America’s low labor participation rate has become a problem for the U.S. economy, experts are warning.
A large number of American workers have failed to return to work since the Covid pandemic.
Economists are saying that an unprecedented drop in labor participation across the country has become widely noticeable.
Health concerns, harmful reactions to the Covid vaccines, lockdowns, and stimulus payments pushed tens of millions of Americans who were still in their prime working years out of their jobs.
Three years later, many of those who quit working have yet to return to work, something that has alarmed experts.
A jobs report from the Department of Labor showed that U.S. unemployment levels fell to 3.4 percent in January.
The figure marks the lowest level in more than 50 years.
“We have an aging population, a decline in labor force participation, an increase in gig economy jobs,” Riley Giauque, an investment adviser, said in a tweet.
“And… the pandemic caused many to exit the labor force altogether, which has artificially lowered the unemployment rate.”
Although some economists see the low unemployment rate as a good sign, others were not celebrating the latest figures and fear that there is an approaching social and economic crisis.
“THIS is the employment number that should concern Americans: our abysmal labor participation rate,” Dr. Samuel Gregg, a distinguished fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research, posted on Twitter on February 9.
“Some Americans have stopped looking OR decided that they don’t want to work OR cobbled together enough forms of welfare rather than work.
“A social and economic disaster . . .”
Rachel Greszler, a senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation and a former senior economist at the Joint Economic Committee of Congress for seven years, spoke to Fox Business about the problem.
Greszler said that particular groups such as parents and low-income workers were disproportionately affected at the beginning of the pandemic, but now it has spread to other demographics.
She cited recent data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), that the virus was not the only reason why many older workers left the workforce.
American workers with children at home have now returned to work at the same pace back before the pandemic in March 2020.
However, employment dropped 2.7 percent for those without kids.
Greszler also told Fox Business that people 20 to 24-year-old age bracket saw the greatest decline in employment and there has been a surge in young adults living in their parent’s homes.
Meanwhile, able-bodied men in that age group, about 7 million of them, have left the workforce altogether.
Last October, Fox Business host, Mike Rowe, called that recent development “chilling.”
“I do think with regard to that workforce participation rate, that to me is the most chilling metric of all,” said Rowe.
“It’s more chilling than the latest report card because it’s an indication of what’s to come.
“Seven million able-bodied men between the ages of 25 and 54 are not only not working.
“They are affirmatively not looking for work. They’ve punched out. They’re done.
“The vast majority of them spend over 2,000 hours a year on screens.”
“Today you have 11 million open jobs,” he explained.
“You have 7 million able-bodied men sitting it out.
“So what’s really happening in the country now that scares me right to my core fundamentally is that we’ve never had so much unrealized opportunity and so little enthusiasm for it.”
However, Greszler noted that the labor participation rate has been declining for the past two decades, well before the pandemic, according to over 70 years of data from the BLS.
Participation in the workforce peaked around 2000.
She said that for men aged 20 to 24, employment has dropped 10.5 percent since the turn of the century.
She told Fox Business that extended government benefits over the last 20 years have encouraged young and fit workers to stay at home.
“I think about the future of my kids. I’m an economist, so I want them to have the full information and make an informed decision,” said Greszler.
“But if you’re making a smart financial decision: The difference between not working or working like 10 hours a week at a low-age job and just collecting a ton of welfare benefits, versus a typical blue-collar or middle-class job is not much at all, she said, asking, ‘why bother?’”
On the other hand, workers between 55 and 64 have returned to work at the same rate as they were before the pandemic.
This is a reversal of the trend of older workers deciding to retire early following the pandemic.
Greszler pointed to a January report from the Sauder School of Business at the University of British Columbia, called “The Great Resignation Was Caused by the COVID-19 Housing Boom.”
The study said that rising home prices were the main factor in the decline in workers 65 and older participating in the economy.
“The troubling part is, what does this mean for the future of the workforce?” she asked.
“When you talk about people who are kind of displaced from the education or worker experience routes that they otherwise would have gone into, and instead just kind of been idle at home—living with mom and dad or maybe in a group setting and just able to live off welfare benefits—they’re not getting the experience and the education they need,” Greszler told Fox Business.
“So I think it’s really troubling going forward that we could see this have a more longer-term impact,” she warned.