- Associated Press - Thursday, October 6, 2011

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of people who applied for unemployment benefits rose slightly last week, a sign that the job market remains weak.

Weekly applications increased by 6,000 to a seasonally adjusted 401,000, the Labor Department said Thursday.

The modest gain comes after applications plummeted by 33,000 in the previous week. The drop partly reflected technical difficulties with the department’s seasonal adjustment process.

The four-week average, a less volatile measure, fell for the second straight week to 414,000, its lowest level in a month.

Still, applications are higher than they would be in a healthy economy. They need to fall below 375,000 to signal sustainable job growth. They haven’t been that low since February.

The slumping economy has led many employers to pull back on hiring. Economists say employers added just 56,000 jobs last month, and the unemployment rate remained stuck at 9.1 percent for the third straight month. The government issues its September jobs report on Friday.

There have been some pessimistic signs regarding hiring this week. Service firms — which include retailers, restaurants, hotels and health care providers — cut their staffs for the first time in 13 months in September, according to a private survey Wednesday by the Institute for Supply Management.

And payroll processor ADP said that businesses added 91,000 jobs last month, a mildly optimistic reading. The ADP report doesn’t cover government jobs, and it has been inconsistent with the Labor Department’s figures. ADP reported a similar job gain for August, and yet the government’s report found a net job gain of zero.

On a positive note, on Monday the ISM’s employment index for the manufacturing sector rose, suggesting that factories added jobs last month. But manufacturing accounts for only about 10 percent of U.S. employment and can’t boost hiring by much on its own.

The overall economy barely grew in the first half of the year. Many economists fear it could fall back into recession. Several analysts have put the risk of a recession as high as 40 percent.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said Tuesday that the economic recovery “is close to faltering.” Mr. Bernanke said that the economy is growing more slowly than the Federal Reserve had expected and that the biggest factor depressing consumer confidence is poor job growth.

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