economy and the extent of the economic insecurity millions of workers and their families are experiencing. But what is less clear is who these workers are and where they work. While national statistics that directly report the demographic characteristics of UI claimants will not be available for months, we use national employment data from March and preliminary state UI reports through April to begin to answer those questions. We find that job losses and furloughs have disproportionately affected women. This is the result of two factors: Women are more concentrated in sectors that experienced more job loss, and women also tended to see more job loss than men within these sectors.

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New survey and report reveals mistreatment of H-2A farmworkers is common: The coronavirus puts them further at risk

The irony should be lost on no one that NPR’s reporting on the Trump administration’s push to lower wages for H-2A farmworkers came out the same week that a new report was published by Centro de los Derechos del Migrante (CDM) that calls into question whether the H-2A temporary work visa program should exist at all without major reforms to protect migrant workers.

The report details the findings of in-depth interviews with 100 H-2A workers, who “reported discrimination, sexual harassment, wage theft, and health and safety violations by their employers—and a chilling lack of recourse.” Every single H-2A worker “experienced at least one serious legal violation of their rights, and 94% experienced three or more.” And before they had even arrived in the United States, many were already heavily in debt as a result of paying illegal recruitment fees in exchange for the opportunity to work in a low-wage farm job.

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