Los Angeles Times

Jobs report shows slowing recovery

- BY DON LEE

WASHINGTON — The last monthly jobs report before election day showed the third straight month of a weakening recovery in employment as the nation added just 661,000 positions in September, down sharply from the 1.5 million gained in August.

And though the jobless rate fell to 7.9% from 8.4% in August, it wasn’t good news given the reason: About 700,000 workers dropped out of the labor force, suggesting many are striking out in the job market.

The federal government’s report Friday came hours after President Trump conf irmed that he and his wife had tested positive for the coronaviru­s, giving a double jolt to his reelection campaign promising a speedy “V- shaped” recovery and an end to the pandemic.

The employment report, which covered both new jobs and those f illed by calling back laid- off workers, seemed to confirm many analysts’ pessimism over the nation’s economic outlook, even as some other measures pointed toward a brighter future. ( California’s jobs data for September will be released Oct. 16.)

Retail sales, housing activity and business capital spending have been stronger than expected recently, thanks in part to federal pandemic- aid programs that are now largely expired, as well as robust monetary support from the Federal Reserve. The latest measures of consumer confidence showed gains, an especially encouragin­g sign when consumer spending accounts for some 70% of total economic activity.

The contrast between such positive indicators and the darker signs in both the jobs report and the views of most mainstream analysts largely ref lects the unique quality of the recession triggered by the COVID- 19 pandemic. Unlike in past downturns, when the damage usually has been spread more broadly, today there are essentiall­y two economies: Millions of Americans, especially lower- wage workers, have been rocked by layoffs and lost incomes, while millions of others have remained largely untouched, mostly in higher- income, white- collar jobs that can be done remotely.

What makes the dramatic fall- off in job gains last month worrisome is that it suggests the economic destructio­n has begun to spread upward into the previously stronger segments of the workforce. That is happening amid indication­s Thursday that negotiatio­ns for up to $ 2 trillion in further federal relief have all but collapsed between Congress and the White House.

“It is clear that the economic rebound is entering a new, weaker phase,” said Michael Pearce, senior U. S. economist at the research firm Capital Economics.

The darkening economic outlook was unwelcome news at the White House and Trump reelection headquarte­rs, despite officials’ efforts to put a positive spin on the data.

“Heading into today’s number, the unemployme­nt rate was already looking likely to show the worst economy of any president running for reelection in modern economic history,” said Chris Rupkey, chief f inancial economist for MUFG Bank in New York.

“This is the highest unemployme­nt and worst economy for any president facing reelection in history,” he said, noting that when President Carter lost his bid for reelection, the unemployme­nt rate before the election was 7.5% in September 1980. When President George H. W. Bush unsuccessf­ully sought a second term in 1992, the jobless rate was 7.6% in September.

Other evidence has hopes for a quick rebound fading, including recent announceme­nts of large layoffs by major corporatio­ns as varied as Raytheon, Allstate and Marathon Petroleum. Burbank- based Walt Disney Co. said this week that it’s cutting 28,000 jobs, most of them at its parks and resorts in Florida and California.

“The easy part of the labor market recovery is largely behind us now,” said Brian Coulton, chief economist at Fitch Ratings. “The sobering statistic here is that 36% of unemployed are now classed as permanent job losers, up from 14% in May.”

In California, so- called early- warning layoff notices that employers filed with the state in September were on pace to exceed levels in the last two months. Through Sept. 23, officials received 299 notificati­ons affecting more than 28,000 workers. A little more than half were for permanent job losses, a notably higher percentage than in prior months.

“As we enter October, the California economy is stalled, with no significan­t uptick in hiring,” said Michael Bernick, former director of the state’s Employment Developmen­t Department. “As the economic lockdowns slowly lift, employers are bringing back some of the workers laid off earlier in the pandemic. But they are not hiring additional workers.”

Separate data from Opportunit­y Insights, a nonpartisa­n group at Harvard and other institutio­ns tracking the recovery, show that as of Sept. 20, the number of small businesses in California was down 29.4% from January. For the nation, that figure was down 24.2%.

And now, a rise in coronaviru­s cases in much of the U. S. raises the specter of new shutdowns and a pullback from the gains made in consumer traveling, shopping and dining out.

Sophia Koropeckyj, labor economist at Moody’s Analytics, wrote to clients that the recovery of 661,000 jobs can’t be dismissed. The gains were spread in both manufactur­ing and constructi­on as well as services, she said, led by the hard- hit restaurant and hospitalit­y sectors continuing to claw back gains. But the economy has regained only about half of the 22 million jobs lost to the pandemic.

Last month, she noted, the pace of hiring was down especially at retail stores.

Job growth tapered off at profession­al and business services, and there was a sizable drop in local government jobs as schools have turned to remote learning.

“There is a good chance that economic activity will stall in the fourth quarter,” Koropeckyj said, “as long as the pandemic persists and Congress is unable to agree on the sorely needed fourth fiscal stimulus package.”

Republican­s and Democrats rushed to approve roughly $ 3 trillion in emergency aid this year when the pandemic struck, but most of those aid programs for individual­s and businesses have ended. In May, when the Democratic- controlled House passed another $ 3- trillion stimulus measure, Republican­s opposed spending that much, and the two parties have not been able to compromise since.

By the end of July, the existence of the two economies — an improved one for higher- income workers, and harder times for everyone else — was becoming apparent. That probably lessened Washington’s incentive to provide more aid, given that lower- income Americans are less likely to vote.

The employment rate of high- income workers ( those making more than $ 60,000) was down just 1.6% from January, according to Opportunit­y Insights. In contrast, employment for low- income workers who earn less than $ 27,000 was off 16%. Overall, employment was down about 7%, a figure consistent with the latest jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The report showed that of the 10.7 million payroll jobs that have not come back, more than half were in lowerwage sectors such as restaurant­s and hotels, retail sales, nursing care and social assistance services. The jobless rate for workers 25 and older with a college degree fell to 4.8% in September — about half the rate of workers with only a high school education.

The gap between white and Black unemployme­nt is even bigger. September unemployme­nt was 7% for white people and 12.1% for Black people. ( The Latino unemployme­nt rate was 10.3%, and it was 8.9% for Asian Americans.)

This week, the Democratic majority in the House passed a slimmed- down aid package, but the GOP- controlled Senate remained opposed. Analysts said the stalemate could be risky, especially for Republican­s.

 ?? Nati Harnik Associated Press ?? PEOPLE line up at a job training center in Omaha in July. Last month, the U. S. added just 661,000 jobs.
Nati Harnik Associated Press PEOPLE line up at a job training center in Omaha in July. Last month, the U. S. added just 661,000 jobs.

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