Amid COVID surge, states that cut benefits still see no hiring boost
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[September 18, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The August slowdown
in U.S. job creation hit harder in states that pulled the plug early on
enhanced federal unemployment benefits, places where an intense
summertime surge of coronavirus cases may have held back the hoped-for
job growth.
New state-level data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
showed the group of mostly Republican led states that dropped a $300
weekly unemployment benefit over the summer added jobs in August at less
than half the pace of states that retained the benefits.
Elected leaders in those states argued the payments, in place since
spring of 2020 to help families through the pandemic, were discouraging
people from work and holding back an economic recovery that seemed to be
gathering steam earlier this year when the impact of vaccines was taking
hold and coronavirus cases were falling.
But some of those same states, notably Florida and Texas, are also
hotbeds of opposition to government health mandates like mask wearing,
and the surge of infections there in July and August appeared to dent
hiring across the sorts of "close contact" businesses that have suffered
most during the health crisis and had begun to recover quickly.
Overall employment in the leisure and hospitality fell about 0.5% in the
26 states that ended benefits, and rose 1% elsewhere.
In Florida, where the weekly average of new cases per 100,000 residents
jumped from less than 50 in June to more than 700 in August, employment
in the sector declined by 4,000 after rising steadily this year.
In Texas, where new infections per 100,000 hit a low of fewer than 30 in
June only to surge above 400 through August, the sector dropped 25,000
jobs after six months of steady growth. Georgia, which also saw a
dramatic rise in infections, lost nearly 7,000 jobs in the sector.
By contrast California and New York, where the outbreaks driven by the
coronavirus Delta variant have been more muted and health controls have
tended to be more strict, added around 33,000 and 7,000 jobs in the
sector respectively.
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A help wanted sign is posted at a taco stand in Solana Beach,
California, U.S., July 17, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
The data feed into a debate about how the end of pandemic unemployment benefits
will impact the economy - whether it will motivate people to take jobs or leave
them strapped for cash amid a new viral wave and difficulties with issues like
finding child care.
The benefits ended nationally in early September, and some economists have noted
that the hand off from those public payments to private income may not come fast
enough to avoid a hit to the overall economy.
While the Delta variant wave of infections may be peaking, the economy's weak
August job growth of just 235,000 was viewed by many analysts as evidence of the
risks the pandemic still poses to the recovery.
Economists analyzing the unemployment issue have seen little evidence yet that
cutting off the benefits has provided a clear boost to local labor markets, in
part because of difficulties separating the influence of the payments from
larger shifts in the labor force, or of the potentially offsetting damage done
by the pandemic.
Goldman Sachs analysts, looking at individual level data, have found that the
end of the payments did increase the probability of someone moving from
unemployment to a job, and expect the national expiration of the extra
unemployment insurance to lead to the addition of an extra 1.3 million jobs by
the end of the year.
"The behavioral response to UI-benefit expiration remains highly uncertain due
to the unprecedented size of the benefit swings and the highly unusual economic
and health situation," Goldman economist Joseph Briggs wrote on Friday.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns, William Maclean)
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