Business Day

Pandemic recession erodes gains in US gender pay gap

• Economists say there could be long-lasting consequenc­es for the economy and an entire generation as women are hit hardest by job cuts and many mothers opt out of the labour force to care for children

- Olivia Rockeman, Reade Pickert and Catarina Saraiva Bloomberg

Women helped pull the US economy out of the last recession. This time around they are falling behind.

The pandemic is disproport­ionately affecting women and threatenin­g to wipe out decades of their economic progress. As the crisis drags on, some of the biggest pain-points are among women of colour and those with young children.

These setbacks — characteri­sed by some economists as the nation’s first female recession — stand in sharp contrast to the dramatic progress women made in the expansion following the last financial crisis. The jobs, income and promotions that women lose as a result of the coronaviru­s could hold back economic growth and sideline an entire generation of women.

The official data is stark. The unemployme­nt rate for black and Hispanic adult women remains above 10%, even though it’s decreased to 7.3% for white women, according to data from the US labour department

which will report September employment figures on Friday.

At the same time, women between 25 and 54 — also known as prime-age — are increasing­ly dropping out of the workforce, often to care for children. The participat­ion gap between men and women in this age group is now widening after shrinking to the narrowest ever right before the coronaviru­s.

Nancy Weindruch, 36, is a case in point. She left her job in communicat­ions in July to care for her two-year-old son, while her husband kept his higherpayi­ng work as a political consultant. Earlier in the pandemic, she took advantage of a government programme that provided paid leave but that has since expired. She hopes the situation is temporary.

“I’m determined to return to the workforce,” said Weindruch, even if that means “starting a few steps behind”.

Economists say it’s going to be difficult for women like Weindruch to return, and there could be long-lasting consequenc­es not just for women but the entire economy.

“When you hear US Federal Reserve officials worry about

‘ permanent scarring,’ that is permanent scarring,” said Julia Coronado, president of MacroPolic­y Perspectiv­es.

US Fed chair Jerome Powell has commented repeatedly about how women and minorities have been among the hardest hit economical­ly by the Covid-19 pandemic.

WAGE GAP

Millennial women, many of whom have children, were

“blazing trails” before the pandemic and are now falling behind, which is a “painful setback ”, Coronado said. The female recession could slow the recovery, according to some economists and policy analysts. The wage gap will likely be more than two percentage points wider after a pandemic recession, instead of shrinking like it would during a normal downturn, according to Northweste­rn University economics professor Matthias Doepke, who co-authored a recent study on the topic.

As many as tens of millions of women may never return to the labour force, even after a vaccine is found, said Centre for American Progress senior policy analyst Rasheed Malik. Altogether, McKinsey expects global GDP could be $1-trillion less in 2030 than it would be without a gender unemployme­nt gap.

Nearly two years separate the first and second drafts of a crucial bill that will entrench the rights of financial consumers in law. The Conduct of FinanWOMEN VOTituERS

There are political consequenc­es too, as women represent one of the biggest voting blocs in question this election. Support for paid leave and similar policies is rising, particular­ly among Republican­s.

About 72% of female voters polled in late March by the University of Maryland’s Programme for Public Consultati­on were in favour of some type of paid leave, up from 64% earlier in the month. The increase in support among men and women for such a policy was driven by a 10 percentage-point rise among Republican­s.

Before the virus, women had been making major strides in the labour market and in closing the wage gap. Participat­ion among women age 25 to 54 peaked in 2000, then dipped after the financial crisis, only to begin accelerati­ng again in 2015 until right before the pandemic. Women earned 82.3c of every dollar men did last year, up from 77.8c in 2007, census data showed.

At the start of the pandemic, women lost more jobs than men, particular­ly in industries such as hospitalit­y and other services with high female employment.

As states reopened, the female unemployme­nt rate has improved, down from a peak of 15.5% in April, the first doubledigi­t reading on record. But at the same time, men’s jobless rate remains lower.

Job losses have been especially dire for women of colour, whose unemployme­nt rates had fallen closer to that of white women before the pandemic. Unemployme­nt for Hispanic women surged to 20.2% in April, compared with 4.9% in February. Black women actually saw their worst jobless rate since the 1980s — 16.5% — in May, even though other groups were beginning to see an improvemen­t by that time.

That is a reverse of what has happened in prior recessions, according to Northweste­rn’s Doepke. Since job losses typically fall disproport­ionately on men in recessions, including the previous downturn, women can act as a “shock absorber” — increasing hours or joining the labour force to offset the household ’ s income declines, he said.

WOMEN DROPPING OUT

This time around, women are increasing­ly dropping out of the labour market altogether as more women are losing or quitting their jobs “because they realise that children come first”, San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly said in a virtual webinar earlier this month.

Nearly 7-million Americans are not employed because they have to take care of children, according to a census survey earlier this month.

Since women earn less than men on average, it is often the mother who steps back. Women lose valuable skills during the time they are not working, which can make finding a job in the future harder and damage family finances, according to Centre for American Progress analyst Malik.

FLEXIBILIT­Y AT A COST

The rise in remote work during the pandemic could boost women ’ s participat­ion but at the same time may jeopardise promotion and pay prospects, said Wells Fargo senior economist Sarah House.

“Flexibilit­y comes at a cost,” she said. “You ’ re not in the room.”

Finding childcare is poised to continue to be difficult as the industry itself has faced unpreceden­ted challenges, including closures and job losses, Malik said. About 94% of child daycare industry jobs are held by women, US Bureau of Labour Statistics data shows. Though policymake­rs remain at a standstill in talks about more stimulus, House Democrats have proposed legislatio­n that would help fund schools and childcare centres during the pandemic, as well as give some parents temporary paid leave.

Heidi Shierholz, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute, said, “We just cannot get out of this — the hole that we’re in — in any reasonable way, without doing huge scarring, without a much stronger care infrastruc­ture.”

 ??  ?? Home work: As women usually earn less than men, many mothers are dropping out of the job market to care for their children. / 123RF/Seventy Four 74
Home work: As women usually earn less than men, many mothers are dropping out of the job market to care for their children. / 123RF/Seventy Four 74

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