Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ Analysis: A lukewarm vaccine summer? Plus, tips for summer job seekers.

- By Neil Irwin

Now that is more like it. Employers added 559,000 jobs in May and created more jobs in March and April than earlier estimates suggested. The shockingly weak April number that confounded economists four weeks ago (originally reported as a gain of 266,000 jobs, now revised up to 278,000) looks like an aberration, not a major downshift in the pace of recovery.

But that does not mean all is well. Just a few weeks ago, it seemed more likely than not that the United States was on the verge of a boom summer, a time of explosive growth that would bring the economy back to full health faster than in any recovery in memory.

It has become increasing­ly clear, however — both from anecdotal reports and in data — that a reopening spurred on by vaccinatio­n is harder than it once seemed. The possibilit­y of adding 1 million jobs a month seemed within grasp not long ago but now looks more like wishful thinking.

It is not so much a hot vax summer as a warm vax summer.

If you average the last three months of job creation, employers are adding 541,000 positions a month. In a normal expansion, that would be great; it is a higher number than was attained for even a single month in the recovery that began in 2009. But it does not imply a return to full health in the immediate future.

At the job creation rate of the last three months, it would take 14 months to return to February 2020 employment levels — longer if the goal is to return to the pre-pandemic employment trend. Unlike in a typical recovery, the problem appears to be the supply of labor, not the demand for it. Job openings are at record highs, and employers are eager to hire, but they cannot find workers — at least not at the wages they are used to paying.

The details of the May numbers support this idea. Wages are soaring — average hourly earning were up 0.5 percent — yet the share of adults in the labor force actually ticked down. The number of people not in the labor force rose by 160,000, implying more people just said, “Forget it, I’m not even looking for a job.”

There have been heated debates over whether this is a result of expanded unemployme­nt insurance benefits, which may give people less incentive to work; problems related to child care and virus-related health risks; or perhaps a broader psychologi­cal reset for many would-be workers.

These are not mutually exclusive; all are likely to be contributo­rs to this unusual moment in which demand for goods and services is soaring and supply of them is constraine­d.

An open question is how much labor supply might increase in some states that end expanded jobless benefits earlier than the September expiration date contained in federal law.

The details of the industries that are adding jobs similarly point to reopening struggles. The leisure and hospitalit­y sector, which suffered the worst damage from the pandemic, added 292,000 jobs in May. That sounds great but is actually lower than the 328,000 jobs it added in April.

In other words, even as the nation was four weeks further along in achieving widespread vaccinatio­n, and seemingly every restaurant in the country was complainin­g it could not hire enough servers, cooks and dishwasher­s, the pace of recovery in that sector slowed rather than accelerate­d.

To the degree the labor supply shortage is about people reevaluati­ng their priorities, it is not necessaril­y a bad thing. It could lead to a more lasting reset of compensati­on and work standards across the economy.

But it does have implicatio­ns for politics and the economy as a whole. For instance, Democrats want to run on a boom-time economy in the 2022 midterms. That will be hard to do if the supply of labor turns out to have shifted lower in the long term.

To the degree there is a broader rethinking of the role of work in people’s lives, this phenomenon will outlast this post-pandemic summer, whatever its temperatur­e ultimately turns out to be.

 ?? LAYLAH AMATULLAH BARRAYN/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A restaurant worker buses clean glasses to a server station last year at a diner in New York City. Finding people to fill jobs, particular­ly those like restaurant work, is proving hard for employers in the wake of the pandemic.
LAYLAH AMATULLAH BARRAYN/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO A restaurant worker buses clean glasses to a server station last year at a diner in New York City. Finding people to fill jobs, particular­ly those like restaurant work, is proving hard for employers in the wake of the pandemic.

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