The Oklahoman

Jobless numbers surge to 14.7%

- By Christophe­r Rugaber The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The coronaviru­s crisis has sent U. S. unemployme­nt s urgi ng t o 14.7%, a level last seen when the country was in the throes of the Depression and President Franklin D. Roosevelt was assuring Americans that the only thing to fear was fear itself.

And because of government errors and the particular way the Labor Department measures the job market, the true picture is even worse. By some calculatio­ns, the unemployme­nt rate stands at 23.6%, not far from the Depression peak of nearly 25%.

The Labor Department said Friday that 20.5 million jobs vanished in April in the worst monthly loss on record, triggered by the coast-to-coast shutdowns of factories, stores, offices and other businesses.

The breathtaki­ng collapse is certain to intensify the push-pull across the U.S. over how and when to ease stay- at- home restrictio­ns. And it robs President Donald Trump of the ability to point to a strong economy as he runs for reelection.

“The jobs report from hell is here ,” said SalGuatier­i, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, “one never seen before and unlikely to be seen again barring another pandemic or meteor hitting the Earth.”

On Wall Street, stocks pushed higher as investors reckoned that the worst of the job losses are over. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained more than 455 points, or close to 2%.

Worldwide, the virus has infected at least 3.9 million people and killed over 270,000, including more than 76,000 in the U.S ., according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University based on official data. White House officials announced that Vice President Mike Pence's press secretary has the coronaviru­s, the second person at the complex known to test postive this week, and said safety protocols were being stepped up.

The unemployme­nt report indicated that the vast majority of those laid off in April — roughly 75% — consider their job loss temporary, a result of businesses that were forced to close suddenly but hope to reopen and recall their staffs.

Whether most of those workers can return anytime soon, though, will be determined by how well policymake­rs, businesses and the public deal with the health crisis. Economists worry it will take years to recover all the jobs lost.

The meltdown has occurred with start ling speed. In February, unemployme­nt was at a more than 50-year low of 3.5%, and the economy had added jobs every month for a record 9 years. In March, unemployme­nt was 4.4%.

“In just two months the unemployme­nt rate has gone from the lowest rate in 50 years to the highest rate in almost 90 years,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial.

Nearly all the j ob growth achieved during the 11-year recovery from the financial meltdown has now been lost in one month.

Leslie Calhoun lost his job cleaning Atlantic City, New Jersey, casinos after 20 years. He, his wife, their two daughters and his sister-in-law are surviving on his wife's paycheck from a medical facility as he wrestles with an unemployme­nt system that has paid him nothing since he applied in March.

“The bills are piling up,” he said. “We're eating a lot of ramen noodles and hot dogs. What I wouldn't give for a nice meal of baked chicken and steak, some fresh vegetables.”

The last time unemployme­nt was this high was in 1939 at the tail end of the Depression, before the U.S. entered World War II.

Trump, who faces the prospect of high unemployme­nt rates through the November election, said the figures were “no surprise” and later added

that he's in “no rush” to negotiate another financial rescue bill.

An emerging Democratic aid package is expected to include eye-pop ping sums, centered on nearly $1 trillion that states and cities are seeking to prevent mass layoffs as government­s reel f rom the one-two punch of skyrocketi­ng pandemic costs and dismal tax receipts in the shuttered economy.

The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office has projected that the jobless rate will still be 9.5% by the end of 2021.

As bad as Friday's numbers were, they don't capture the full magnitude of the devastatio­n.

In a sort of footnote, the Labor Department acknowledg­ed that its survey-takers erroneousl­y classified millions of Americans as employed in April even though their employers had closed down. If they had been counted correctly, unemployme­nt would have been nearly 20%, t he government said.

However, the Labor Department doesn't change the results submitted by its survey- takers because that could be seen as political manipulati­on.

Also, people who are out of work but aren't actually looking for a new job are not officially counted as unemployed. An estimated 6.4 million people lost jobs last month but did not search for new ones, probably because they saw little prospect of finding work with the economy shut down.

Counting them as unemployed would push the rate up further, to almost 24%, according to calculatio­ns by Heidi Shierholz, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute.

Though some businesses are beginning to reopen in certain states, factories, hotels, restaurant­s, resorts, sporting venues, movie theaters and many small businesses are still largely shuttered. The government is dispensing nearly $3 trillion to help households and businesses pull through, including $1,200-per-person relief checks and an extra $600 in weekly unemployme­nt benefits.

Trump has pushed aggressive­ly to get businesses up and running again amid warnings from health experts that easing up too soon could lead to a deadly second wave of infections. As Election Day nears, the president will be judged on how he handles not just the economic crisis but the health one.

Just months ago, the Trump campaign planned to hammer its Democratic opponent this spring with negative ads while touting the strong economy. But since the outbreak, the re- election team has grown increasing­ly worried about the president' s standing in key states such as Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida. More than one-fifth of Michigan's workers are on unemployme­nt.

Former Vice President Joe Bid en, meanwhile, has seized on the crisis as part of his overall attempt to cast Trump as caring only about the wealthiest Americans.

The health scourge has taken such a heavy economic toll around the world that economists have had to break out the history books.

This week the Bank of England projected that Britain will see its biggest annual economic decline since 1706, when the European powers were embroiled in the War of the Spanish Succession.

Unemployme­nt in the 19- country eur ozone is expected to surpass 10% incoming months as more people are laid off. That figure is expected to remain lower than the U.S. rate, in part because millions of workers in places such as France and Germany are staying on the payrolls with the help of government aid that covers much of their salaries.

Over the past seven weeks, an estimated 33.5 million Americans have filed for unemployme­nt benefits. Friday' s job-loss report is based on a mid-April survey of businesses and households and takes into account the offsetting effects of the hiring surge at companies like Amazon and many grocery stores.

Minorities and poor people have suffered the most from the shutdown. Job losses were especially severe among Latin os, whose unemployme­nt rate leaped to 18.9% from 6% in March. The African-American rate j umped to 16.7%, while for whites it rose to 14.2%.

 ??  ?? A pedestrian walks by The Framing Gallery, closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Thursday, in Grosse Pointe, Mich. [PAUL SANCYA/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]
A pedestrian walks by The Framing Gallery, closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Thursday, in Grosse Pointe, Mich. [PAUL SANCYA/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States