Imperial Valley Press

US hiring slows amid signs of longer-lasting economic damage

-

— U.S. hiring slowed in July as the coronaviru­s outbreak worsened, and the government’s jobs report o ered signs Friday that the economic damage from the pandemic could last far longer than many observers originally envisioned.

The United States added 1.8 million jobs in July, a pullback from the previous two months. At any other time, hiring at that level would be seen as a blowout gain. But after employers shed a staggering 22 million jobs in March and April, much larger increases are needed to heal the job market. The hiring of the past three months has recovered 42% of the jobs lost to the pandemic-induced recession, according to the Labor Department’s report.

Though the unemployme­nt rate fell last month from 11.1% to 10.2%, that level still exceeds the highest rate during the 20082009 Great Recession.

Roughly half the job gains were in the industries hit hardest by the virus: restaurant­s, retail shops, bars, hotels and entertainm­ent venues such as casinos. Those jobs have been relatively quick to return after the broadest shutdowns ended in May and June.

But economists worry that the next leg of job growth will be harder to achieve, particular­ly as the virus dampens confidence, leaving much of the country only partially reopened, most travel on hold and millions of employees working from home. The number of people unemployed for longer than 15 weeks jumped in July to more than 6 million, a sign many of the unemployed will have to find work at new companies or even in new occupation­s, a potentiall­y lengthy process.

Constance Hunter, chief economist at accounting firm KPMG, noted that many jobs in hotels, sports stadiums and the travel industry probably will not return until a vaccine is developed.

“When are you going to be comfortabl­e again being in an air-conditione­d room with 400 people?” she asked. “There are whole parts of the economy that will remain unemployed until we have a much tighter control of this virus.”

The jobs report emerged as new infections run at about 55,000 a day. While that’s down from a peak of well over 70,000 in the second half of July, cases are rising in about half of the states, and deaths are climbing in many of them.

In other virus-related developmen­ts Friday:

— New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that schools can bring children back to classrooms for the start of the school year, citing success in battling the virus in the state that once was the U.S. heart of the pandemic. The decision clears the way for schools to o er at least some days of in-person classes, alongside remote learning.

— California has surpassed 10,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s, making it the U.S. state with the third-highest number of deaths since the beginning of the pandemic. The figure was reported Friday by Johns Hopkins University.

— A small South Dakota town launched a huge 10-day motorcycle rally on Friday despite fears it could lead to a massive coronaviru­s outbreak. Organizers of the 80th Sturgis Motorcycle Rally said they were expecting 250,000 people from all over the country. South Dakota has no mask mandates, and many who arrived on Friday expressed defiance of measures meant to prevent the spread of the virus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States