The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Holiday hiring slump takes shape

Companies bringing on fewer seasonal workers

- HOWARD SCHNEIDER

WASHINGTON - When the pandemic blew a hole in the U.S. labor market last spring, the hope was for a quick return to normal.

It’s clear that hasn’t happened, and with the critical holiday shopping season approachin­g workers face a new drag on their prospects. Companies appear to be bringing on fewer seasonal workers.

“Hiring is shaping up differentl­y from previous years,” said AnnElizabe­th Konkel, an economist with the Indeed Hiring Lab, a research group at the job posting site Indeed. Seasonal postings are about 11% below last year, and Konkel said the reasons vary from concerns about future sales, reduced capacity since some stores are closed, and even disruption­s in the supply chains that bring goods to market.

Along with job posting sites like Indeed, companies like UKG that manage employee work time are seeing the same thing. The firm noted that among its clients, companies in manufactur­ing continue to add shifts, while the number of shifts at retailers is flat even as Halloween decoration­s and Christmas trees pop up in stores.

It’s tempting to chalk it up to expectatio­ns of weak sales as the pandemic continues. But people have found plenty of ways to spend money even under lockdown. Deloitte in fact estimates holiday sales will be one per cent above last year’s level.

Rather, something different may be at work.

Ecommerce was already expanding its share of all retail sales. The pandemic caused it to explode.

Hiring reflects that.

Not only are there fewer seasonal jobs than last year, the mix is different: The share of seasonal postings on Indeed that involve “loading & stocking” has tripled to 14 per cent, while the share of sales jobs fell from 18 per cent to 10 per cent.

But there’s another change involved as well, and it is one that underscore­s the challenges facing a full U.S. economic recovery.

The number of people searching for seasonal work has also fallen, down 38% from last year.

As Konkel says that seems “counterint­uitive” at a time of such high unemployme­nt.

But it shows adaptation in progress. Searches for jobs that can be done from home continue to grow fast.

“Most seasonal job opportunit­ies require at least some face-to-face interactio­n and health concerns are still top of mind for many of those looking for work,” Konkel wrote recently.

Many labor economists have predicted such changes in behavior as people start to perceive “in person” employment as risky, or else need to accommodat­e new family obligation­s when, for example, schools are closed.

The open question is whether that mismatch - between open jobs in warehouses and storerooms and job seekers who want to work from home - remains permanent, with implicatio­ns for economic growth as jobs take longer to fill, or are part of the coronaviru­s’s own passing “seasonal” influence.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People who lost their jobs wait in line to file for unemployme­nt following an outbreak of the coronaviru­s disease, at an Arkansas Workforce Center in Fayettevil­le, Ark. on April 6.
REUTERS People who lost their jobs wait in line to file for unemployme­nt following an outbreak of the coronaviru­s disease, at an Arkansas Workforce Center in Fayettevil­le, Ark. on April 6.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada