Los Angeles Times

Plight of long- term jobless poses a threat to recovery

Unemployme­nt grows from weeks to months, raising the chances of extended downturn.

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER AND ALEXANDRA OLSON

This spring, Magdalena Valiente was expecting her best year as a Florida- based concert promoter. Now, she wonders whether the career she built over three decades is over.

In March, Valiente had been planning f ive tours for Latin Grammy winners Fonseca and Andrés Cepeda and more than 20 for Miami Latin pop band Bacilos. Earning well into six f igures during good years, Valiente was hoping to help her youngest son, a high school junior, pay his way through college.

But with live events canceled, things have turned bleak. She is relying on unemployme­nt benefits and Medicaid, and has applied for food stamps. She has lost hope that the crisis will end soon.

“I worked up from the very bottom when I started in this business in my 20s,” said Valiente, a single mother in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. “There weren’t many other women, and it was hard. It’s not easy to let it go.”

Millions of Americans in the industries hit hardest by the COVID- 19 pandemic face a similar plight. Their unemployme­nt has stretched from weeks into months, and it’s painfully unclear when, if ever, their jobs will come back.

In the entertainm­ent f ield where Valiente worked and in other sectors that absorbed heavy job losses — including restaurant­s, hotels, energy, higher education and advertisin­g — employment remains far below prepandemi­c levels.

These trends have raised the specter of a period of widespread long- term unemployme­nt that could turn the pandemic- induced recession into a more painful, extended downturn.

People who have been jobless for six months or longer — one definition of long- term unemployme­nt — typically suffer an erosion of skills and profession­al networks that makes it harder to find a new job.

Many will need training or education to f ind work with a new company or in a new occupation, which can delay their reentry into the job market.

On Friday, the government reported that employers added 661,000 jobs in September, normally a healthy gain. Yet it marked the third straight monthly slowdown in hiring.

The nation has regained barely half of the 22 million jobs that were lost to the pandemic and the widespread business shutdowns it caused in March and April.

In a worrisome trend, a rising proportion of job losses appear to be permanentl­y gone.

When the virus erupted in the U. S. in March and paralyzed the economy, nearly 90% of layoffs were considered temporary, and a quick rebound seemed possible. No longer. In September, the number of Americans classified as permanentl­y laid off rose 12% to 3.8 million. And the number of long- term unemployed rose by 781,000 — the largest increase on record — to 2.4 million.

“We have a real chance of there being massive longterm unemployme­nt,” said Till Von Wachter, an economics professor at UCLA.

The nation now has 7% fewer jobs than in February. Yet the damage is far deeper in some sectors. The performing arts and spectators­ports category, which includes Valiente’s industry, has lost 47% of its jobs. It hasn’t added any net jobs since the coronaviru­s struck.

Hotels are down 35%, restaurant­s and bars, 19% and transporta­tion, 18%. Advertisin­g, one of the f irst expenses that companies cut in a downturn, is down 9%.

Higher education has lost 9% of its jobs. Many classes have been delayed or moved online, reducing the need for janitors, cafeteria workers and administra­tors. Normally during recessions, the education sector adds jobs to accommodat­e people returning to school to

seek marketable skills or education. Not this time.

Ashley Broshious took years to develop skills that now seem much less in demand. A manager and sommelier at a Charleston restaurant, Broshious is one of just six certified advanced sommeliers in South Carolina.

Still, she was laid off in March. And when the restaurant owner reopened one of his two establishm­ents, she wasn’t rehired.

Now, Broshious receives about $ 326 a week in unemployme­nt benefits. That’s not nearly enough to pay the $ 2,400 monthly rent on her home, as well as student loans, car insurance and credit card debt from a trip to Hawaii she took while still working.

“When you spend your entire life building this career,” Broshious said, “it’s hard to start over.”

Some economists note hopefully that this recovery has progressed faster than many analysts expected and may keep doing so. Matthew Notowidigd­o, an economist at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, and three colleagues predicted in a research paper that the rapid recall of temporary workers will lower unemployme­nt to 4.6% a year from now. That would suggest a much faster recovery than after the previous recession.

Three- quarters of the temporaril­y laid off aren’t bothering to look for work, Notowidigd­o said, based on an analysis of government data, apparently because they’re confident of being recalled. And although the number of job openings has declined about 17% compared with a year earlier, according to Glassdoor, it remains far higher than during the Great Recession.

In July, the most recent month for which government data are available, there were 2.5 unemployed workers, on average, for each job opening. That’s much better than the six unem

ployed per job opening during the depths of the Great Recession.

“There are still a lot of people f inding jobs fairly rapidly,” Notowidigd­o said.

Still, more than one- third of workers who have been laid off or furloughed now regard their job loss as permanent, according to a survey by Morning Consult. That’s up from just 15% in April.

Some economists, such as Sophia Koropeckyj of Moody’s Analytics, see rising cause for concern. Koropeckyj estimates that 5 million people will struggle to f ind work even after the virus has been controlled. Jobs probably won’t return to pre- pandemic levels until late in 2023, she said in a research note.

Even among some people who have managed to land new jobs, the pandemic recession has upended their financial lives.

Angela Grimley worked her way up through several Marriott hotels in Philadelph­ia to become an event manager, only to have the recession kick her back down the ladder.

After months of unemployme­nt, Grimley, 38, found a part- time job answering customers’ calls and emails for the Pennsylvan­ia General Store, which sells food and souvenirs found only in Pennsylvan­ia. She loves the work. And she feels fortunate that her boyfriend, with whom she lives, is still working. But before the pandemic, Grimley had received a job offer to be a conference and event manager at a marketing company involved in healthful parenting products.

The job would have paid much more and provided health and retirement benefits, which her part- time job doesn’t. But the offer vanished in the pandemic. The damage to her f inances “keeps me up at night,” Grimley said.

“By the end of the year, if things look worse, I’ll have to come up with a Plan B,” Valiente said.

‘ When you spend your entire life building this career, it’s hard to start over.’ — ASHLEY BROSHIOUS,

CHARLESTON, S. C., SOMMELIER

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? I N SECTORS that absorbed heavy job losses — including restaurant­s, hotels and advertisin­g — employment remains far below pre- pandemic levels. Above, a drive- through food bank is held in Pomona in August.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times I N SECTORS that absorbed heavy job losses — including restaurant­s, hotels and advertisin­g — employment remains far below pre- pandemic levels. Above, a drive- through food bank is held in Pomona in August.
 ?? Steven Senne Associated Press ?? EMPLOYERS ADDED 661,000 jobs in September, U. S. data show. That’s normally a healthy gain, but it marked the third straight monthly slowdown in hiring.
Steven Senne Associated Press EMPLOYERS ADDED 661,000 jobs in September, U. S. data show. That’s normally a healthy gain, but it marked the third straight monthly slowdown in hiring.

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