April marked the first time in the pandemic that Oregonians with permanent job losses outnumbered those experiencing temporary layoffs, according to new data from the Oregon Employment Department.
The figures reflect how the dynamics of unemployment have changed in the state as the pandemic grinds on.
鈥淏ack in the height of the pandemic, last April, nine out of 10 layoffs were temporary,鈥 said state employment economist Gail Krumenauer, 鈥渨hich makes sense, because that was in the initial widespread shutdowns for public health and safety.鈥
One year later, a smaller percentage of people are waiting to be recalled after temporary shutdowns. More people have lost their jobs for good.
The new finding was included in April鈥檚 unemployment report, which showed the state鈥檚 jobless rate remained parked at 6.0% last month. That鈥檚 a far cry from April 2020, when unemployment soared past 13%.
But after several months of larger gains, the state added only 2,200 jobs last month 鈥 mainly in government and leisure and hospitality businesses such as restaurants and bars.
Meanwhile, the ranks of the long-term unemployed continued to increase.
Last month, long-term unemployment reached its highest point in nine years, Krumenauer said, with roughly 71,000 Oregonians out of work for six months or longer.
The last time long-term unemployment was that bad in Oregon was at the end of 2011, during the slow recovery from the Great Recession.
A jump in long-term unemployment is often a grim benchmark. It鈥檚 hard on people who are out of work. It can also be more difficult for people who have been out of work a long time to get new jobs.
Krumenauer hopes the state鈥檚 recovery from the coronavirus recession will be fast enough to avoid that outcome.
鈥淐oming out of the Great Recession, it took us six years to get back down below long-run average unemployment. Coming out of the pandemic, that has happened in less than a year,鈥 she said.
A tighter labor market, she said, could potentially provide more opportunities to people experiencing long-term unemployment.
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