Houston Chronicle

Gloomy jobs report also shows a bright spot

- By Neil Irwin

It seemed appropriat­e that the jobs numbers for the final months of 2020 would be as nasty as the year as a whole was.

It is fair to say that the loss of 140,000 jobs in December indicates a backslidin­g of the economic recovery that took place in the summer and fall. Other numbers in Friday’s report confirm that basically gloomy picture, such as the continued depressed share of adults who are in the labor force. In the debate over which letter of the alphabet best describes the pattern of the 2020 economy, the December numbers pretty much rule out “V.” But. But.

The details of this report, combined with everything else swirling around in economic policy and the financial markets, make for amore optimistic case. There is an opportunit­y for 2021 to be the year of a remarkable bounce back, thanks tomonetary and fiscal stimulus, the delayed effects of buoyant markets over the last few months and above all the prospect of widespread coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns.

The December numbers point to a jobs crisis that is contained to sectors dealingwit­h the direct effects of pandemic-related shutdowns. Unlike the data from the spring of 2020, the latest numbers are not consistent with the sort of broad-based absence of demand in the economy that caused the recovery fromthe last few recessions to be so long and so slow.

The steepest December job losses were in leisure and hospitalit­y, a sector that shed 498,000 positions. Consider what that number represents: countless restaurant­s, hotels and performanc­e stages and arenas shuttered, with hundreds of thousands of people back on the jobless rolls and unsure when they will be able to resume work.

The good news is, we know how and when those jobs can come back. If enough Americans are vaccinated, they will probably feel comfortabl­e in returning to normal patterns of leisure activity. An outright boom in those sectors is plausible later this year. Americans’ savings are through the roof, and it is easy to imagine pent-up demand for travel, concerts and the like.

Other sectors less directly affected by public health concerns — industries that were at recessiona­ry levels just a few months ago — kept improving. They are not necessaril­y back to pre-pandemic levels but are on track to get there before much longer.

Constructi­on employment, for example, is still 3 percent below its pre-pandemic levels, but the sector added 51,000 jobs in December. At that pace, it will be back to full health in the spring. The story is similar for manufactur­ing jobs, still down 4 percent from February but having added 38,000 positions in December.

The list of sectors fitting that basic pattern — still at levels consistent with a recession but clawing their way back steadily — is long, and it includes industries as

varied as truck transporta­tion, real estate rental and leasing, and profession­al and business services.

Both the policy and market environmen­t should create tail winds for those sectors in 2021, helping them return to full health faster.

A booming stock market does not translate into more economic activity overnight. But as corporate executives make their capital spending plans and as consumers make their spending decisions, surging stocks do tend to have a positive effect. That would imply that the positive effects of new market highs over recent weeks should start to show up as public health concerns recede.

The December employment numbers cover a period before Congress reached a compromise pandemic aid package worth $900 billion. Among other things, the bill includes enhanced unemployme­nt benefits that will help the hundreds of thousands of workers whose jobs disappeare­d in December, as well as $600 checks that should strengthen consumer spending in the months ahead.

Moreover, the Democratic victories in Georgia this week and the resulting Senate majority make it more likely that those checks will grow to $2,000 per person. It also means that the Biden administra­tion will have the flexibilit­y to undertake a more ambitious agenda, including infrastruc­ture spending, that should support overall economic activity.

A Democratic Congress will also be likely to providemor­e aid to states, helping one of the other areas of job loss in December besides leisure and hospitalit­y: State and local government­s cut 51,000 jobs last month.

Plenty could still go wrong, such as a prolonged bungling of the vaccine rollout or a market correction that damages business and consumer confidence. And none of this diminishes the pain of the millions of Americans who are still out of work.

But put it all together, and more so than at any point since the start of the pandemic, the economy has a clear path back to full health.

 ?? Bryan Anselm / New York Times ?? Constructi­on employment is still below its pre-pandemic levels, but the sector added 51,000 jobs in December. This, and other indicators, could signal paths to recovery.
Bryan Anselm / New York Times Constructi­on employment is still below its pre-pandemic levels, but the sector added 51,000 jobs in December. This, and other indicators, could signal paths to recovery.

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