San Diego Union-Tribune

UNCOUNTED JOBLESS

Official statistics may not reflect the aspiration­s of the millions who have left the labor force.

- BY SYDNEY EMBER

Robert Hesse was expecting an imminent promotion to manager of Sub Zero Ice Cream, a nitrogen ice cream shop in Ventura when it shut down in March 2020 because of the pandemic.

“I like to work,” said Hesse, a college graduate who turns 26 this month. “Otherwise I feel like I’m useless.” But he has been reluctant to seek a new job because he lives with his parents, who are not yet vaccinated, and is afraid of bringing the virus home to them.

“It’s just health concerns — I don’t really want to be around the general public yet,” he said.

Hesse represents what economists say is one of the most striking features of the pandemic-driven economic downturn: the tide of workers who, as the government counts things, have left the labor force. In the year since the pandemic upended the economy, more than 4 million people have quit the labor force, leaving a gaping hole in the job market that cuts across age and circumstan­ces. An exceptiona­lly high number have been sidelined because of child care and other family responsibi­lities or health concerns. Others gave up looking for work because they were discourage­d by the lack of opportunit­ies. And some older workers have called it quits earlier than they had planned.

These laborforce dropouts are not counted in the most commonly cited unemployme­nt rate, which stood at 6.2 percent in February, making the group something of a hidden casualty of the pandemic.

Now, as the labor market begins to emerge from the pandemic’s vise, whether those who have left the labor force return to work — and if so, how quickly — is one of the big questions about the shape of the recovery.

“There are a lot of dimensions related to the pandemic that I think are driving this phenomenon,” said Eliza Forsythe, a labor economist at the University of Illinois. “We don’t really know what the longterm consequenc­es are going to be because it is different from the past.”

There is some reason for optimism. Economists expect that many who have left the labor force in the last year will return to work once health concerns and child care issues are alleviated. And they are optimistic that as the labor market heats up, it will draw in workers who grew disenchant­ed with the job search.

Hesse, for instance, said he planned to look for a new job in earnest once he is vaccinated and hoped to go back to work this year.

Moreover, after the last recession, many economists said those who left the labor force were unlikely to come back,

“I like to work. Otherwise I feel like I’m useless. It’s just health concerns.”

Robert Hesse • college graduate from Ventura, who says he plans to look for a job in earnest once he is vaccinated and hopes to go back to work this year

“No disrespect to women who want to stay home, but that’s never been me.”

Heather Kilpatrick • Boston mom who lost her job last March and stayed home with her 3-year-old daughter; she has just taken a new job that enables her to work remotely

whether because of disabiliti­es, the opioid crisis, a loss of skills or other reasons. Yet labor force participat­ion, adjusted for demographi­c shifts, eventually returned to its previous level.

But the speed with which the pandemic has driven workers from the labor force has had devastatin­g effects that could leave lasting damage.

The labor force participat­ion rate among those 16 or older has dropped to about 61 percent from 63 percent in February 2020. Among prime age workers — those 25 to 54 — it has declined to 81 percent from 83 percent.

Women in their prime working years have quit the labor force at nearly twice the rate of men, according to research by Wells Fargo, partly because more women work in industries like leisure and hospitalit­y, which are less suited to social distancing, and partly because women are more likely to bear the burden of child care. The share of Black women who have left the labor force is more than twice the share of White men.

Then there are the many people who may be seeking a job but who are unavailabl­e to take one because of health concerns, illness or caretaking obligation­s, putting them in what economists say is something of a gray area — between being unemployed and not in the labor force — that has become more common during the pandemic.

Older workers have exited the workforce in droves, including those who left out of health concerns or illness or who took the opportunit­y to retire early. Among those 55 or older, labor force participat­ion has fallen to 38 percent from 40 percent in the last year.

A study from the research firm Oxford Economics estimates that around 2 million workers have left the labor force to retire since the start of the pandemic, more than twice the level in 2019.

For the legion of older workers who hope to return to work after the pandemic, a challengin­g path may lie ahead. Studies show that older people who leave the workforce will have a more difficult time re-entering it because of age discrimina­tion and other reasons. If that reality holds during the recovery, the number of older workers who have left the labor force — either because they could not find a job or because they retired early — could be one of the pandemic’s enduring consequenc­es.

One prevailing question is whether employers, as in the past, will look askance at those who have been out of the labor force for a significan­t time.

Even in a tight labor market, longterm unemployed workers faced a stigma, said Maria Heidkamp, the director of the New Start Career Network, which helps older job-seekers in New Jersey.

“In addition to any age, race or gender discrimina­tion that they may already encounter, there’s a lot of evidence that it is easier to get a job if you already have a job,” she said. Though employers may overlook any pandemic résumé gap, she said, “there’s no reason to think that that is going to be different for these people, who are on the sidelines right now who want to come back.”

Still, because of the pandemic’s unique economic impact, many economists believe that the extraordin­ary number of people who have left the labor force will be more of a temporary blip than emblematic of a deeper structural issue.

“I don’t think overall the U.S. labor force participat­ion rate is going to get stuck at a lower rate,” said Betsey Stevenson, a professor of economics and public policy at the University of Michigan, who was a member of President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers.

Already there is evidence that people who left the labor force are returning to work.

Labor participat­ion among young people, which tumbled in the early stages of the pandemic, has rebounded significan­tly as service industries bounce back.

And as the vaccinatio­n rate continues to rise and restrictio­ns on activity lift across the country, many more people who have left the workforce are beginning to plot their returns.

Since Heather Kilpatrick lost her job in private-event sales last March, she has spent her days at home in East Boston caring for her daughter, now 3.

Without her additional income, she and her husband, co-owner of a restaurant, could no longer afford day care at the local YMCA. So although Kilpatrick, 36, ached to go back to work, she felt as if she were trying to solve a chicken-or-egg dilemma.

“No disrespect to women who want to stay home, but that’s never been me,” she said.

Recently, she finally accepted a part-time job working from home for a restaurant group.

Her job began last week.

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 ?? TONY LUONG THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
TONY LUONG THE NEW YORK TIMES
 ?? JENNA SCHOENEFEL­D THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
JENNA SCHOENEFEL­D THE NEW YORK TIMES
 ?? HANNAH YOON THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ed Hoag of Lambertvil­le, N.H., a librarian for 35 years, decided on an early retirement last summer out of health concerns.
HANNAH YOON THE NEW YORK TIMES Ed Hoag of Lambertvil­le, N.H., a librarian for 35 years, decided on an early retirement last summer out of health concerns.

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