‘Sudden Black Hole’ for the Economy With Millions More Unemployed

Jobless claims now exceed 16 million as shutdowns from the coronavirus pandemic widen and problems with getting benefits persist.

With the coronavirus outbreak shutting businesses in every state, fresh evidence of the economic devastation was delivered Thursday as a government report showed that 6.6 million more workers had lost their jobs.

The Labor Department announcement, reflecting last week’s filings for unemployment benefits, meant that more than 16 million people had been put out of work in just three weeks, an unheard-of figure. Two years of job losses from the last recession produced barely half that total.

Many economists say the actual job losses so far are almost certainly greater, and there is wide agreement that they will continue to mount.

It’s as if “the economy as a whole has fallen into some sudden black hole,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. financial economist at Oxford Economics.

The Federal Reserve redoubled its effort to break that fall on Thursday with an ambitious plan to help companies and state and local governments gain access to funding. The Fed said its new and expanded programs could pump $2.3 trillion into the economy.

The central bank’s intervention was welcomed in financial markets, with the S&P 500 stock index ending the day with a gain of almost 1.5 percent.

But additional relief from Washington hit a Senate roadblock over what to include. Republicans have proposed $250 billion to replenish a loan program for distressed small businesses, while Democrats want $250 billion more to assist hospitals and state and local governments dealing with coronavirus-related expenses and revenue shortfalls.

What it will take to stabilize the economy is no more than guesswork, many analysts say. The purposeful and sudden halt in economic activity has no precedent, and no one knows when the restrictions on movement and commerce enacted to slow infections will be lifted.

6

million

16,780,000

5

Claims were filed in

the last three weeks

4

Initial jobless claims, per week

Seasonally adjusted

3

2

RECESSION

1

0

’04

’08

’09

’12

’16

’20

6

million

16,780,000

5

Claims were filed in

the last three weeks

4

3

RECESSION

2

Initial jobless claims, per week

Seasonally adjusted

1

0

’04

’08

’09

’12

’16

’20

16,780,000

6

million

Claims were filed in

the last three weeks

5

Initial jobless claims, per week

4

Seasonally adjusted

3

RECESSION

2

1

0

’04

’08

’09

’12

’16

’20

16,780,000

6

million

Claims were filed in

the last three weeks

5

4

3

RECESSION

2

Initial jobless claims, per week

Seasonally adjusted

1

0

’04

’08

’09

’12

’16

’20

Source: Department of Labor

By The New York Times

Several economists expect that by the end of the month, more than 20 million people will have been thrown out of work, pushing the unemployment rate toward 15 percent. In February, it was 3.5 percent, a result of 113 straight months of job growth.

The country’s gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the goods and services produced, could fall this quarter at an annual rate of as much as 35 percent from the preceding three months.

It is clear that this quarter will be “really terrible,” Ms. Bostjancic said. “We just don’t know the degree of terribleness.”

Despite feverish efforts in many states to expand staffing and upgrade technological capacity, unemployment offices have been vastly overpowered by demand. Applicants in several of the hardest-hit places, like New York and California, say they’ve made dozens of attempts — even hundreds — to get through online or by telephone. Some have still not succeeded.

Kendall Clark, an information technology recruiter in The Woodlands, Texas, said she had not managed to file despite more than 1,200 attempts, some at 1 a.m.

“I’m stuck, I’m frustrated, and I don’t really know where to go from here,” said Ms. Clark, who lives with her husband and two sons. “The plan is that we don’t pay some bills, but pay the mortgage so we don’t lose the house.”

Image
Kendall Clark has struggled to file for unemployment despite hundreds of attempts.Credit...Brandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times

Although each state sets the level and duration of its unemployment benefits, the federal $2 trillion emergency relief act passed two weeks ago expanded the program, widening eligibility and extending the period for compensation.

Those payments will be crucial in helping families survive the crisis, said Robert G. Valletta, senior vice president and associate director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

“It’s exactly the kind of bridge that we need to make sure people are able to maintain some level of household stability and come out of this without complete devastation,” he said. Once the epidemic recedes, the hope is that many laid-off workers will be rehired.

Even with a check from the government, though, covering bills can be a struggle.

Lyn Douglass and her husband, William Hickey, who live in the Los Angeles neighborhood of North Hollywood, are feeling the pinch, even though California has relatively generous unemployment benefits.

Mr. Hickey, 40, who worked at an events planning company for the past 14 years, was furloughed at the end of March and has no idea when he will get his job back. “I’m in a bit of a limbo state right now,” he said. “It’s terrifying.”

Ms. Douglass, a casting producer and a wedding videographer, said her work started to dry up a few weeks earlier. Now nearly all of her spring gigs have been canceled.

