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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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).
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 |
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
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.
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.
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.)
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.
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.
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.
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% |
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
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
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.
The Trump administration has weakened crucial worker protections needed to combat the coronavirus: Agencies tasked with protecting workers have put them in danger
Key takeaways:
- The Department of Labor (DOL) issued a temporary rule that will exempt 96% of applicable firms from providing paid sick and paid family and medical leave to their staff. It could also exempt 9 million health care workers and 4.4 million first responders from receiving paid leave.
- DOL issued guidance that narrows the eligibility of workers to receive Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA). For example, gig workers must be “forced to suspend operations” by a government quarantine in order to receive PUA benefits, rather than voluntarily quarantining themselves.
- The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) issued guidance that will jeopardize the health and safety of workers. The CDC now allows essential workers to continue to work even if they may have been exposed to the coronavirus—as long as they appear to be asymptomatic and the employer implements additional precautions.
- The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) advises that certain businesses are not required to investigate or record workplace-related coronavirus cases. Not only does this guidance make workers less safe, it will likely make the public health crisis worse as employers will not be required to record virus-related illness as officials work to track these cases.
In the last three weeks, an unprecedented 17 million workers applied for unemployment insurance (UI), while millions more risk their lives to provide essential services. To mitigate the health and economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic, Congress has passed a series of bills aimed at providing relief and recovery measures. The Families First Coronavirus Relief Act (FFRCA) and the CARES Act included critical provisions to assist workers impacted by the pandemic; chief among those are an expansion of Unemployment Insurance (UI) and access to paid leave. However, rather than working to implement these relief and recovery bills efficiently and effectively, the Trump administration has instead looked for ways to narrow and weaken the worker protections included in the legislation.
Trump administration looking to cut the already low wages of H-2A migrant farmworkers while giving their bosses a multibillion-dollar bailout
Key takeaways:
- The Trump administration, which recently deemed farmworkers essential to the economy, is considering lowering the wages of the 205,000 migrant farmworkers employed in the United States through the H-2A temporary work visa program, according to published reports.
- H-2A wages are usually based on a mandated wage standard that varies by region—known as the Adverse Effect Wage Rate (AEWR)—aiming to prevent temporary migrant farmworkers from being underpaid according to local standards and to prevent downward pressure on the wages of farmworkers in the United States.
- Farmworkers in general are paid very low wages—in 2019 they earned $13.99 per hour, which is only three-fifths of what production and nonsupervisory workers outside of agriculture earned, and they earned less than what workers with lowest levels of education in the U.S. labor market earned.
- The national average AEWR wage, at $12.96 per hour, was lower than wages for any of these groups of workers, and many H-2A farmworkers earned far less in some of the biggest H-2A states.
- The Trump administration may try to lower the wages of H-2A farmworkers through the regulatory process or a provision attached to a broader piece of legislation.
- This comes at a time when farm owners looking to cut their workers’ wages are on the verge of receiving a federal bailout worth at least $16 billion, which will help cover potential financial losses related to impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
Last week, NPR reported that “new White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows is working with Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to see how to reduce wage rates for foreign guest workers on American farms.” Apparently, the Trump administration believes that temporary migrant farmworkers—who earned between $11.01 and $15.03 per hour in 2019—are overpaid.
Why should migrant farmworkers have to take a pay cut, especially right now, when farmers and ranchers are about to receive at least $16 billion in direct payments thanks to a federal bailout?
The coronavirus will explode achievement gaps in education
This blog post was originally posted on shelterforce.org.
The COVID-19 pandemic will take existing academic achievement differences between middle-class and low-income students and explode them.
The academic achievement gap has bedeviled educators for years. In math and reading, children of college-educated parents score on average at about the 60th percentile, while children whose parents have only a high school diploma score, on average, at the 35th percentile.* The academic advantages of children whose parents have master’s degrees and beyond are even greater.
To a significant extent, this is a neighborhood issue—schools are more segregated today than at any time in the last 50 years, mostly because the neighborhoods in which they are located are so segregated. Schools with concentrated populations of children affected by serious socioeconomic problems are able to devote less time and attention to academic instruction.
