Thread: Today’s #JobsReport shows a labor market that, despite improvements since April, remains devastated by the #COVID19 recession. #JobsDay
Here are six signs showing why.
cbpp.org/blog/6-signs-t…
1. The jobs “hole” that opened in March & April remains huge.
Private payroll employment remains 10.7 million jobs below its February level & state & local government payrolls remain 1.1 million jobs below.
cbpp.org/blog/6-signs-t…
2. State & local job losses, many in education, remain large due to budget cuts.
In April alone, more state & local workers were furloughed or laid off than in the Great Recession of a decade ago & its aftermath. #JobsDay
3. Most job losses have occurred in industries that pay low average wages, where a disproportionate number of workers are people of color.
The shares of Black, Latino, & immigrant workers in the lowest-wage group of industries exceed their shares of the overall population.
4. Workers without a bachelor’s degree have suffered the largest job losses. #JobsDay
5. Unemployment was higher for Black & Hispanic workers than for white workers before the crisis hit & has risen more for them since then.
These patterns have endured in recessions & recoveries & are rooted in this nation’s history of structural racism.
cbpp.org/blog/6-signs-t…
6. The crisis also widened racial & ethnic disparities in the share of prime-age workers with a job.
cbpp.org/blog/6-signs-t…
With #COVID19 still not under control & labor market conditions still poor, we need a robust, bipartisan #COIVDRelief bill now. #JobsDay
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