Los Angeles Times

1 in 5 fear they won’t make rent, mortgage

Census survey shows pandemic’s cost to households

- BY SARAH D. WIRE

WASHINGTON — More than half of California households have seen a loss of income due to the coronaviru­s crisis, the U.S. Census Bureau said Wednesday, based on a newly launched weekly survey.

Since March 13, 54.5% of California adults surveyed said they or another adult in their home had lost income, and an additional 40.8% expected their households to earn less from work over the next four weeks.

Nationally, more than a fifth of adults surveyed reported they had slight or no confidence in their ability to pay their rent or mortgage in June.

The findings come from the first release of data from a new weekly survey conducted by the bureau to try to gauge how the outbreak is affecting Americans. The 50question survey asked about food security, ability to pay rent, access to a computer for schoolwork and anxiety levels.

Nationally, 47% adults said they or another adult in their home had lost employment income since March 13, and 39% expected their household to earn less from work over the next four weeks.

“When we saw those numbers, we were very surprised,” said Victoria Velkoff, associate director for demographi­c programs at the bureau.

Speaking at a Brookings Institutio­n event after the numbers were released, Velkoff noted that the new survey asked about income loss, not unemployme­nt, so the results differ from national jobless figures. Some 36 million Americans have filed unemployme­nt insurance claims since the coronaviru­s struck.

The survey results show an outsize financial impact of the coronaviru­s on low-income, low-education and minority households.

Nationally, 58% of Latino respondent­s, 55% of black respondent­s and 53% of mixed-race respondent­s reported lost income, compared with 48% of Asian respondent­s and 43% of white respondent­s.

Only 38% of respondent­s with a bachelor’s degree or higher reported a loss of income, while 56% of those with less than a high school diploma, and 51% of those with a high school diploma, GED or some college reported a loss of work.

Similar discrepanc­ies were found over income, with more than 50% of respondent­s with household incomes of less than $75,000 reporting a reduction, compared with 29% among households with incomes of $200,000 or more.

The survey also shows the increasing price and scarcity of food during the pandemic.

In California, 11.4% of adults in the survey reported living in a household where there was sometimes or often not enough to eat in the previous seven days, slightly above the 10.6% nationally. Households across the country reported spending an average of $196 a week to buy food at supermarke­ts or online, according to the bureau.

In California, 38.3% of those surveyed said they had delayed medical care during the pandemic, on par with 38.7% of adults nationally.

More detailed state and city data are expected in the coming weeks, according to the bureau.

Nationally, 29.7% adults reported daily anxiety for over half of the days in the previous week. And 22.8% reported not being able to stop or control worrying on over half of the days in the previous week.

When asked about depression, 18.6% of adults reported feeling down more than half of the days or nearly every day during the previous week.

The data come from a Census Bureau survey of more than 74,000 households. People were contacted through email and texted links to online questionna­ires from April 23 to May 12. The weekly surveys are to continue through midJuly.

The bureau is conducting similar weekly surveys of businesses. The first batch of data released last week showed that the majority of businesses responding did not expect to resume operations for at least six months and reported experienci­ng supply chain disruption­s.

Though online surveys are sometimes less reliable, and using email and text messages to gather government statistica­l informatio­n is unusual, Daniel Goroff, vice president of the nonprofit Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, said at the Brookings event that the survey stood out because of its sample size and speed.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? PFC. GRANT MOCK and other California National Guard troops helped make up for the Sacramento Food Bank’s shortage of volunteers amid heavy demand.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press PFC. GRANT MOCK and other California National Guard troops helped make up for the Sacramento Food Bank’s shortage of volunteers amid heavy demand.

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