In 2001 we adopted the “No Child Left Behind Act,” assuming that these disparities mostly stemmed from schools’ failure to take seriously a responsibility to educate African American, Hispanic, and lower-income students. Supporters claimed that holding educators accountable for test results would soon eliminate the achievement gap. Promoted by liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans, the theory was ludicrous, and the law failed to fulfill its promise. The achievement gap mostly results from social-class based advantages that some children bring to school and that others lack, as well as disadvantages stemming from racial discrimination that only some children have to face.
The coronavirus, unfortunately, will only exacerbate the effects of these advantages.
Congress should immediately pass legislation protecting workers’ safety during the coronavirus pandemic
Key takeaways:
- Working people should not have to wait for a fourth recovery bill for vital, lifesaving protections, while corporations have received $450 billion in aid with no strings attached.
- The federal government should take on the role of “payroll of last resort,” as some other nations have done, in order to keep working people on the payroll with access to health care.
- The “phase four” recovery bill should contain enhanced protections for all workers performing essential work during this crisis, such as providing personal protective equipment, hazard pay, whistleblower protections, and bolstered collective bargaining rights.
Since March 8, Congress has passed three bills allocating trillions of dollars to relief and recovery measures in response to the coronavirus pandemic. These bills included some important provisions for workers hurt by the pandemic. Chief among those are funding for expanded unemployment insurance, increased access to paid sick leave for some workers, and funding for the airline industry to keep paying workers and covering their benefits. However, direct aid to workers was a small percentage of the overall funding in these relief and recovery measures. Much of the money included in these bills went directly to corporate interests. For example, the CARES Act included $450 billion in aid to impacted firms with virtually no strings attached. Instead of requiring firms receiving this bailout money to maintain pre-pandemic payroll levels, wages, and benefits, the language in the bill requires that such worker protections be provided “to the greatest extent practicable.” This is toothless language that does not require employers to use this taxpayer money to keep workers employed.
The airline industry relief funding was the only example of financial assistance with a serious string attached—requiring relief funds to be used explicitly for the “continuation of payment of employee wages, salaries, and benefits.” However, the Trump administration seems to be playing politics with the implementation of this program. It is unfortunate if not unpredictable that the sole program that provided a subsidy for workers’ wages and benefits is now the source of a political battle that jeopardizes its efficacy.
A comprehensive U.S. manufacturing policy is needed now more than ever
Twelve years ago, we warned that:
-
- The increasing dependence of U.S. defense systems on foreign suppliers is alarming, especially, it might be argued, in a post-September 11 world…What happens when supply routes, for example, anywhere across the Atlantic or Pacific Oceans, are disrupted?
These warnings could not be more relevant today as we experience devastating disruptions in our supply chains across virtually every industry sector due to the growing COVID-19 crisis. Essential medical supplies are impacted as we struggle to combat the coronavirus pandemic.
The U.S. commercial industrial base is particularly threatened by excessive reliance on outsourcing without regard to possible downsides. Aerospace, which contributes heavily to gross domestic product (GDP) with almost 500,000 U.S. jobs, has been outsourcing production for many years to repeated protests from the Machinists Union, among others. Fifty years ago, U.S. commercial airplanes were mostly produced in the U.S. Now, a much larger percentage of aircraft is outsourced—with an estimated 70% of the Boeing 787 production being outsourced.
Of course, it is not just aerospace and related products that are outsourced. The U.S. shipbuilding and repair industry has declined dramatically, along with other fundamental industries like machine tools. We are now more dependent on other countries for these items—along with countless others—than ever before.
Do Black economists matter?: The media erasure of Black economic voices hurts the communities hardest hit by the pandemic and society at large
The voices of Black economists have been largely absent from the recent media coronavirus coverage. Over the past month, for example, The New York Times, which has become one of the primary sources for economic insights about the pandemic, published 29 articles between opinion editorials and The Upshot mentioning the words “economist” and “coronavirus” between March 9 and April 9. Out of the 29 articles listed, just one was authored by a Black journalist, and only three addressed the racial inequities with respect to COVID-19. Given the high demand for economists’ insights, between the opinion page and The Upshot, 42 economists were either cited or co-authoring a piece. Among the 42, not a single Black economist was cited or was a contributor to an article despite the fact that some are addressing mobile payments to workers, solutions to the widening racial-wealth gap, and the pandemic’s impact on marginalized communities.
