speeches · August 23, 2020
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2020
I’m hesitant to make a strong prediction about which jobs will disappear or which will grow
once we’ve weathered the pandemic. After all, in the wake of 9/11, people thought we’d
never travel again, and then we did. But it seems quite possible that — even with a vaccine
or treatment — we will be in a world where highly exposed personal service sectors, such
as restaurants, retail, and entertainment, continue to operate at reduced capacity, which
would mean fewer jobs in those sectors. That leads me to ask, who works in these jobs, and
what happens to them if some percentage of them don’t return?
Workers in these highly exposed jobs are generally hourly employees, working part time,
and they tend to be younger than the workforce as a whole — just over 1 in 4 are between
the ages of 16 and 24, twice their representation in the workforce overall. These jobs o�er
low wages and few, if any, bene�ts. Still, some younger workers take these jobs (43 percent
of workers between the ages of 16-24 work in retail trade and leisure and hospitality alone)
because they’re a great way to get a start in the workforce and gain experience and soft
skills. (I got my start in my uncle’s bagel shop.) Others appreciate the �exibility that allows
them to work while they’re in school. And for workers who lack the resources or academic
preparation for postsecondary education, these jobs might be the only path that’s open to
them. Another attraction is that you can move nearly anywhere and count on �nding a job
in a restaurant or retail.
Those in these customer-facing service roles have been disproportionately a�ected by the
pandemic, and younger workers in them have fared worse than older workers. Between
February and April, nearly 50 percent of “highly exposed workers” aged 16-24 lost their
jobs, compared to 36 percent of highly exposed workers aged 25-54. While the
unemployment rate for the population as a whole has increased to 10.2 percent (net
negative 6.7 points since February), the unemployment rate for workers aged 16-24 is still
10.9 points up from where it was in February, currently sitting at 18.6 percent.
What happens to a server or cashier who has lost his or her job? Chances are, they can’t get
a job at another restaurant or store because so many other highly exposed, high contact
jobs are going away at the same time. So where can young people who have yet to enter
the labor market go to get a foothold in the labor market and start building experience and
savings? Maybe we’ll see new entry-level jobs delivering groceries or meals, but I’m doubtful
these segments will grow quickly enough to immediately replace the millions of jobs that
have been lost. In the interim, young people will face substantial uncertainty and will be set
back. And if young people have a harder time starting out, what does this mean for them
decades from now? We know that early circumstances matter: Research suggests that well
over half of income and wealth inequality is determined by a person’s circumstance at age
23. And research has shown that graduating from college during a recession has persistent
negative e�ects on people’s earnings and health.
What can be done? The most powerful lever would be to retain as many of these jobs as
possible. Temporary relief has helped. But looking ahead, we need to ensure that
incentives for locating and pursuing new operating models are in place. We can count on
continued innovation of the kinds we’ve already seen, like constructing more outdoor
seating at restaurants, pivoting to takeout and delivery, turning retail stores into e-
commerce ful�llment centers, investing in online platforms that are helping small
businesses get their products to customers, and creating virtual options for traditionally in-
person personal services like live �tness classes. Each of these innovations has created
demand for employees to perform new and di�erent tasks — and jobs. The economy will
need even more.
The economy also needs smart, �exible and concerted training e�orts to prepare people,
particularly displaced workers and young people with less education, for other in-demand
�elds. Policy can help by allowing students to use Pell Grants for certi�cate programs and
giving community colleges the funding they need to teach online. For this group of younger
workers, in particular, who are digital natives, the innovations in online learning could pay
real dividends.
This type of retraining won’t be e�ective without businesses investing as well. New jobs are
being created in this pandemic. And a number of sectors, such as trucking, nursing,
technology, and skilled trades, continue to struggle to �nd quali�ed employees. We are
starting to see innovative approaches in recruitment as employers look to this pool for
talent. But the economy will require even more aggressive and targeted recruiting e�orts,
such as community college partnerships and generalist training programs, to redeploy
these workers into new careers.
The challenge seems daunting, but we have done this before when a large pool of workers
needed education and training. In the 1800s, we created a system of land-grant universities
to provide farmers and other rural residents with access to higher education. When World
War II veterans returned home, we created a pathway for them to earn college and
technical degrees. These e�orts weren’t perfect, particularly with respect to their treatment
of minority groups, but they demonstrate the potential upside. In the aftermath of this
crisis, we have the opportunity to do so again.
“Highly exposed jobs” refers to workers in “highly exposed census industries,” a classi�cation
of sectors by their exposure to employment losses. For a complete look at the industries
included in the “highly exposed” group as well as further data on workers in this category,
see Dey et al. (2020).
Employment and Labor Markets Workforce Development
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2020, August 23). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200824_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20200824_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200824_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}