Eakinomics: COVID-19 and
Communities of Color
I testified yesterday before the House Ways and Means Committee on the topic of
“The Disproportionate Impact of Covid-19 on Communities of Color.” (Historical
footnote: This was the very first virtual hearing – held via WebEx – in the
House of Representatives.) The full testimony is here, but the highlights are pretty
simple.
The COVID-19 pandemic is a tragedy – over 100,000 Americans have
perished – and an economic calamity of enormous proportions. In the past two
months, we have seen the largest one-month drop in consumer confidence,
one-month drop in retail sales, one-month decline in employment (20 million
jobs, 10 times larger than the previous high), one-month rise in unemployment
(over 10 percentage points, 10 times larger than the previous high), and
one-week rise in new claims for unemployment insurance (over 6 million, 10
times larger than the previous high). The Congressional Budget Office projects
that gross domestic product (roughly our national income) will fall by 11
percent in the second quarter – just under the decline seen during
the entire year of 1932, which was the worst of the Great
Depression. Bad stuff.
Both the health and economic bad news have been unequally felt. Racial
minorities have experienced disproportionately high rates of infection and
death. The unemployment rate jumped 2.9 percentage points more for Hispanics
than Whites, and 0.3 percentage points more for Asians. Of note, the
unemployment rate for Blacks rose by 0.7 percentage points less; this seems to
be explained by the fact that Blacks are disproportionately working in
essential businesses and occupations.
The obvious way to unwind these rising measures of health and economic
inequality is an aggressive strategy to safely ramp up economic growth and
return as quickly as possible to the labor market conditions that prevailed
only 3 months ago. That’s the easy part.
The hard part is to recognize that there were already significant health and economic
disparities to begin with. As my testimony puts it, “Those most at
risk have underlying health conditions, jobs that are either essential and
present workers with a greater risk of exposure or non-essential but unable to
be performed from home, and live in highly dense areas where it is more
difficult to isolate. In the United States, such individuals are more likely to
be people of color than White. School closures will also disproportionately
impact lower-income children, who are more often from racial and ethnic
minority families. The pandemic is not creating these disparities but rather
highlighting and exacerbating existing disparities.”
Addressing the pandemic is the priority of the moment. But addressing those
existing disparities should not be forgotten.
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