Black economists have long been ignored by the economics profession and media. Sadie T.M. Alexander, the first African American economist, could not practice after she earned a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania in 1921 because of racism and sexism. And recently, the American Economic Association began addressing its race problem beginning with a professional climate survey that showed a 56-percentage-point-difference between Blacks and non-Blacks with respect to feeling that race was respected in the profession and nearly half of Black respondents cited that they felt discriminated against because of race. One respondent went so far as to share that they would not recommend their Black children go into economics and that they made a mistake in choosing the field.
This is not the first crisis in which Black economists have been ignored by their colleagues and the media. Before the 2008 financial downturn, Black communities were experiencing early signs of waning unemployment and housing market devastation with respect to subprime loans and predatory lenders. William Spriggs, an economist at Howard University, told Quartz that underrepresented minority economists noticed these trends early on but their notes of alarm were barely amplified and were, quite frankly, ignored. Janet Yellen, former Chair of the Federal Reserve Board has since gone on record to recognize how the lack of diversity at the Board contributed to the severity of the crisis and the ineffectual nature of responses to it. The problem hasn’t gotten better, however. The Federal Reserve Board has hired only one Black woman out of its team of 406 economists, which is why there was a slew of coverage about its lack of diversity in 2019.
Relief efforts need to do more to protect older workers in a coronavirus economic shutdown
Key takeaways:
- The Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act, signed into law last month, and earlier policy responses to the pandemic are steps in the right direction but don’t do enough to protect workers, including older workers, who are at much greater risk from COVID-19.
- Older workers who lose their jobs face harsh consequences. They have less time to make up for lost earnings and savings before retirement. Many have trouble being hired and retire before they’re ready. They’re often 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.
- While older workers are less likely to work in the hard-hit leisure and hospitality industries, many are employed in other sectors and occupations that could see large job losses, including public-sector occupations.
- Expanding access to paid sick and family leave is critical to the safety and well-being of older workers and their families, as are stronger health and safety protections for workers.
- The CARES Act makes some necessary changes to paid leave and unemployment insurance programs, but these reforms need to be made permanent or automatically extended as long as economic conditions warrant.
- Older workers with inadequate health and safety protections who stop working because they’re at higher risk of serious consequences from COVID-19 should be eligible for paid leave and unemployment benefits.
- Work-sharing programs that encourage employers to reduce hours rather than resort to layoffs would especially help older workers.
(This is part one of a two-part series of posts on the impact of the coronavirus on older workers and what needs to be done to mitigate the economic shock to this group.)
The Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act, signed into law last month, and earlier policy responses to the pandemic are steps in the right direction but don’t do enough to protect workers, including older workers, who are at much greater risk from COVID-19.
Older workers ages 65 and older, though not those ages 55–64, are less likely to be able to work from home than most other workers; only workers ages 15–24 are less able to telecommute. These older workers—many of whom are on the front lines—are at much higher risk of dying or suffering serious consequences from COVID-19 than their younger counterparts.
Personal care aides are among the low-paid and high-risk occupations with a disproportionate share of older workers (personal care aides are also overwhelmingly women and disproportionately people of color and immigrants). Older workers are also somewhat more likely than their younger counterparts to be employed in hospitals and nursing homes. (Unless otherwise noted, all references to older workers’ employment shares are based on the author’s analysis of 2015–2017 American Community Survey microdata for workers ages 55–64.)
The federal response to the pandemic has so far done little to protect the health of older workers and others facing greater risk from exposure to the virus, who are faced with a daily choice between risking their lives and losing their livelihoods. Low-paid workers in particular are not only less able to work from home, they’re also more likely to rely on public transportation and share close living quarters, heightening the risk of contagion for themselves and their families.
The next coronavirus relief package must include funding to safeguard our democracy: Voting by mail and online voting must be considered
An essential component of any “phase four” coronavirus relief and recovery package must be additional investments to protect our right to vote. Lawmakers must act now to establish safe, alternative voting methods—like vote-by-mail and online voting—especially before November’s general election.
