Sentinel & Enterprise

Jobless rate ‘not as rosy as it might seem’

Data shows many in Massachuse­tts have left workforce

- By Chris Lisinski

The number of Massachuse­tts workers counted as unemployed dropped by more than 250,000 over the past two months, a decline of more than a third that helped the state escape from a short streak of owning the worst jobless rate in the country.

About 114,000 more workers became employed in that span, too, a sign of continued steps toward recovery following the pandemic-related recession’s low point in the spring.

But the improving jobs numbers and unemployme­nt rate likely mask deeper, more lasting damage at both the state and federal level: Many people are dropping out of the workforce altogether, hinting that some — particular­ly women, who disproport­ionately fill caretaker roles — have given up attempts to find employment amid slow hiring and uncertaint­y about the COVID-19 health outlook.

“It’s a significan­t problem,” Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President and CEO Eric Rosengren said in a speech Thursday. “The longer the pandemic goes on, the more you’re going to see people leaving the labor force, not only because they can’t find a job but because they have to care for either elderly parents, people that are sick because of the pandemic, or children that are not able to go to school because schools have been closed and there is not availabili­ty of day care.”

The trend, according to economist Alicia Sasser Modestino, indicates that the recent improvemen­t in the state’s unemployme­nt situation might be “not as rosy as it might seem.”

Between January and August, the working-age population in Massachuse­tts grew 13,400, according to data published by state labor officials based on a household survey. In that same span, the labor force, which counts people who are employed and those who are unemployed but actively seeking work, shrunk by 290,000.

The drop was not limited to the earlier days of the COVID-19 crisis, when job cuts were severe. In July and August, a span in which the employed population grew and the unemployed population shrunk, the labor force declined by 138,500 — more than the 114,000 jobs added.

While both Massachuse­tts, and the country as a whole, have seen workers depart the market, the trends have taken different patterns.

Nationally, the rate of working-age adults participat­ing in the labor force has been slowly but steadily climbing, reaching 61.7% in August after dropping to 60.2% in April. In Massachuse­tts, the rate fell to 60.3% in April, rebounded to 65.1% in June, and then fell back down again to 62.6% in August, according to household survey labor data.

“We seem to be moving in the opposite direction from the country in terms of the number of people who are participat­ing in the labor force, which means that our improvemen­t in the unemployme­nt rate is maybe not as rosy as it might seem,” Modestino, who is associate director of the Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy at Northeaste­rn University, told the News Service. “If some of that improvemen­t is coming from people dropping out of the labor force, that’s not how we usually like to improve the unemployme­nt rate during a recession.”

Both the fluctuatin­g pattern and the scale of the changes are unusual. In general, the labor force shrinks during recessions and grows during expansions, but — like so much else about the pandemic — this economic slowdown is unpreceden­ted.

Alan Clayton-Matthews, another Northeaste­rn professor who is a senior research associate at the Dukakis Center, said the more acute labor-force changes in recent months reflect the new reality of the pandemic.

“In some sectors, you know you can’t get a job right now,” Clayton-Matthews said. “In a normal recession, you might have stayed in the labor force, but in this one where, because of COVID, there’s a virtual certainty that you’re not going to be able to get a job, you drop out of the labor force.”

Another factor, he said, is the now-expired increase in unemployme­nt aid offered through federal programs to blunt the impact of massive layoffs.

Red flags

While experts said the volatility in the labor-force figures raises red flags, they stressed that the state-level data do not offer a clear picture of why workers have departed.

Some could have opted to halt working over health concerns; some could have resigned themselves to not finding a job in the current strained economy; some might need to shift their focus to caretaking; and some might have simply retired during the pandemic.

Many experts agree, though, that the employment impacts have been disproport­ionately concentrat­ed among people of color, who are more likely to work low-wage jobs prone to disruption, and among women, who often perform a larger share of parenting and caretaking duties.

A survey Modestino conducted found that 13% of working parents either reduced their hours or lost their jobs because they had to take on child-care duties during the pandemic. The effects were more concentrat­ed among women, she said.

“Among women who became unemployed during the pandemic, 25% of them said it was solely due to child care,” Modestino said.

In February, about 31% of Massachuse­tts claimants seeking unemployme­nt benefits were women, according to Modestino. By July, that rate had jumped to more than 56%, “a tremendous shift.” A similar trend is occurring nationally. Between February and September, the percent of men aged 25-54 participat­ing in the labor force dropped 1.6 percentage points, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data based on the Current Population Survey. For women in the same age range, the labor-force participat­ion rate dropped 2.8 percentage points over that span.

“In a pandemic, where many schools are closing, when many people in the 25 to 54 age bracket are having children, many families have to make a choice of whether or not they can continue to work because they have children at home,” Rosengren said. “Sometimes, that is borne by the husband, but frequently it is borne by the wife.”

The long-term effects of discourage­d workers may not become clear for months or years, particular­ly amid enormous uncertaint­y over the public-health outlook.

Key questions remain unanswered, such as when consumers will feel comfortabl­e resuming pre-pandemic routines, when a vaccine or treatment will be available, and whether Congress will approve another stimulus package.

Clayton-Matthews described the risk of federal aid falling through as “the biggest sword of Damocles hanging over us.”

“The economy seems to be weakening, and without another stimulus, I don’t see how it’s going to get by until there’s a vaccine widely available,” he said. “We could see a prolonged recession if there’s not more support for incomes like there was in the beginning of this pandemic.”

 ?? CHRIS LISINSKI / SHNS ?? Despite gains in total employment in the past two months, the Massachuse­tts labor force is shrinking, raising concerns about workers who have given up on finding employment amid the COVID recession
CHRIS LISINSKI / SHNS Despite gains in total employment in the past two months, the Massachuse­tts labor force is shrinking, raising concerns about workers who have given up on finding employment amid the COVID recession

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