speeches · May 25, 2021
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2021
The “she-cession” has been a dominant narrative of this pandemic. Unlike the Great
Recession, which primarily a�ected male-dominated sectors such as manufacturing and
construction, the COVID-19 recession disrupted the service sector, which employs more
women. From February to April 2020, women’s employment fell 17.9 percent, compared to
14.3 percent for men. More than 12 million jobs held by women went away, and school
closures and child care constraints further limited workforce participation for primary
caregivers who are disproportionately women. Employment of women of all ages, races
and educational levels fell more than employment of men with similar backgrounds.
But, over the last several months, that overall gap has largely closed. As of the
May 2021 jobs report, employment for women and men was down 5 percent and 4.6
percent, respectively — a di�erence of just a few tenths of a percentage point. But it’s
important to note that not all women have recovered equally. And a new dichotomy has
surfaced by age.
To be clear, the employment recovery for women still trails the recovery of
similarly educated men. For women with a high school diploma or less, employment is still
down more than 9 percent, compared to 5 percent for men with the same education. Black
and Hispanic women have also seen a slow recovery. Compared to February
2020, employment is still 7.4 percent lower for black women and 6.4 percent lower
for Hispanic women. But it’s down 4.1 percent for black men and 2.1 percent
for Hispanic men.
Minorities and women with lower levels of education are more likely to work in low-wage
roles with a high degree of personal contact, such as those in leisure and hospitality, that
were disrupted by the pandemic. As of 2019, 10.1 percent of women without a bachelor’s
degree worked in leisure and hospitality, compared to 8.4 percent of men without a
bachelor’s degree. Almost 30 percent of women without a bachelor’s degree were
employed in service occupations, compared to just under 16 percent of their male peers.
In contrast, college-educated women are now actually their male peers —
their employment in April 2021 was 2.1 percent higher than it was in February 2020,
compared to 0.8 percent lower for college-educated men. Part of the reason may again be
sector mix. Nearly 50 percent of women with bachelor's degrees work in education and
health care, sectors where employment has fared relatively well for college-educated
workers.
These employment di�erences by educational levels may well be driven by disparities in
circumstances. In a late 2020 study, 19 percent of adults with a high school degree had
someone in their household who had substituted remote work for in-person work, versus
62 percent of adults with a bachelor’s degree. Women not able to work remotely may well
have been more concerned about their health or less able to �nd an alternative
arrangement to support child care or remote schooling. Perhaps those concerns reduced
their ability to participate in the workforce.
Another segment where women are now outperforming men is older workers. Employment
is down 6 percent for men 55 and older, versus 5.5 percent for women the same
age, compared to February 2020.
This comes amid a surge in retirement, which accounts for nearly 50 percent of the decline
in overall labor force participation. And many of those retirements likely wouldn’t have
happened were it not for the pandemic: Excess retirements, meaning people who appear
to have retired earlier than they otherwise would have, account for more than half of this
drop.
Why did the pandemic push people to retire? There are numerous potential explanations,
including fear of exposure to the coronavirus, family responsibilities such as caring for
elderly parents or grandkids, or �rm incentives like early retirement packages. Older
workers might also have been more hesitant about the steep learning curve associated
with remote work or about the challenge of training for a new position after a layo�. And
for workers with 401(k) accounts, the robust stock market may have made retirement more
�nancially feasible.
These factors a�ect men and women equally, so they don’t explain why employment is now
recovering somewhat more strongly for women. As with educational di�erences, the
answer might be industry mix. Looking at job loss among older workers, the industries in
which older women are the most concentrated — education and health — together fared
better than the industries in which men are the most concentrated (professional and
business services, manufacturing, and wholesale and retail trade). But less visible factors
could also play a role. Older men on average are less healthy than women, and their
comorbidities could have given them higher vulnerability to COVID-19. This may have
reduced their willingness to engage in the workforce during the pandemic.
So what’s ahead? As the service sector returns to normal, it’s likely that its recovery will help
many women make up lost ground. Family responsibilities should also become less of a
barrier, as schools and child care facilities reopen. Access to remote work may become an
enabler of �exibility rather than employment.
Bringing retirees back might be more of a challenge. Historically, the likelihood of retirees
returning to the workforce has been very low. But maybe COVID-19 retirements will be
di�erent — perhaps, once wages grow and barriers such as health concerns or family
responsibilities disappear, retirees will be lured back to the labor force.
We may still see some scarring when we reach our new normal. This could take the form of
skill mismatch for lower-wage workers and technology requirements for
retirees. Research also shows that the longer someone is unemployed, the harder it is to
�nd work, as both skills and relationships weaken with time.
Growing the economy means growing the workforce, and the Richmond Fed focuses on the
evolving story of workforce engagement as we monitor progress toward maximum
employment. That in turn requires understanding employment success by demographic
segment and recognizing that the story changes over time. But one theme common to all
our analyses is that our least educated citizens face major challenges, and the returns of
investing in education are high. This pandemic has been no di�erent.
All calculations based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics via Haver and IPUMS-CPS.
The probability is 1.4 percent, according to Andreas Hornstein, Marianna Kudlyak, Fabian
Lange, and Tim Sablik, “Does the Unemployment Rate Really Overstate Labor Market
Recovery ?” Richmond Fed Economic Brief no. 14-06, June 2014.
Employment and Labor Markets Education
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2021, May 25). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210526_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20210526_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2021},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20210526_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}