Americans are staying jobless for longer as pandemic stretches on

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WASHINGTON, Dec 2, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Eleanore Fernandez lost her job as an
executive assistant when the coronavirus pandemic struck in March, and things
have only grown worse in the months since.

Her husband, a professional musician, was also put out of work, and she is
just weeks away from losing the US government unemployment benefits that have
helped sustain Fernandez and her teenage daughter.

“I’ve never been in a situation where it’s like, this hairy,” Fernandez
told AFP, noting she is “taking more out of my savings account.”

“I’m going to run out soon if nothing happens,” she said.

The coronavirus pandemic caused the US economy to shed more than 20 million
jobs, and though some people have been rehired, data shows the jobless are
remaining out of work for longer as the virus again surges nationwide.

With the extra unemployment benefits approved by Congress set to lapse at
the end of the year, economists warn the US labor face is facing long-term
damage ahead of Joe Biden’s inauguration as president in January.

“We’ve been concerned about longer run damage to the productive capacity of
the economy,” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said last month.

“Workers who are out of work for long periods of time, they may lose their
contact with the labor market. They may lose their skills.”

– ‘Take anything’ –

Labor Department data for October showed nearly 3.6 million people in the
United States have been unemployed for at least six months.

That is equivalent to about a third of the total unemployed population, and
is a sign a significant share of people who lost their jobs in the early
weeks of the pandemic, in March and April, have not been able to find work.

The figure is 1.2 million higher than in September, making it “the highest
month-over-month increase in history,” Michele Evermore, senior policy
analyst at the National Employment Law Project, told AFP.

Fernandez has spent fruitless months applying for work and is left to
wonder what will happen when extended unemployment payments authorized by
Congress in March run out on December 26.

“I’m going to have to take anything or deliver groceries, too, or
something,” she told AFP.

That dilemma is exactly what the central bank chief warned of and what
analysts say will make the pandemic damage linger even after the virus is
brought under control.

When “people lose attachment to the workforce, particularly once they fall
off of unemployment insurance, they stop looking for work, they start
figuring out something else, you know, turning to the informal economy,”
Evermore said.

The government is scheduled to release the November employment report on
Friday, and Evermore predicted that, with the economy far from fully healed,
the ranks of the long-term jobless will swell further.

Before the crisis, the US had a historically low unemployment rate of 3.5
percent, but most economists believe returning to that level is years away.

And the pandemic could change the labor market in other lasting ways, as
more jobs shift away from service industries towards the tech sector,
requiring costly and time-consuming re-training to prepare unemployed workers
for these new opportunities.

– Deepening inequality –

As with most economic trends in the US, the pain is not being felt equally.

African Americans, who have the highest unemployment rate among all racial
groups, suffer from what Evermore called “first fired, last hired syndrome,”
as they have the weakest job prospects and tend to be laid off first.

Some communities had never fully recovered from the lingering pain of the
2008-2010 global financial crisis, and the pandemic will compound that damage
as it ripples out into the wider economy.

“It’s not just individuals who are unemployed and get hurt, but it’s their
entire community, because they don’t have that money to spend it at the local
stores,” she said.

Nadra Enzi, who has been unemployed since April, is already seeing this
happen where he lives in New Orleans, particularly among African Americans
like himself.

“More completed suicide. More domestic violence. More people seeking mental
health counseling” is how Enzi describes the pandemic’s bleak months.

He believes racism cost him his job as a security guard, and his search for
new work has thus far been unsuccessful.

“The pandemic is also being used for racial discrimination,” he said.
“That’s a whole new field of civil rights.”