The CARES Act included $400 million in “election security grants” to prevent, prepare for, and respond to the coronavirus domestically for the 2020 federal election cycle. This is far less than fair election advocates argued was necessary to protect our elections during the pandemic. The Brennan Center for Justice, for example, released a plan calling for a $2 billion investment to ensure that the 2020 election is free, fair, accessible, and secure.
As more states explore alternative ways of casting ballots, Congress must provide resources responsive to the magnitude of the challenge. A failure to provide sufficient investments to safeguard elections is the most successful effort at voter suppression and disenfranchisement since the expansion of the franchise. We must demand investment in our democracy infrastructure and more voting options.
States continue to see record-high levels of initial unemployment insurance claims, including in the South
Key takeaways:
- Twenty-eight states had record numbers of unemployment insurance (UI) filings last week. The remaining states had their record high in one of the previous two weeks.
- California, Georgia, Michigan, New York, and Texas had the most claims last week.
- Southern states didn’t initially lose jobs as quickly as other states, because they were slow to implement social distancing measures. Now, however, they are experiencing this unprecedented job loss particularly acutely.
- The federal government should take on the costs of keeping workers on the payroll and provide substantially more funding to state and local governments.
Another 6.6 million people filed initial unemployment insurance (UI) claims last week, continuing the upending of the labor market we have seen in response to the coronavirus pandemic. According to seasonally adjusted data released yesterday morning by the Department of Labor, over the last three weeks, 16.8 million—over one in 10—workers have filed for UI. As the labor market is disrupted, so are the lives of millions of workers across the country.
Last week, 28 states saw a record number of initial UI filings, with the rest of the states experiencing their high point during one of the prior two weeks. While many states saw a slight decline in UI claims compared with the prior week, the number of claims filed this week is still staggeringly high. In the four weeks between March 7 and April 4, over two million Californians and one million Pennsylvanians filed UI claims.
At least $500 billion more in coronavirus aid is needed for state and local governments by the end of 2021
- States and localities are already announcing severe budget shortfalls due to the coronavirus shock.
- The recently passed CARES Act allocated $150 billion to help state and local governments respond to the coronavirus, but this amount does not come close to what’s needed.
- We estimate that at least $500 billion more aid will be needed by the end of 2021 to prevent state and local budget cuts that hamper the economy after the public health crisis ends.
Congress has provided multiple rounds of relief to state and local governments in legislation responding to the economic shock of the coronavirus, but much more will be needed by these governments in coming years. We estimate that roughly $500 billion more will be needed by the end of 2021 to keep state and local governments from becoming a significant drag on economic recovery after the public health crisis passes.
The recently passed CARES Act allocated $150 billion to help state and local governments grapple with the costs of responding to COVID-19. But this amount does not come close to what is needed to address the severity and likely duration of the public health and economic crises. As economic activity has collapsed, it has triggered a dramatic downturn in state and local revenues even apart from new spending demands imposed by the coronavirus. Unlike the federal government, most state governments are required by law or constitution to balance their budgets. As revenues decline because of lower incomes and reduced spending, state and local governments face serious fiscal constraints, often leading to budget cuts that further depress demand in the economy.
Already, states and localities are announcing austerity measures and severe budget shortfalls exactly when public spending is most critical—both for protecting workers and for priming the economy for a rapid bounceback when the shutdown ends. Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has proposed an across-the-board 20% budget cut; New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli estimated tax revenue would be between $4 billion and $7 billion below projections for fiscal year 2020; Arkansas’s projected revenue decline is more than double the size of the state’s reserves; and California is projected to spend down its sizable cash reserves in mere months, despite previously being on track to build the largest cash reserve in its history of more than $20 billion.
Local governments are announcing severe revenue shortfalls, too: This week, Arlington County, Virginia, announced a shortfall of $56 million for FY 2021, and cities like Seattle and New Orleans are each projecting shortfalls of at least $100 million this year.
