The Norwalk Hour

Survey: 843,000 Conn. residents expect to lose income this month

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

With federal benefits expiring and businesses fearing another pandemic shutdown, more than 840,000 Connecticu­t residents anticipate a dreary December — during which someone in their household will lose income, according to new data from the U.S. Census.

The latest Household Pulse Survey — a Census initiative in conjunctio­n with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — shows abysmal consumer confidence, experts said, that could deteriorat­e Connecticu­t’s alreadyfra­gile economy quickly in the new year.

“What it says is ‘We aren’t going to spend anything if we can possibly avoid it,” said University of Connecticu­t economist Fred V. Carstensen. “We’re only going to pay for absolute necessitie­s.”

The survey polled workers and the unemployed nationally from Nov. 11 to Nov. 23 about their expectatio­ns for the coming month, finding 76 million nationally, and 843,000 here, believe they or someone else contributi­ng to their household will lose income soon. The Connecticu­t figure represents roughly 1 in 3 working-age adults or teens.

Whether that many residents ultimately lose jobless benefits, face pay cuts or layoffs, watch seasonal work expire or otherwise fall back fiscally isn’t as important — right now — as what they think, said economist Don Klepper-Smith from DataCore Partners.

Klepper-Smith, who was chief economic adviser in the late 2000s to Gov. M. Jodi Rell, said the real threat is fearful and excessive belt-tightening that could cripple businesses already hurting since the pandemic began in March.

“What we have here is the perfect storm evolving,” he said, adding that the stock market’s robust performanc­e since the summer isn’t enough to offset vanishing consumer confidence. “There is Main Street and there is Wall Street. Wall Street is pointing up, and Main Street is pointing down.”

Part of that “perfect storm” involves an array of federal extensions and enhancemen­ts to the base of 26 weeks of unemployme­nt available to most jobless in Connecticu­t.

With federal benefits expiring and businesses fearing another pandemic shutdown, more than 840,000 Connecticu­t residents anticipate a dreary December — during which someone in their household will lose income, according to new data from the U.S. Census.

The latest Household Pulse Survey — a Census initiative in conjunctio­n with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — shows abysmal consumer confidence, experts said, that could deteriorat­e Connecticu­t’s alreadyfra­gile economy quickly in the new year.

“What it says is ‘We aren’t going to spend anything if we can possibly avoid it,” said University of Connecticu­t economist Fred V. Carstensen. “We’re only going to pay for absolute necessitie­s.”

The survey polled workers and the unemployed nationally from Nov. 11 to Nov. 23 about their expectatio­ns for the coming month, finding 76 million nationally, and 843,000 here, believe they or someone else contributi­ng to their household will lose income soon. The Connecticu­t figure represents roughly one in three working age adults or teens.

Whether that many residents ultimately lose jobless benefits, face pay cuts or layoffs, watch seasonal work expire or otherwise fall back fiscally isn’t as important — right now — as what they think, said economist Don Klepper-Smith from DataCore Partners.

Klepper-Smith, who was chief economic adviser in the late 2000s to Gov. M. Jodi Rell, said the real threat is fearful and excessive belt-tightening that could cripple businesses already hurting since the pandemic began in March.

“What we have here is the perfect storm evolving,” he said, adding that the stock market’s robust performanc­e since the summer isn’t enough to offset vanishing consumer confidence. “There is Main Street and there is Wall Street. Wall Street is pointing up, and Main Street is pointing down.”

Part of that “perfect storm” involves an array of federal extensions and enhancemen­ts to the base of 26 weeks of unemployme­nt available to most jobless in Connecticu­t.

Some extensions already have expired, and two more — one that expanded benefits to include freelancer­s and a second that lengthened the duration of federal assistance — go away on Dec. 26.

And with the pandemic entering its 10th month in December, more Connecticu­t residents exhaust their state benefits each week.

But Carstensen, who heads the Connecticu­t Center for Economic Analysis, a UConn think-tank, said expiring federal aid is just the tip of the iceberg.

Even if President-elect Joe Biden, the new Congress and the Federal Reserve take steps in January to expand a stimulus, that might not be enough to convince frightened consumers to part with their resources.

“The Fed can flood the economy with money, but the Fed has no capacity to buy goods and services,” Carstensen said.

The Center for Economic Analysis warned in a late October forecast that Connecticu­t — already headed for trouble before

the coronaviru­s due to inadequate investment­s in technology and transporta­tion — likely would struggle for a decade or longer to undo the economic damage created by the pandemic.

And since March, workers and the unemployed read daily warnings and speculatio­n from state officials, business leaders and others about the impending closure of one economic sector or another.

The Connecticu­t Restaurant Associatio­n, which launched its new #SaveCTRest­aurants campaign last week, hammered its point home by noting that 600 restaurant­s already have closed here, and associatio­n executive director Scott Dolch added that “without additional support, many more are likely to shutter in the weeks and months ahead.”

Chris DiPentima, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, said the best way to stop businesses from furloughin­g workers and trimming pay is for state officials not to wait for Washington alone to solve the problem.

“I don’t think there’s a silver bullet,” he said, adding that the associatio­n is asking Gov. Ned Lamont and the legislatur­e to waive sales tax on business expenses on personal protective equipment and on worker retraining services.

Lamont did announce last Friday that he would increase state unemployme­nt benefits temporaril­y for about 38,000 jobless residents who lost low-paying jobs.

This, in turn, would enable them to qualify retroactiv­ely for $55 million in temporary federal aid — about $1,800 per person.

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