The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Jobless for longer: How the pandemic has hit Asian Americans

- Reade Pickert

ASIAN Americans who lost their jobs during the pandemic have found it harder than most to get them back.

The 5.9 per cent unemployme­nt rate among the roughly 10 million-strong Asian workforce in December was below the US national rate. But in the final three months of 2020, almost half of jobless Asians had been out of work for at least 27 weeks – a bigger share than White, Black or Hispanic Americans.

The reasons are largely economic and geographic. Many work in industries particular­ly vulnerable to business closures, and almost one-third of Asian Americans live in California, one of the states hit hardest by pandemic restrictio­ns.

Ivy Nguyen, a nail technician in Santa Ana, California, has been unemployed since the salon where she worked closed in mid-March. When it reopened, she wasn’t among those asked to return.

Nguyen, who moved to the US from Vietnam in 1980 and is in her late 50s, has received just US$2,184 in unemployme­nt benefits.

Speaking by phone through a translator, she said she has relied on financial support from her children and stimulus payments.

Almost one in four AsianAmeri­can workers is employed in hospitalit­y and leisure, retail, or other services such as salons and dry cleaners, according to a July study of Covid-19’s impact on Asian employment. Those sectors are among the hardest hit by the pandemic.

“Asian Americans were hard-hit initially,” said Don Mar, co-author of the study and a professor emeritus of economics at San Francisco State University.

The researcher­s estimated that there was a disproport­ionate decline in the number of Asian-owned small businesses over the first two months of the pandemic, compared with those owned by non-Hispanic Whites.

Asian Americans are diverse. More than half are foreign-born, and no single country of origin dominates, according to a Pew Research Center report.

On aggregate, the population has higher education and income levels than the US as a whole. But it also includes many groups – such as refugees, or those with limited Englishlan­guage skills – who are at greater risk of suffering lasting scars as a result of the pandemic slump.

In California, Asian-Americans made up 16 per cent of the state’s labour force in February and filed 19 per cent of initial unemployme­nt claims in the first two-and-a-half months of the shutdown, according to Mar.

In New York State they made up 9 per cent of workers and 14 per cent of claims by mid-April.

Many of the applicants needed help for linguistic reasons. Dung Nguyen (who’s not related to Ivy) at the California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborat­ive estimates she’s helped as many as 300 people apply for government financial support during the pandemic.

It involved hours of filling out forms or ba ling an overwhelme­d and glitchy state computer system. One submission took 105 a empts.

“There’s a lot of confusion. So folks just come to us,” Nguyen said.

Asian immigrant workers o en aren’t eligible for a lot of the social safety net, according to Howard Shih, director of research and policy at the Asian American Federation.

He also says that aid programs generally weren’t designed with the Asian community in mind, citing the Paycheck Protection Program of loans for small companies as an example.

Many Asian businesses “were unable to get assistance because the translatio­ns of the forms that they had to fill out and the instructio­ns came out way too late”, Shih said.

Some firms won’t survive the pandemic, pu ing their employees and owners in jeopardy.

Ivy Nguyen, who’s been a nail technician since 1986 and says she’s never really thought of doing anything else, is concerned about catching Covid if she goes back to work.

But she’s also worried that opportunit­ies will be hard to come by when the pandemic ends – because there’ll be so many unemployed nail-salon workers looking for a job.

 ?? — Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris ?? A worker pulls a cart outside a nail salon in Palo Alto, California.
— Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris A worker pulls a cart outside a nail salon in Palo Alto, California.

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