They filed unemployment claims and have started receiving benefits, but said they had lost 75 percent of their average income. The state’s benefits can replace 60 to 70 percent of wages up to a maximum of $450, but, Ms. Douglass said, “it’s gotten to be so financially dire, I’m going to have to sell some of my cameras to pay rent.”

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Lyn Douglass and William Hickey said that even with unemployment benefits they had lost 75 percent of their average income.Credit...Patrick T. Fallon for The New York Times

The couple spent a day calling creditors asking for more lenient payment terms on their Target card, their cable bill and other expenses. Most were understanding, they said.

“We have to prioritize what we’re purchasing — our cat food, our own food,” Ms. Douglass, 40, said. “We would usually rent a movie on Vudu, but now that’s out the window. Every dime is important to us.”

More than 925,000 new claims were filed in California alone last week. New York, Michigan, Florida, Georgia and Texas also saw big jumps in the number of new applicants. Although the national figures are seasonally adjusted, the state totals are not.

Getting money immediately into the hands of people who need it not only helps households buy groceries and pay rent during an acute crisis but also aids in the economy’s recovery.

“That helps to keep establishments open and running,” said Cathy Barrera, founding economist of the Prysm Group, and that could help prevent a short, sharp shock from turning into a prolonged slump after the epidemic ebbs.

The government’s relief package — which includes low-interest loans and grants for businesses, ready cash for individuals and expanded unemployment insurance — was enacted with that goal in mind.

Individuals should soon start receiving $1,200 emergency assistance checks. But Ms. Barrera worries that the expanded unemployment benefits won’t come through rapidly enough.

“I am concerned that the way this relief has been channeled through the existing unemployment insurance system — which can be difficult to access in an expedient way — can be causing us some problems,” she said.

Several states, including Connecticut, have warned that checks could be delayed up to five weeks because of the deluge. Others, like Florida, start benefits only when a claim is filed, regardless of the difficulties that applicants have had.

The new Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, for example, allows workers who don’t normally qualify — like independent contractors, part-timers and recent hires — to receive weekly benefits.

But like many others, Kandy Thomas, a self-employed dog trainer and animal caregiver in Salt Lake City, found barriers to collecting. The state website she checked said that “these benefits are not yet available as we are awaiting further guidance from the U.S. Department of Labor on the process for implementing these programs.”

Image
“This is the first time in 20 years I’ve had to worry,” said Kandy Thomas, who runs a dog-training business.Credit...Lindsay D'Addato for The New York Times

“There’s nothing for someone like me,” Ms. Thomas said. “As soon as you say you’re self-employed, you’re done.”

Ms. Thomas, who lives with three rescue dogs and has five chickens, said she usually earned $5,000 to $6,000 a month and sometimes as much as $10,000. She was booked solid during the spring and had to turn some clients away, she said, but over three days last month, everyone canceled. She has no money coming in now.

“This is the first time in 20 years I’ve had to worry,” she said. “I was like, oh, my God, my whole world’s falling apart. The first week, I was a mess. I was so depressed, so sickened. But you can’t worry about what you can’t control. I’m strong, and I always have been.”

Normally, most states offer roughly half of a worker’s previous wage for up to 26 weeks of unemployment, but the benefits can vary widely among states.

At the end of 2019, the average weekly benefit in Mississippi was $215, and just 9 percent of unemployed workers there were eligible to receive any payments, according to a Brookings Institution analysis. In Massachusetts, the average weekly benefit was $550, and 57 percent of jobless workers qualified.

In Florida and North Carolina, benefits last for only 12 weeks.

Under the new federal law, jobless workers will get an additional $600 each week through July. They will also be able to receive benefits for an additional 13 weeks.

Many states have yet to send out the $600 supplement. New York started issuing the additional money this week. The Texas Workforce Commission is working to start the payments by Sunday, a spokesman said. Other states estimate longer delays.

In Utah, Ms. Thomas said she was not counting on receiving any jobless benefits, but plans to use the $1,200 stimulus check — when she receives it — to help cover some bills, including her business and health insurance.

“Thank God for my chickens,” she said. “They’ve been giving me eggs when I can’t find any in the store.”

Patricia Cohen covers the national economy. Since joining The Times in 1997, she has also written about theater, books and ideas. She is the author of “In Our Prime: The Fascinating History and Promising Future of Middle Age.” More about Patricia Cohen

Tiffany Hsu is a media reporter for the business desk, focusing on advertising and marketing. Previously, she covered breaking business news. Before joining The Times, she wrote about the California economy for The Los Angeles Times. More about Tiffany Hsu

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: ‘It’s Terrifying’: Millions More Out Of Work. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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