Albuquerque Journal

Pandemic especially tough on people of color, poll finds

61% of Hispanic Americans have experience­d income loss

- BY KAT STAFFORD AND EMILY SWANSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT — People of color have not only been hit harder by the deadly coronaviru­s than have Americans overall, but they’re also bearing the brunt of the pandemic’s financial impact, according to a recent survey from the The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The financial picture is especially grim for Hispanic Americans, while some African Americans face the dual burden of being disproport­ionately affected by the virus itself while also struggling to pay bills due to the economic fallout.

The poll found that 61% of Hispanic Americans say they’ve experience­d some kind of household income loss as a result of the outbreak, including job losses, unpaid leave, pay cuts and fewer scheduled hours. That’s compared with 46% of Americans overall. Thirty-seven percent of Latinos and 27% of black Americans say they’ve been unable to pay at least one type of bill as a result of the coronaviru­s outbreak. Only 17% of white Americans say the same.

“If our policies do not adequately address these shortfalls and the racial disparitie­s in income, wealth, employment and wages, then we’re going to see the same pattern that we have seen historical­ly,” said Valerie Wilson, director of the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute’s program on race, ethnicity and the economy. “It’s going to take much longer for these families to recover — if they ever recover economical­ly.”

The survey, conducted in mid-April, found that 21% of Hispanics have been unable to make a rent or mortgage payment as a result of the outbreak, while 23% have been unable to pay a credit card bill.

That compares with 8% of white Americans in both cases. Black Americans are also slightly more likely than white Americans to have been unable to pay a credit card bill, at 15%.

New Mexico resident Denise Abraham, a retired teacher and librarian, said her 34-year-old son has experience­d a loss of income after he quit his restaurant job because he didn’t want to potentiall­y expose his family to the virus.

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