Clearly, the aid to state and local governments passed so far is not sufficient, and we estimate that at least $500 billion will be needed by the end of 2021. Here’s how we got to this number.
The Wild West: Gig workers on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic lack basic worker protections
In the safety of our homes, those of us lucky enough to be healthy and have disposable income are searching websites for the best food delivery options, clicking on the pad thai and pizza choices that will soon arrive at our door. We wash our hands after touching the delivery bag and enjoy our dinner in front of the latest Hulu or Netflix binge offering. But what about the Uber Eats driver who dropped off the food? Not only are these workers exposed to customers and restaurant workers who might be sick with COVID-19, but these workers lack paid sick leave, health care, or unemployment protections through their employer because Uber—as well as so many other companies we depend on right now, such as Instacart, Lyft, and Amazon—classifies many of its workers as independent contractors not entitled to regular employee benefits.
Right under our noses, every day, these men and women toil without any of the basic job safety or security protections we take for granted. Independent contracting is the Wild West of the workplace. No law applies. None. While lately, Uber, Lyft, and Amazon have been in the news for filling a critical role in delivering supplies to a homebound nation, until recently news on their employment practices has focused on lawsuits accusing them of misclassifying their workers as independent contractors. California has even passed a law, AB5, that would make sure these workers are considered employees with full protections, but the gig employers are defying the law and spending tens of millions of dollars to repeal it in a November referendum. Some gig employers defend their practices as simply a byproduct of the “gig” economy and a natural development from the greater use of technology. But in reality, this is just an old dog doing a new trick: These workers are clearly employees. The same regime applies to many other workers we interact with every day, from janitors to manicurists and hairstylists.
When the New Deal laws were drafted, few could have imagined the creativity of the American employer. At its inception, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which requires a minimum wage and time-and-a-half overtime pay, was written to apply only to “employees,” because no one anticipated how that term would be manipulated. But the FLSA helped set in motion the legal contortions used by employers today, by giving companies an avenue to pay less than the minimum wage and avoid overtime pay by insisting that their workers are independent contractors, not employees.
How can the U.S. get more transformative with its coronavirus-shock response? With payroll guarantees and an economic ‘deep freeze’ plan.
Since March 8, Congress has passed three bills to provide resources for health care and economic relief and recovery in response to the shock of the coronavirus. Yet more remains to be done. We should continue to make marginal improvements on the existing framework of response, but we should also think about how to move our policy response closer to the international best practices established by other countries.
At the heart of those best practices are payroll guarantees and a willingness to “deep freeze” the economy.
Other nations have shown greater social solidarity and a much keener recognition of just how different the coronavirus shock is from previous recessions. In essence, the public health response to the coronavirus has mandated an economic “sudden stop.” The challenge is giving households and businesses resources to live on during the shutdown (relief), while making an economic bounceback once the all-clear sounds as fast as possible (recovery).
One key ingredient in fostering a rapid recovery is preserving labor market matches between workers and their employers and allowing employers to continue paying fixed nonlabor costs during the shutdown period.
Domestic workers are at risk during the coronavirus crisis: Data show most domestic workers are black, Hispanic, or Asian women
The coronavirus pandemic is placing the nation’s 2.2 million domestic workers—91.5% of whom are women—in a particularly precarious position. Steep declines in work are leading to a devastating loss of income while a lack of protective equipment for those who still work is a real threat to their health. This blog post provides details on who domestic workers are and where they live.
Domestic workers, whose worksites are private homes, have always faced unique challenges and have seen their work undervalued. In the face of the coronavirus pandemic, this already-vulnerable group is placed in a particularly precarious position. Many domestic workers are experiencing a steep decline in work. According to new data from the National Domestic Workers Alliance (NDWA), just over half (52%) of domestic workers surveyed said they had no job for the week beginning March 30—and that share increased to 68% by the next week. Domestic workers face long-term uncertainty, with 66% reporting that they are unsure if their clients will give them their jobs back after the pandemic. The decline in employment for domestic workers represents a significant loss of income for these workers and their families.
