As U.S. job growth stalls, some workers face long-term
unemployment
Send a link to a friend
[October 06, 2020] By
Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - More than six months after the
pandemic ravaged the U.S. labor market, millions of Americans who are
still unemployed are bracing for the possibility that the jobs they held
before the crisis may not come back for years, if at all.
After big improvements over the summer, the labor market recovery is
slowing. People who previously worked as bartenders, housekeepers or in
other jobs dependant on travel and close human interaction, are
sidelined as their industries adjust to lower demand and the pandemic
begins to leave a lasting mark on the U.S. economy.
As of September, the U.S. labor force had about 142 million workers,
down 7% from pre-pandemic levels. But employment in leisure and
hospitality is 23% below pre-pandemic levels, according to Labor
Department data released last week, more than any other industry.
Temporary furloughs are becoming permanent layoffs as companies that had
hoped to reopen fully make tough choices.
Walt Disney Co announced last month it will cut 28,000 jobs. United
Airlines and American Airlines will furlough 32,000 workers. Cineworld,
the world's second-largest cinema chain, will cut approximately 20,000
U.S. jobs.
Meanwhile, hiring by utility companies and retailers, which offer
services that are essential or in high demand during the crisis, is
rebounding more quickly, bringing employment almost back to February
levels.
"It's almost like there's two economies going on," Cleveland Federal
Reserve Bank President Loretta Mester told Reuters last week. "It's very
much sector by sector."
Graphic-An uneven jobs recovery link:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/HIRING/
xlbvgjxqzpq/chart.png
UPSIDE DOWN
Workers who were laid off from hard-hit industries are finding few new
job opportunities and intense competition.
Matthew Seevers was permanently laid off in May from his job as a
bartender for a Las Vegas casino. Seevers, 36, has not heard back on any
of the five jobs he has applied for since.
"Everything is upside down in our world," said Seevers, who hopes to
find another job before the forbearance on his mortgage expires in six
months.
The number of advertised job openings increased in September, according
to an analysis of postings by Indeed Hiring Lab
https://www.hiringlab.org/
2020/09/30/job-postings-through-sept-25. But the jobs on offer are not
typically in the same sectors that have shed the most workers.
Postings for retail positions and jobs that require driving or delivery
are approaching or above levels seen a year ago, according to Indeed.
Hospitality and tourism job postings are down nearly 50% from a year
ago, and food prep and childcare down about 20%.
"There has been definitely a shift in the composition of jobs," said
Nick Bunker, the economic research director for North America at Indeed
Hiring Lab.
Low-wage job postings, those paying less than roughly $30,000, are rebounding
more quickly than middle or high-wage jobs, Indeed found.
[to top of second column] |
As Phase One of reopening began in Northern Virginia in May, a
waiter in a face mask to protect against the coronavirus (COVID-19)
carried food to diners seated outdoors at a restaurant in
Alexandria, Virginia, U.S., May 29, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Gloribel Castillo, 50, has been out of work since early July, when the Manhattan
hotel where she worked as a housekeeper furloughed her for the second time this
year. Domestic air and hotel bookings to New York state for the week of Sept. 21
were down 81% compared with a year ago, according to a report https://www.ustravel.org/toolkit/covid-19-travel-industry-research
by the U.S. Travel Association.
Castillo said she would be happy to do other work, but worries about matching
her previous earnings and benefits - about $1,400 a week before taxes with
generous healthcare benefits and the opportunity for overtime pay. "Where am I
going to get that?" she said.
She holds out hope that her employer will call her back to work, as occurred
this spring when the hotel hosted doctors and nurses who were treating COVID-19
patients in the city. Castillo is considering applying for food stamps to
supplement the $442 a week she receives in unemployment benefits.
After paying her nearly $1,300 rent bill and utilities, she has only about $100
left for the month to buy groceries for her daughter and herself.
PERMANENT LOSSES?
More people face prolonged periods of joblessness as hiring slows.
The number of people who had been out of work for at least 27 weeks increased by
781,000 in September to 2.4 million, according to the Labor Department. Another
345,000 people were permanently laid off that month, increasing the total to 3.8
million.
Graphic-More Americans face long-term unemployment link: https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/ygdvzklywpw/chart.png
Some economists are concerned the pandemic has set off a long-term shift that
echoes the 2008 financial crisis. Cost-cutting and technological improvements
contributed to a drop in office, administrative, manufacturing and construction
jobs, which never returned to 2007 levels.
Workers may need training for new careers, policymakers say.
Helping the out-of-work rebuild careers is "a pretty important thing for us to
work on," Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said on Bloomberg TV last week.
Seevers, the laid-off bartender, said he is looking to learn computer science or
other tech skills. "If I don’t get my job back, I'm just trying to figure out
something that has more of a future."
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte in New York; Additional reporting by Howard
Schneider in Washington; Editing by Heather Timmons and Matthew Lewis)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |