Houston Chronicle

Black business owners reeling from lockdowns

- By Michael Sasso

The COVID-19 economic shutdown has hurt African American businesses the most among racial and ethnic groups in U.S., with a 41 percent decline of black owners from February to April, a new study from the National Bureau of Economic Research shows.

While the pandemic has hit entreprene­urs across the board, closing some 3.3 million small businesses at least temporaril­y, the sidelining of 440,000 African Americans was especially severe. Black owners may have fared worse because fewer of them operated in industries deemed “essential” during the pandemic, among other factors, according to the NBER paper. Immigrant business owners also fared poorly, with a 36 percent drop during the period.

“The negative earlystage impacts on minorityan­d immigrant-owned businesses, if prolonged, may be problemati­c for broader racial inequality because of the importance of minority businesses for local job creation, economic advancemen­t, and longer-term wealth inequality,” said the report’s author, Robert Fairlie of the University of California, Santa Cruz.

The findings add to other data showing that the pandemic has broadly hit African Americans harder than other groups, with blacks suffering higher rates of mortality from the coronaviru­s and greater joblessnes­s. While unemployme­nt among white Americans fell to 12.4 percent last month, according to data released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the jobless rate for African Americans rose slightly to 16.8 percent. The disparitie­s put a stark spotlight on racial inequaliti­es as protests continue nationwide in the wake of the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, at the hands of a white police officer in Minneapoli­s.

The NBER’s study evaluated data from a federal government population survey to estimate the number small business owners that had ceased operating from pre-pandemic February to April, the first full month of COVID-19 related lockdowns. The report makes no assumption­s about whether the owners will be shuttered only temporaril­y or permanentl­y, and it notes certain government relief efforts that could help keep small businesses afloat, especially the $669 billion Paycheck Protection Program.

The study doesn’t capture most of the second tranche of funding in the

PPP program, which started at the end of April and reached many small firms that were shut out in the first round. A new bill signed last week gives small businesses more flexibilit­y in how they can use the PPP loans, which can be converted into grants as long as owners follow program guidelines. Among other changes, it extends the period in which businesses can use the funds and still seek loan forgivenes­s to 24 weeks from eight weeks.

Overall, the number of operating business owners of all groups fell to 11.7 million in April from 15 million two months earlier, a 22 percent decline that Fairlie calls “unpreceden­ted.” Aside from blacks and immigrants, Hispanic smallbusin­ess owners also fared poorly, with a 32 percent decline over the period, while Asians and women saw drops of 26 percent and 25 percent, respective­ly.

The number of businesses owned by white men or women fell 17 percent, the study says.

Among industries, the only sector that didn’t suffer a decline in small-business owners was agricultur­e, which saw a 7 percent uptick. Hard-hit industries include arts, leisure and hotels, which fell by 35 percent, and constructi­on, down by 27 percent.

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