Trump-Voting Areas Recouping Pandemic Job Losses Faster Than Biden-Voting Areas, Study Shows

Ares of the United States that had a higher number of votes for President Donald Trump over Joe Biden in the 2020 election have recouped more jobs lost during the pandemic that Biden-voting parts of the country, a new study has found.

Trump voting counties across the U.S. quickly recouped all of their job losses, according to an analysis by the Economic Innovation Group.

The analysis is based on local employment data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics through the first quarter of 2022.

It found that through the first quarter of this year, counties that supported Trump had almost fully regained all the jobs they lost when the COVID-19 pandemic led to a downturn at the start of 2020.

Specifically, it found that by the end of Q1 2022, Trump-supporting counties were just 124,000 jobs short of where they stood prior to the pandemic in Q1 2020.

The recovery marks an employment shortfall of about 0.3 percent.

In contrast, counties in which a majority of the residents voted for Biden began the year with an employment shortfall of 1.7 million jobs.

The figure equates to a 1.8 percent shortfall of total pre-pandemic employment, according to the analysis.

Analysts noted that Biden counties lost nearly four times as many jobs in the first year of the pandemic than cities in Trump counties.

Furthermore, analysts noted that Biden-voting states will likely only recover the jobs they lost to the pandemic in late 2022.

Meanwhile, states that Trump won already surpassed pre-pandemic employment levels back in January this year.

Analysts said that Trump counties have made greater progress because they were “predisposed to be more resilient in the face of this particular shock—because of the very different economic and social natures of the competing political geographies,” while Biden-supporting areas had suffered from the continued weak recovery of business districts, particularly in light of an uptick in remote work.

Those areas include nearly all the country’s key business districts that simply “disappeared with the pandemic,” analysts said.

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The report also showed that so-called purple states, those where Democrats and Republicans have similar levels of support among voters and have an equal shot at winning, recovered all the jobs lost to the pandemic by September 2021.

However, Wisconsin is the only one of the six still lagging behind, according to the analysis.

Red states followed six months later, in February 2022, according to the analysis.

Elsewhere, analysts found that population growth has accelerated modestly in Trump counties.

Yet, they noted that inflation is higher in both Trump-supporting counties and purple parts of the country, whereas Biden-supporting areas “remain modestly more insulated from inflation’s bite.”

According to analysts, annual inflation in purple states averaged 9.1 percent in August 2022, well above the 8.0 percent registered in the average blue state and 8.4 percent in the average red state.

Those estimates are based on division-level inflation data.

“Trump-leaning areas are doing better on certain labor market indicators because the winds of economic and social change that blew in with the pandemic favored them—with economies more oriented towards goods-production, more affordable housing markets, and less intensely urban lifestyles,” Economic Innovation Group analysts wrote.

They noted that Biden-supporting areas had enjoyed a decade of cashing in on “powerful forces of agglomeration” during the 2010s, which “concentrated high-value economic activity in very populous areas.”

However, the shift to remote work, technological change, migration, and household preferences “now push in the other direction.”

“As a result, Democrats’ political heartland faces greater headwinds emerging from the pandemic than that of Republicans,” analysts added.

“Of course, the extremely dense base of human capital in blue areas endows them with considerable resilience, too, and belatedly urban cores may be reheating. Purple areas, for their part, have some of the highest in-migration rates in the country–hubs of economic growth and opportunity that Americans continue to seek out.”

The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits increased moderately earlier this month, Department of Labor data published on Sept. 22 showed.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits, which saw declines in August after soaring earlier in the summer, rose 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 213,000 for the week ended September 17.

Data for the prior week was revised to show 5,000 fewer applications than previously reported; from 213,000 to 208,000.

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By Nick R. Hamilton

Nick has a broad background in journalism, business, and technology. He covers news on cryptocurrency, traditional assets, and economic markets.

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