Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hiring struggles lead to slowed job growth

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — The recovery of America’s job market hit a pause last month as many businesses — from restaurant­s and hotels to factories and constructi­on companies — struggled to find enough workers to catch up with a rapidly strengthen­ing economic rebound.

Employers added just 266,000 jobs in April, sharply lower than in March and far fewer than economists had expected. With viral cases declining, and states and localities easing restrictio­ns, the recovery from the pandemic recession has been so fast that many businesses have been caught flat-footed in the face of surging consumer demand.

Last month’s hiring slowdown appears to reflect a host of factors. Nearly 3 million people are reluctant to look for work because they fear catching the virus, according to government surveys. More women dropped out of the workforce last month, likely to care for children, after many had returned in the previous two months.

In addition, constructi­on

companies and manufactur­ers, especially automakers, have been left short of parts because of clogged supply chains and have had to slow production for now. Both sectors pulled back on hiring in April. And some businesses say they believe that a $300-a-week jobless benefit, paid for by the federal government, is discouragi­ng some of the unemployed from taking new jobs.

Still, companies have added jobs for four-straight months, the Labor Depart- ment said Friday, though the government lowered its estimate of job growth for February and March by a combined 78,000. April’s total is far below March’s gain of 770,000.

The resumption of hiring has encouraged some Americans to start looking for jobs, which means they are newly counted as unemployed if they don’t immediatel­y find work. This is what happened in April, when the unemployme­nt rate ticked up from 6% to 6.1%.

Employers are now posting far more jobs than they did before the pandemic, and “help wanted” signs dot many restaurant windows. Other telltale signs of labor shortages have emerged as well: Average hourly pay rose 0.7% in April to $30.17, which the government said suggests that the fast reopening of the economy “may have put upward pressure on wages.” The average workweek also rose, evidence that companies are asking their employees to work more.

“Demand is outpacing supply,” said Daniel Zhao, senior economist at Glassdoor, a job listings website. “That’s something that is occurring across the economy, in semiconduc­tors to lumber, and we’re seeing a similar crunch in the labor market.”

The drop in hiring suggests that the Federal Reserve is still months away from slowing its purchases of Treasury notes and other bonds, which are intended to keep long-term interest rates low. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has said it would take “a string” of reports like the one for March to show that the economy is on track for a full recovery. Fed officials have signaled that they don’t intend to raise the short-term benchmark rate until after 2023.

On Friday, the prospect of ongoing Fed stimulus helped fuel a stock market rally, with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average both closing at record highs.

At a news conference, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen cautioned that a swift recovery from an event as catastroph­ic as a pandemic isn’t likely to be free of disruption­s. She cited shortages of lumber, computer chips and other goods.

“Starting up an economy again, trying to get it back on track after a pandemic in which there are a lot of supply bottleneck­s is going to be, I think, a bumpy process,” Yellen told reporters at the White House.

Some economists note that the $300-a-week federal jobless benefit, available until September, has come on top of state payments that average about $320. The combined unemployme­nt benefits mean that anyone earning less than $32,000 a year can potentiall­y receive more income from unemployme­nt aid than from their previous jobs, according to economists at Bank of America.

Marie M., who asked that her full name not be used so her comments wouldn’t affect her job prospects, said she had been juggling shifts at two restaurant­s in Los Angeles in the fall of 2019. Once the pandemic hit, she lost both jobs.

Last year, she collected around $30,000 in unemployme­nt aid — about the same amount she had earned working in 2019. In July, she plans to start looking for restaurant work again. This time, she feels more confident that she’ll get the hours she needs. Restaurant­s are already reaching out to her about jobs, so she can afford to be more selective.

“Unemployme­nt benefits have been like collective bargaining,” she said. “They made a union out of all of us.”

On Friday, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce responded to the April jobs report by calling for an end to the $300-a-week federal unemployme­nt supplement.

STATES CANCEL BENEFITS

Arkansas on Friday joined two other Republican-led states, Montana and South Carolina, by moving to cancel federal unemployme­nt benefits in recent days, blaming the benefits for hampering the return to work.

Still, optimism about the economic recovery is growing. Many Americans are flush with cash after having received $1,400 federal relief checks, along with savings they have built up after cutting back on travel, entertainm­ent and dining out over the past year. Millions of consumers have begun spending their extra cash on restaurant meals, airline tickets, road trips, and new cars and homes.

Most economists expect job growth to strengthen as more vaccinatio­ns are administer­ed and trillions in government aid spreads through the economy. Even if another uptick in covid-19 cases were to occur, analysts don’t expect most states and cities to reimpose tough business restrictio­ns. From month to month, though, the gains in the job market could prove choppy, as Friday’s jobs report suggested.

JOBS VARIED BY SECTOR

Transporta­tion and warehousin­g, which had hired rapidly in the past year amid a burst of e-commerce, cut 74,000 jobs. Temporary workers, who are often added when companies are unsure of the future, dropped by more than 111,000.

By contrast, restaurant­s, hotels and entertainm­ent venues — businesses that have complained the loudest about a shortage of workers — added 331,000 jobs in April, even more than their 206,000 increase in March.

But other industries that are also facing worker shortages cut back. Constructi­on companies added no jobs in April after having added 97,000 in March. Manufactur­ing lost 18,000 positions after hiring 54,000 the previous month.

As Americans release pent-up demand for entertainm­ent, business is soaring at amusement parks and other venues. On Tuesday, at the Great Wolf Lodge in Williamsbu­rg, Va., customers for the indoor water park and hotel were plentiful. Yet job-seekers for the company’s hiring open house were relatively scarce.

Nick Licastro, general manager for the lodge, said customer demand is running higher than the company can accommodat­e because it’s still limited to roughly 50% of its capacity by state rules. He said he expects business to return to pre-pandemic levels by summer if capacity restraints are lifted.

Licastro would like to hire about 100 workers — lifeguards, kitchen workers, hotel cleaners and others — to meet that demand. For now, the company has about 400 people on staff, most of whom it recalled after it was allowed to reopen in September. The company had about two dozen interviews scheduled for Tuesday, along with some walk-ins.

“We’d love to have more, if you know of any,” Licastro said. “It’s becoming an increasing­ly more competitiv­e market.”

 ?? (AP/Patrick Semansky) ?? Restarting the U.S. economy after the pandemic and its supply bottleneck­s is going to be “a bumpy process,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday.
(AP/Patrick Semansky) Restarting the U.S. economy after the pandemic and its supply bottleneck­s is going to be “a bumpy process,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday.

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