Domestic workers who are still on the front lines risk sacrificing their health for economic security. House cleaners—who help families follow the practices advocated by public health officials to help to prevent the spread of disease—and home care aides—who care for sick, disabled, and elderly people—may lack the protective equipment they need. Certain groups of domestic workers are excluded from basic labor protections, including those guaranteed under the Occupational Safety and Health Act and the Family Medical Leave Act, which are particularly important sets of protections for workers in the midst of a pandemic.
Wisconsin’s election during this pandemic shows that limiting voting options is the new form of voter suppression
In an unprecedented ruling Monday night, the United States Supreme Court voted to allow Wisconsin’s primary election to occur as scheduled, even as nearly a dozen other states have postponed their primaries due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Today, as voting is happening, Wisconsin has almost 2,500 reported cases of the coronavirus and is under a “safer at home” order that Democratic Governor Tony Evers issued on March 25. It orders Wisconsin residents to stay at home unless engaged in an essential activity.
After a lengthy battle between the state’s Democratic governor, the Republican-controlled legislature, and the judiciary branch on whether or not to postpone the election and extend absentee ballot deadlines, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision left Wisconsin voters with a difficult choice: stay safely at home or risk getting sick and waiting in long lines to exercise their fundamental right to vote.
This choice was particularly cruel for voters in Wisconsin’s largest and most diverse city, Milwaukee. There, so few poll workers signed up to work that the city was able to open only five polling locations, instead of the usual 180. In a city of around 600,000 residents, opening only a handful of polling locations led to extremely long lines that wrapped around city blocks and forced people to wait for hours.
Unfortunately, Milwaukee is used to this type of voter suppression.
Since 2011, Wisconsin has had one of the strictest voter ID laws in the country, requiring residents to have a current address on their identification. This disproportionately hurts voters in urban parts of the state, like Milwaukee County, which has one of the highest eviction rates in the state, making it harder for residents to keep a current address on their ID. In fact, research by the University of Wisconsin found that 17,000 Wisconsin voters were kept from the polls in 2016 because of the strict voter ID law.
A ‘phase four’ relief and recovery package should provide economic assistance to state and local governments, extended unemployment benefits, and better protections for workers and jobs
A “phase four” coronavirus recovery and relief package must be passed quickly and must be sufficient in scope and magnitude to address the severity of the economic and public health crisis we are experiencing. The package must include:
- More aid to state and local governments
- Extended unemployment insurance benefits
- Another direct cash payment to households
- Better protection for workers and jobs
- Full funding for coronavirus testing, treatment, and front-line worker personal protective equipment (PPE)
In the last two weeks, nearly 10 million people applied for unemployment insurance. The March jobs report revealed a loss of 701,000 jobs—the first monthly job loss in nearly 10 years and already one of the worst monthly losses on record. Further, March’s job loss numbers are just the tip of the iceberg, as they do not capture the entire month of March, but refer only to the payroll period containing March 12, before the shutdowns accelerated significantly.
How policymakers respond now will determine the level of pain working families experience and the speed at which the economy can get back on track after the shutdown period is over. The relief and recovery packages passed since the crisis began included many good measures, but they are still too little and some provisions in these packages represent policy missteps. More relief and recovery aid will certainly be needed.
The biggest misstep taken in the earlier relief and recovery packages was allocating so much of the aid to financial rescues of large firms with insufficient conditions to ensure that jobs and wages of workers were saved. Policymakers approved over $450 billion in direct fiscal aid to this effort, with more potentially forthcoming in subsidized loans from the Federal Reserve. Yet this aid (apart from the stronger stipulations for the airline industry) is largely not tied to preserving rank-and-file workers on payrolls.
Another large tranche of aid ($350 billion) was better targeted in preserving the payroll of small firms. But this aid will likely underperform in actually saving jobs because the administrative capacity of the Small Business Administration and banks servicing small and medium-sized firms are too poor to ensure the full amount of aid reaches employers and preserves payroll.
These two tranches of aid could have been bundled and made into more direct and better administered financial relief that hinged entirely on the willingness of employers to preserve workers on payroll with the federal government financing their pay during the shutdown. This would have allowed workers to remain in the jobs they held before the coronavirus shock, and this would have helped ensure a rapid economic recovery once the public health crisis had subsided.