Antelope Valley Press

No hope of getting jobs back

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NEW YORK (AP) — Eric Benz didn’t worry very much when his graphic design firm in Atlanta laid him off in March. He felt sure he’d be recalled to work once the viral pandemic eased and his firm’s clients resumed spending.

Three months later, there’s been no call. Instead, Benz has applied for gig work as an Instacart shopper.

Hope has given way to an urgent need to pay bills because Benz’s unemployme­nt benefits haven’t yet come through. Benz has negotiated with his mortgage lender to defer payments on the home he and his wife bought earlier this year. But the deferral won’t last long.

“I’m doing everything I can,” said Benz, 37. “It will take a little while to get back.”

Even as the US economy begins to flicker back to life, even as job cuts slow and some laid-off people are called back to work, the scope of the devastatio­n left by the viral pandemic has grown distressin­gly clear to millions who’d hoped for a quick return to their jobs: They may not be going back anytime soon.

With many businesses reopening, the government surprising­ly announced Friday that contrary to expectatio­ns of further layoffs, the economy added 2.5 million jobs in May, and the unemployme­nt rate fell from 14.7% to 13.3%.

But the harsh reality is that last month’s rehirings aren’t expected to continue at the same pace. Forty-two percent of the layoffs caused by the pandemic could become permanent job losses, according to a study by the University of Chicago’s Becker Friedman Institute for Economics. Many businesses, from tech startups to small shops and big retailers, may not survive the loss of revenue despite federal rescue aid.

That aid will run out soon. And despite gradual re-openings, public fear of the virus is still keeping many people away from bars, restaurant­s, hotels, hair salons and other retail establishm­ents. Few have resumed traveling. Sports and entertainm­ent venues remain closed.

That collective slowdown continues to keep millions of laid-off people on the sidelines. In April, 78% of people who were unemployed saw their jobs as temporary. In May, that figure dipped to 73%, according to the jobs report. And a declining proportion of the unemployed were classified as temporaril­y laid off.

In Charlotte, North Carolina, Alex Jansen’s company reopened Monday. But Jansen, a marketing administra­tor, didn’t get the call he expected calling him back to work. He’s spending his time learning Adobe programs to strengthen his resume.

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