COVID weighing less and less on the U.S. job market
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[April 02, 2022]
By Howard Schneider and Dan Burns
(Reuters) - The coronavirus pandemic's grip
on the U.S. job market notably loosened in March, two years after a
state of emergency was declared, as the number of people homebound by
COVID-19 concerns hit a new low and fewer people reported having to work
remotely.
In all, the government's benchmark monthly nonfarm payrolls report out
Friday showed that by several metrics - including the total number of
unemployed dropping below 6 million and a 3.6% unemployment rate - the
U.S. job market had all but recovered from the devastating hit delivered
in the first two months of the pandemic when 22 million people were
thrown out of work.
The main report and a supplemental survey illustrated the pandemic's
rapidly waning restraint and dovetailed with recent health data showing
the fewest new infections since July and hospitalizations over the last
week averaging the lowest since the initial surge in March and April
2020.
"There are still challenges," Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said in an
interview. But "you can almost feel the mood of the country changing."
A litany of data points painted an employment picture redolent of
February 2020, then heralded as one of the strongest job markets of the
post-World War Two era. Among them:
* The workforce participation rate of women aged 25-54, which has
experienced an uneven recovery, jumped by the most since June 2020,
seven-tenths of a percentage point. Now at 76.5%, it is just four-tenths
of a point from where it was before the pandemic.
* The broadest measure of unemployment also capturing those marginally
attached to the workforce or working part time for economic reasons fell
to 6.9%, below February 2020's level and a fraction from a record low.
* Overall employment climbed to just 1% below its pre-pandemic level,
but minority groups have more than fully recovered: Total employment
among Blacks, Hispanics and Asians now surpasses February 2020 levels.
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Restaurants re-open as people still wear their masks, amid the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Los Angeles, California,
U.S., February 8, 2022. REUTERS/David Swanson/File Photo
The report also showed the disease
itself having its smallest impact on worker behavior since the
pandemic began.
Just 874,000 people were reported to have not sought work in the
previous four weeks because of COVID-19, down from 1.23 million in
February and 1.81 million in January when the Omicron variant drove
U.S. infections to a record.
In May 2020 - the first month the Bureau of Labor
Statistics launched its supplemental survey on the pandemic's
effects on the job market - some 9.7 million people had not looked
for work because of the coronavirus outbreak.
"People feel more comfortable going back to work," Walsh said. "More
people (are) shopping. Hospitality and leisure are really
benefiting."
And just 10% of those people with a job said they either teleworked
or worked from home because of COVID-19, a figure representing about
15.8 million workers. That is also a pandemic-era low and is roughly
a third of the number reporting the need to work remotely in May
2020.
"I don’t know what the new normal will be, but it is a good sign to
get more people into the workforce," Walsh said. The challenge in
coming months is that "we are going to start running out of people,"
a fact he said should make efforts to increase immigration a
priority.
In conversations with employers "nobody has said to me that is a bad
idea."
(Reporting by Dan Burns and Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea
Ricci)
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