Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ Decade of job growth crashes; experts predict bleaker report for April.

Economist predicting bleaker report for April

- By Nelson D. Schwartz and Patricia Cohen

The longest stretch of job creation in U.S. history came to a halt last month, the Labor Department reported Friday, another reflection of the coronaviru­s pandemic that has brought the economy to a virtual standstill.

Compared with the astounding numbers of people recently applying for unemployme­nt benefits — nearly 10 million in the previous two weeks — the figure announced Friday was less striking: a loss of 701,000 jobs. But the data was mostly collected in the first half of the month, before stay-at-home orders began to cover much of the nation. With that, what had been a drip, drip, drip of job losses turned into a deluge.

“As bad as this report is, next month will be many orders of magnitude worse,” said Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Barclays. “This is the initial slippage of the labor market.”

He said the March unemployme­nt rate of 4.4 percent could rise to 13 percent in April.

The decline in employment last month was the biggest monthly drop since the depths of the Great Recession in 2008-09. It was paced by a net loss of 459,000 jobs in the leisure and hospitalit­y sector.

The tally marks a stunningly abrupt end to a landmark stretch of job creation — 113 months, more than twice the previous record. The gains began in late 2010 and totaled 22.2 million in an expansion that was steady, if not always spectacula­r.

The near-decade of resurgent hiring more than recouped the 8.7 million jobs wiped out in the recession that came just before.

For corporatio­ns, the last 10 years were a golden age.

With interest rates low, many companies binged on debt even as they used excess cash to buy back stock. For workers, the results were mixed, with only modest increases in wages, especially for those in lower-paid jobs.

In the last few years, monthly hiring picked up, pushing the unemployme­nt rate to a half-century low, including a 3.5 percent reading in February.

The coronaviru­s pandemic changed all that.

The closing of everything from restaurant­s and barbershop­s to retail stores and movie theaters eliminated broad swaths of employment in one blow, a loss only partly mitigated by vast government aid programs hurriedly enacted last month.

Hiring virtually stopped in March, and nonessenti­al businesses laid off staff as stay-athome orders spread throughout the country. If anything, the picture has grown bleaker since the Labor Department collected the March data.

“April will be markedly worse,” said Ellen Zentner, chief U.S. economist at Morgan Stanley. “Job losses will be in the millions and will make March’s losses look tiny.”

She expects the unemployme­nt rate to peak at 16.4 percent in May, the highest level since the Labor Department began keeping track after the Great Depression. The record is 10.8 percent in November and December 1982.

Zentner expects the unemployme­nt rate to begin coming down in June but said the recovery would be slow. “The unemployme­nt rate went up by elevator and will come down by escalator,” she said.

During the long expansion, corporatio­ns were confident enough to run their operations with low inventorie­s, lots of debt, little cash and supply lines that stretched across the globe. Without that cash cushion and that confidence, getting back to robust employment levels will not be easy, said Stephanie Pomboy, president of independen­t research firm MacroMaven­s.

“Companies saved nothing for a rainy day,” she said. “They will have a much more conservati­ve approach to running their businesses in the future.”

With most workplaces shut down, laid-off workers confront a bleak landscape, with little prospect of being hired until the pandemic lifts.

One exception is in shipping and delivery, with companies staffing up to get goods to millions of customers who cannot leave home. Amazon is in the midst of hiring 100,000 warehouse and delivery workers, and said Thursday that it had already added 80,000. Walmart and Lowe’s are filling tens of thousands of new positions.

But those are rare opportunit­ies in an economy largely frozen.

 ?? BRITTANY GREESON/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Gratiot Avenue, a normally busy street in downtown Detroit, is nearly devoid of activity with social-distancing efforts aimed at slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s.
BRITTANY GREESON/NEW YORK TIMES Gratiot Avenue, a normally busy street in downtown Detroit, is nearly devoid of activity with social-distancing efforts aimed at slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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