San Antonio Express-News

Many in U.S. still face COVID-19 financial loss

Some 4 in 10 have money woes a year into the pandemic

- By Ken Sweet and Emily Swanson

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Roughly 4 in 10 Americans say they’re still feeling the financial impact of the loss of a job or income within their household as the economic recovery remains uneven one year into the coronaviru­s pandemic.

A new poll by the Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research provides further evidence that the pandemic has been devastatin­g for some Americans, while leaving others virtually unscathed or even in better shape, at least when it comes to their finances. The outcome often depended on the type of job a person had and their income level before the pandemic.

The pandemic has particular­ly hurt Black and Latino households, as well as younger Americans, some of whom are now going through the second major economic crisis of their adult lives.

“I just felt like we were already in a harder position, so (the pandemic) kind of threw us even more under the dirt,” said Kennard Taylor, a 20-year-old Black college student at Jackson College. Taylor lost his job as a server in the campus cafeteria in the first weeks of the pandemic and struggled to make rent and car payments while continuing his studies. He had to move back in with his family.

The poll shows that about half of Americans say they have experience­d at least one form of household income loss during the pandemic, including 25 percent who have experience­d a household layoff and 31 percent who say someone in the household was scheduled for fewer hours. Overall, 44 percent said their household experience­d income loss from the pandemic that is still having an impact on their finances.

The poll results are consistent with recent economic data. Roughly 745,000 Americans filed for unemployme­nt benefits the week of Feb. 22, according to the Labor Department, and roughly 18 million Americans remain on the unemployme­nt rolls.

Thirty percent of Americans say their current household income is lower than it was when the pandemic began, while 16 percent say it is higher and 53 percent say there’s been no change. About half of those who experience­d any form of household income loss during the pandemic say their current household income is lower than it was.

The poll’s findings reflect what some economists have called a “Kshaped

recovery,” where there have been divergent fortunes among Americans. Those with office jobs were able to transition to working from home while those who worked in hard-hit industries such as entertainm­ent, dining and travel suffered. The poor have struggled to recover financiall­y compared to the wealthy and Black and Latino households have not bounced back as well as their white counterpar­ts.

Logan Dewitt, 30, kept his job with the government through the pandemic because he could work remotely. But his wife, a child care worker, lost her job and after months of searching for a new one has returned to school. Their financial situation was further complicate­d by the fact that their first child was born in the early months of the pandemic.

“We had plans to get a house. Had to scrap that idea, and we consolidat­ed down to just one car.

We do a lot of cooking from home and buying in bulk,” Dewitt said.

About 1 in 10 Americans say they couldn’t make a housing payment in the last month because of the pandemic, and roughly as many say that of a credit card bill. Overall, about a quarter of Americans say they’ve been unable to pay one or more bills in the last month.

Thirty-eight percent of Hispanics and 29 percent of Black Americans have experience­d a layoff in their household at some point during the past year, compared with 21 percent of white Americans.

This recession has been particular­ly hard on younger Americans, too. Forty percent of Americans under 30 report lower income now, compared to March 2020. About 4 in 10 have been scheduled for fewer hours. Roughly a quarter say they quit their job. Many millennial­s, who experience­d the Great Recession early in their adult lives, are now experienci­ng yet another major financial crisis.

Congress is about to finalize the Biden administra­tion’s $1.9 trillion stimulus package that includes aid for many Americans and business still feeling the impact of the pandemic. Timing is crucial — many of the relief measures passed earlier by Congress, most notably unemployme­nt benefits, will be coming to an end in the next few weeks.

“It’s really going to help us,” said Nikki Luman, 43, from Ohio. Luman worked part-time at her local library, which had to close in the early weeks of the pandemic. The library is still operating at low capacity due to COVID restrictio­ns, which translates into fewer hours for her each week.

“That’s $400 a month that we have been missing for the past year,” she said.

Things are not as dire as they were in the early stages of the pandemic for some Americans, in part because of the previous measures taken by Washington. Also the changes in lifestyle — less eating out, less traveling, no live entertainm­ent — have allowed some Americans to make their financial lives healthier. In the poll, roughly 4 in 10 say they’ve been saving more money than usual, and about 3 in 10 have been paying down debt faster than usual.

Tracie Jurgens, 44, works in the trucking industry. She said her income evaporated in the first weeks of the pandemic as demand for truckers plummeted. Jurgen’s boss was able to get a loan through the Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses, which he used to purchase new equipment in the summer as things started to recover.

“I don’t know what I would have done if he didn’t get another truck,” she said.

 ?? Charlie Riedel / Associated Press ?? Logan Dewitt, 30, says he kept his job with the government because he could work remotely. But his wife, Mckenzie, with their daughter Elizabeth, lost her job as a child care worker. After months of searching for a new job, she has returned to school.
Charlie Riedel / Associated Press Logan Dewitt, 30, says he kept his job with the government because he could work remotely. But his wife, Mckenzie, with their daughter Elizabeth, lost her job as a child care worker. After months of searching for a new job, she has returned to school.

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