Houston Chronicle

Job growth for July loses momentum

Longer crisis goes on, the greater the toll on small businesses

- By Nelson D. Schwartz and Gillian Friedman

The U.S. economy slowed in July as the pace of hiring eased from the robust rate of the previous two months, a victim of waning momentum and the resurgence of the coronaviru­s in many parts of the country.

Employers added 1.8 million jobs, well below the 4.8 million jump in payrolls in June, the Labor Department reported, after virus-related restrictio­ns caused some businesses to close for a second time. The unemployme­nt rate fell to 10.2 percent.

Hours after the report underscore­d the slowing recovery, talks between administra­tion officials and congressio­nal Democrats on how to pump more aid into the economy were on the verge of collapse. White House advisers said they would recommend that President Donald Trump bypass Congress and act on his own — though his power to do so was unclear.

Prominent among the unresolved issues were a revival of the government’s $600-a-week supplement to unemployme­nt aid, a lifeline for millions of jobless workers until it expired at the end of last month, and a possible extension of an eviction moratorium covering many of the nation’s tenants.

Even with July’s gains, fewer than half of the 22 million jobs lost in March and April have been restored. And economists warn that the rest of the lost ground will be a challenge to regain.

“The easy hiring that was done in May and June has been exhausted,” said Michelle Meyer, head of U.S. economics at Bank of America. “With many companies not running at full capacity, it becomes harder to get that incrementa­l worker back in.”

Overall, the job market reflects the crosswinds buffeting the economy less than 100 days before the presidenti­al election. Retailers continue to file for bankruptcy, while airlines and hotels operate at a small fraction of capacity. Some companies are calling back laid-off employees, even as other employers continue to shed workers.

The longer the crisis goes on, the greater the toll for businesses, especially smaller ones.

“We’re going to start to see a lot of small businesses fall by the wayside, a lot of people who are unemployed become chronicall­y unemployed,” said Kenneth S. Rogoff, a Harvard University economist who has written extensivel­y on financial and economic crises. “We’re in very, very dangerous territory.”

And underscori­ng the preva

lence of what economists term “churn” in the labor market, some jobless Americans have secured work only to find themselves out of a job for a second time.

After coronaviru­s-related lockdowns forced dining establishm­ents in New York to close in March, Hannah Lane, 24, was laid off as a server in a popular Gramercy Park restaurant where she made about $60,000 a year.

She applied for unemployme­nt benefits, but had to wait two months for the payments to begin. Then, in early July, as New York allowed restaurant­s to open for indoor dining, Lane was recalled to her job.

“I went back into work, clocked in, went back on payroll, the whole nine yards,” she said.

She had spent just one day there when Gov. Andrew Cuomo reversed course and prohibited dining inside restaurant­s. Lane was laid off again, and found herself back on unemployme­nt and looking for work.

The leisure and hospitalit­y industry was hit hard in the downturn and faces new restrictio­ns on bars and indoor dining in states like California, Florida and Texas.

Last month, it added 592,000 jobs, or one-third of the net gain for the economy overall.

July’s job growth in the industry followed a jump of 3.4 million in May and June, seasonally adjusted, but employment in the field is still 4.3 million below where it was in February.

The retail industry, another hard-hit sector that has seen numerous bankruptci­es in recent months, added 258,000 jobs last month.

The seasonally adjusted unemployme­nt rate for Black adults was 14.6 percent in July, down slightly from 15.4 percent percent the month before and a little more than 2 percentage points from its peak in May — but still more than double its 5.8 percent rate in February.

Joblessnes­s for white workers eased to 9.2 percent in July. While that rate is up sharply from 3.1 percent in February, it has fallen about 5 percentage points from its April peak.

Unemployme­nt among other minority groups also remains elevated. The rate for Hispanic workers was at 12.9 percent, up from 4.4 percent before the crisis. Asian workers — who before the downturn had the lowest jobless rate of any demographi­c group — posted a 12 percent unemployme­nt rate in July.

Policymake­rs have noted the differing impact. “The rise in joblessnes­s has been especially severe for lower-wage workers, for women, and for African Americans and Hispanics,” Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, said at a news conference in late July. “This reversal of economic fortune has upended many lives and created great uncertaint­y about the future.”

Even as some employers recall laid-off workers, others are concluding they can no longer stay in business. That has caused financial and emotional damage for owners and employees alike.

For Jackie Anscher, the closing of the boutique fitness studio where she taught spinning classes in Long Beach, New York, until March meant more than the loss of a job. It was the end of something she was passionate about and halted the deep connection­s she had built with clients.

“I miss it like I’ve lost a limb,” she said. “What started as an exercise class encompasse­d so much more. I’m a therapist on a bike. I’m sure a lot of people can relate to the emotional loss.”

Anscher, who taught eight to 10 classes a week, said her financial situation was stable because of her husband’s job. But there is nowhere to go to keep teaching as gyms remain closed.

“This was a forced retirement,” Anscher, 58, said. “I’m not ready to retire. I’m waiting to see how I can pick up the pieces.”

Stephanie Horowitz, the studio’s owner, didn’t think the moratorium on classes would be the end of her business, Ocean Ride, when it was imposed in March. She offered spinning classes over the internet, she said, “but it never took off the way we needed it to.”

By mid-July, the financial drain was too great, and she decided to shut down after seven years. Some of the bikes have been sold, and Horowitz has been cleaning out the space on the South Shore of Long Island, a few blocks from the Atlantic. Seven part-time workers, including Anscher, have lost their jobs.

“We were a staple in the community, and we had a good run,” Horowitz, 40, said. “It’s emotional.”

 ?? Photos by Christophe­r Smith / New York Times ?? A barista works Wednesday in Kansas City, Mo., at a coffee shop that had laid off much of its staff early in the pandemic.
Photos by Christophe­r Smith / New York Times A barista works Wednesday in Kansas City, Mo., at a coffee shop that had laid off much of its staff early in the pandemic.
 ??  ?? A sign advertises job openings at American Freight in Independen­ce, Mo., on Wednesday.
A sign advertises job openings at American Freight in Independen­ce, Mo., on Wednesday.

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