Analysis: Biden's first year could see record employment growth. More
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[January 20, 2021] By
Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - Joe Biden's first year in
office could go down in history as a record-breaker on the job-creation
front, with an explosion in hiring expected as the coronavirus vaccine
rollout allows Americans to emerge from a year in hiding.
It may not be enough.
Only slightly more than half of the 22 million jobs lost in the pandemic
were regained by the end of last year. Even if 2021 hiring shatters the
post-World War Two record of 4.27 million jobs created in 1984, roughly
a quarter of those who lost work could still be on the sidelines, with
bleak prospects for regaining their vocations in an economy reshaped by
the pandemic.
As Biden takes the oath of office on Wednesday, the job market awaiting
him presents a monumental challenge.
Just a year ago, a record-long expansion was creating more opportunities
and higher pay for women, minorities and other workers on the margins.
These same groups - key to his election victory - were
disproportionately harmed by pandemic job losses in service-sector jobs
that face the longest road to recovery.
"It's not only about recouping what we've lost, it's recouping what
could have been," said Diane Swonk, chief economist for Grant Thornton.
"You need a lot of tail wind to get there."
Graphic: The jobs hole facing Biden
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/
xlbpgygrnpq/chart.png
Biden unveiled an ambitious $1.9 trillion plan last week for shoring up
the economy by enhancing jobless benefits and providing more direct cash
payments to households. A second phase of his plan is expected to boost
job creation through investments in infrastructure, clean energy
projects and education. It is unclear how many of his proposals will
pass through Congress, but Democrats' slim majority in the Senate may
help.
Janet Yellen, the former Federal Reserve Chair and Biden's nominee for
Treasury Secretary, urged lawmakers on Tuesday to act aggressively.
"Without further action, we risk a longer, more painful recession now —
and long-term scarring of the economy later," Yellen said during her
confirmation hearing.
That fiscal support, if delivered, could be bolstered by another
tailwind: Easy monetary policy from the Fed.
Fed officials committed last year to a new framework that aims for
"broad-based and inclusive" employment. Under the new approach,
policymakers will no longer raise interest rates preemptively when the
labor market is heating up in anticipation of faster inflation. Instead,
rates will stay low for longer, giving the economy more time to benefit
disadvantaged workers.
"They're going to keep their foot on the accelerator even beyond the
time when we’re at full employment," said Mark Zandi, the chief
economist at Moody’s Analytics. Combine that with additional fiscal
support, and you suddenly have "a lot of policy juice to the economy,"
he said.
PAIN UNEVENLY SPREAD
It took more than six years for the U.S. labor market to recoup all of
the jobs lost during the last recession. Policymakers are expecting the
recovery to happen more quickly this time around with the help of
effective vaccines.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden talks
with workers as he tours the Wisconsin Aluminum Foundry before
delivering remarks at a campaign event in the factory in Manitowoc,
Wisconsin, U.S., September 21, 2020. REUTERS/Mark Makela/File Photo
But as the post-pandemic jobs landscape takes shape, some workers may need extra
help moving into different lines of work.
Special attention may need to be paid to the 4 million Americans who have been
out of work for more than six months, putting them at greater risk of facing pay
cuts or dropping out of the labor force altogether. In their ranks: Many of the
servers, cooks, bartenders and other leisure and hospitality workers left
jobless by the shutdowns meant to curb the virus.
"Unless we act now, we're going to again leave behind millions of Americans,"
said Senator Chris Van Hollen, one of several lawmakers who met virtually last
week with Cecilia Rouse, Biden’s nominee for chair of the Council of Economic
Advisers, to discuss programs that could help the long-term unemployed.
The low-wage workers hit hardest by pandemic job losses - including women, Black
and Hispanic workers - are also among those at greater risk of falling through
the cracks as the economy heals.
Graphic: Racial disparities widen https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/FULL-EMPLOYMENT/xklpybbeyvg/chart.png
"Even though by next year the economy should be booming, it still is going to
take quite a while" for Black and Latino workers to see labor market gains
because they are more subject to discrimination, said William Spriggs, chief
economist with the AFL-CIO, the largest federation of U.S. labor unions.
For instance, the unemployment rate for white workers dropped to 6% in December,
below the overall unemployment rate of 6.7%. But Black and Hispanic workers
faced higher jobless rates of 9.9% and 9.3%, respectively.
Many women are also at risk of facing lasting scars after being
disproportionately affected by shutdowns of schools and child care centers. Of
the 3.9 million people who dropped out of the labor force between February and
December, 55% were women.
Bringing them back to work will require policies that make caring for children
and other relatives more affordable, said Kathryn Anne Edwards, a labor
economist for the Rand Corporation.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last week that he is hopeful the labor market may
surpass pre-crisis levels soon.
"We’ve got to get through this very difficult period," he said on Thursday
during a virtual event organized by Princeton University. "But as the vaccines
go out and we get COVID under control, there’s a lot of reason to be optimistic
about the U.S. economy.”
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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