USA TODAY International Edition

Some industries resume hiring amid pandemic

- Paul Davidson

Even as COVID- 19- related layoffs remain at historical­ly bleak levels, another trend is quietly taking root: Businesses are starting to hire again.

All 50 states have begun allowing nonessenti­al businesses to reopen in phases, prompting restaurant­s, shops, hair salons and others to rehire at least some of the employees they laid off or furloughed to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s. Many small businesses received federal loans that are forgivable as long as they retain or rehire staffers.

Job postings in those and other industries are also picking up, underscori­ng that firms seek to tap a broader pool of workers, including the roughly 30 million Americans who are unemployed. Hiring in fields that have benefited from the pandemic is surging.

The economy unexpected­ly added 2.5 million jobs in May as employers rehired laid- off workers, the Labor Department reported Friday. Eight million payroll losses were expected. Although 9.3 million workers lost jobs last month, 13.1 million went back to work, according to an analysis of Labor Department data by Morgan Stanley.

The unemployme­nt rate fell to 13.3% from 14.7% A reality check: Overall hiring of new employees is still depressed. Total job postings on Glassdoor fell 5% in May, but that followed a 30% plunge in April from early March.

“We have signs of stabilizat­ion, but we’re not out of the woods yet,” says Glassdoor Senior Economist Daniel Zhao.

Still, “we’re seeing companies now get more focused on the future,” says Paul McDonald, senior executive director at staffing firm Robert Half Internatio­nal.

Another sign hiring is bubbling back to life is that the number of Americans receiving unemployme­nt benefits totaled 21.5 million the week ending May 23, up from the prior week but down from 25 million earlier in the month, the Labor Department said Thursday.

Some employers haven’t been able to

“We're seeing companies now get more focused on the future.”

Paul McDonald Senior executive director at Robert Half Internatio­nal

bring back the employees they laid off. Some workers may have landed new jobs while others earn more from unemployme­nt checks – which are juiced by a $ 600 weekly federal supplement during the crisis – than they would from their normal wages.

In May, job postings on Glassdoor increased 6% for restaurant­s and bars, 3% for beauty and fitness, 7% for travel and tourism and 8% for private security services – needed to serve some of the restaurant­s, stores and office buildings that reopened, according to data Glassdoor provided exclusivel­y to USA TODAY.

Some industries have thrived during the pandemic. As Americans purchased more groceries amid restaurant closures and ordered their goods online, job postings from early March to midMay rose more than sevenfold for grocery managers and increased 177% for workers who package goods for delivery, 145% for warehouse managers and 89% for customer service sales representa­tives.

Job ads for public health advisers, such as consultant­s who help businesses manage the crisis, shot up 59%, and postings increased by a third for informatio­n technology specialist­s, including experts who help employees set up remote computer networks, the Glassdoor data shows.

Although demand for some of these positions probably will decrease as the pandemic eases, it’s likely to remain elevated even after states reopen as consumers and employees remain leery of resuming old behaviors, at least until a vaccine is widely available, possibly by the middle of next year.

Bank hiring has increased significantly as low- interest rates spur more mortgage refinancings and employees are needed to handle the crush of demand for the government’s small- business loan program, McDonald of Robert Half says.

More broadly, demand has risen for tech workers, accountant­s, lawyers and creative directors in industries that are stable or growing, such as e- commerce, health care, financial services and insurance, McDonald says.

Staffing firm Randstad says its clients have increased hiring in banking and finance by 25% compared with precrisis levels. Health care systems are starting to bring on workers again as they resume elective surgeries and routine checkups.

A few months ago, when unemployme­nt was at a 50- year low of 3.5%, companies struggled to find job candidates for those roles, McDonald says. Now, he says, some companies are taking advantage of a big supply of unemployed workers and filling those positions more quickly.

Hiring, he says, has accelerate­d in some cases because employers are conducting video instead of in- person interviews and are more receptive to allowing candidates in faraway regions to work remotely.

“We’re seeing some clients hire more swiftly because more people are available,” McDonald says.

Charter Communicat­ions, the cable and broadband giant, said it hired 3,000 employees nationwide, including billing and sales agents, nearly all of them through video interviews amid the pandemic. The company says it’s trying to fill thousands of additional openings. The stay- at- home trend has been a boon for cable companies as customers dramatical­ly step up TV viewing and streaming.

“Through the effective use of virtual hiring practices, we have maintained a steady rate of hiring,” says Seth Feit, Charter’s group vice president for Talent.

 ??  ?? A sign advertises jobs at a McDonald's in Moss Point, Miss., last year. Hiring is picking up again. ROGELIO V. SOLIS/ AP
A sign advertises jobs at a McDonald's in Moss Point, Miss., last year. Hiring is picking up again. ROGELIO V. SOLIS/ AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States