Pandemic's uneven march across U.S. paved way for wider outbreak
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[December 07, 2020]
By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nine months after
the U.S. government declared a state of emergency to fight the
coronavirus pandemic, daily deaths and new infections are breaking
records, hospital capacity is more stretched than ever, and debate over
the economic response has devolved into a battle over who deserves help
and who doesn't.
How did it get to this point? Once-in-a-century public crises might seem
a natural rallying point for a nation, but the current pandemic hit a
trifecta: a politically polarized society, the uneven spread of the
virus, and an economic impact that was disparately felt and quick to
fade in some parts of the country even as it kept others fast in its
grip.
Today's rampant spread of the virus is bound with those facts: Local and
state decisions to let the economy reopen as much as it did, as soon as
it did, with public health rules spotty and unevenly enforced, set the
stage for it to rotate through the country and eventually to spread
unchecked.
While that spurred more job creation early on, the country is now facing
the worst of both worlds.
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New COVID-19 cases are mounting at a rate of a million a week, and
deaths have reached new peaks approaching 3,000 daily. Meanwhile, the
economic recovery seems to be hitting stall speed. U.S. payrolls grew by
only 245,000 jobs in November, scant progress given that net job losses
since February still total around 10 million.
New data released in early December on state and metro level employment
and wages by industry show just how unevenly the economic pain of those
first months was spread.
Indeed, while workers in New York City, one of the early epicenters of
the U.S. outbreak, struggled with economic conditions reminiscent of the
Great Depression last spring, workers in Montana, on the whole, earned
about as much in the three months from April to June as they did in the
prior three months.
For workers in six western states, in fact, the second quarter of 2020
looked about the same as the second quarter of 2019 in terms of total
wages collected, while in Nevada, Hawaii and Michigan wages were down
more than 10% from a year earlier.
The jobs crash was painful everywhere, particularly in the industries
where people would be most vulnerable to a communicable disease - the
close-contact services like restaurants, grooming parlors and gyms.
Even in places where the initial crash was less intense, more than 8% of
jobs were lost from February to April. At its worst, in the U.S.
Northeast and Hawaii, more than 20% of jobs disappeared.
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Back-up hospital beds are seen in the parking garage at the Renown
Regional Medical Center in Reno, Nevada, U.S. November 11, 2020.
Picture taken November 11, 2020. Jason Bean/Reno Gazette Journal/USA
Today via REUTERS
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But the places that suffered the lightest initial blow also more
quickly regained lost employment, and in some instances by June had
nearly regained all the lost jobs in April's wave of layoffs and
closing. At that point the spread of the pandemic was also mild in
those states, perhaps providing a reason to maintain a
business-as-usual approach.
In urban areas the difference in outcomes was even more pronounced.
Seasonal factors influence the numbers of jobs in some cities more
than others. Beach towns and summer resorts see a bump when the
weather warms. But comparing the number of jobs this June to a year
ago shows how some fared better - or worse.
Atlantic City, New Jersey, an oceanside resort and casino hub, had
only 66% of the jobs this past June that it did the year before.
Cleveland, Tennessee, part of the U.S. South's emerging auto
industry, by contrast, had more jobs in June than it did a year
before.
Industries also felt those first months of the pandemic very
differently. At first blush, hiring in some seasonal industries
proceeded apace, with drive-in theaters, for example, staffing up
for the summer: Employment there more than doubled from February to
June, possibly a sign of entertainment migrating outdoors. Still,
even such an industry well-suited to the moment saw its employment
drop compared with a year earlier.
By contrast, nursery and garden center employment rocketed nearly
30% from February to June - a typical summertime jump. Nonetheless,
it was also 1.7% above the level from June 2019.
At the other end of the scale, industries in the food and
entertainment sectors saw job losses that may amount to a permanent
shift in the economy and where people work.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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