Across the South

Deep South Job Losses due to COVID-19 likely to Far Eclipse those of the Great Recession

< Back

As unemployment claims due to COVID-19 continue to climb, the picture of the economic impact of the current crisis becomes clearer.  With the new unemployment claims released April 16, the total initial unemployment claims since March 15 in Deep South States has climbed to 1.2 million in only 4 weeks. 

Initial unemployment claims do not directly compare to total establishment employment numbers, but they can be an early indication of the direction and magnitude of changes (job losses) that will become apparent as employment numbers for March and April 2020 become available.

Table 1: Four week unemployment claims climb to more than double jobs lost due to the Great Recession in Deep South States

The magnitude of job losses due to COVID-19 are being seen throughout the United States; however, they are particularly concerning in Deep South States due to already poor economic conditions.  As of February 2020, Mississippi and Louisiana were in the top three states for unemployment.1  For 2019, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Alabama were in the bottom five among states for real GDP per capita and among the bottom six states for personal income per capita.2

Recovery from the Great Recession is informative here. After the Great Recession, some Deep South states took much longer to recover than the United States as a whole.

Nonfarm Employment by State 2007-2016

So far, federal stimulus supports have rightly focused on immediate needs; however, even those short-term recovery efforts are falling too short.  For example, the Payroll Protection Program designed to help small businesses keep their employees ran  out of funding after only two weeks, and bypassed the small businesses most in need. 

Footnotes

  1. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics https://www.bls.gov/web/laus/laumstrk.htm ↩︎
  2. U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis https://apps.bea.gov/iTable/index_regional.cfm ↩︎
< Back