It was just a few months ago when things were looking up for Latinos. Wages were rising and unemployment had hit a
record low
As the U.S. economy marked its longest expansion on record, Latino families marked better times with milestone purchases. They
bought more homes
Now, that historic wave of Latino prosperity appears to be at risk from the coronavirus pandemic. The devastation in job losses is widespread in America, as the unemployment rate has climbed to
14.7%, the highest level since the Great Depression
Research shows that minority communities are especially vulnerable in economic downturns. During the Great Recession just over a decade ago, Latino
fortunes were harmed far more
"Migrants are not only the first ones to lose their job but will be the last ones to regain it," Manuel Orozco, a director at the Inter-American Dialogue and also a senior fellow at Harvard University's Center for International Development of the Inter-American Dialogue.
This time, the pain could be far worse.
In the span of just two months, millions of jobs have evaporated, particularly from businesses that employ a
large number of Hispanics
No one is traveling or going out to eat during the lockdowns and that has sliced 5.5 million jobs from restaurants and bars and another 839,000 from hotels in April alone.
And with offices shut down, it's led to another 259,000 job losses from building services — an industry with over 40% Hispanic employees. Workers like Anabel, from El Salvador, who has lived in Los Angeles for 12 years.
Until recently, Anabel worked two jobs — four days as a cleaner at a Beverly Hills designer store and one day a week at an office building — making $14 an hour. But the store closed a few weeks ago and she still has the the building job, but that's just four hours of work, and she makes barely enough to make ends meet.
Anabel says she didn't pay her May rent — it was the first time she was delinquent.
"All of us here in the apartment building have gone to the manager and said we can't pay," Anabel told NPR. "How can we pay without jobs?"
She says the apartment building manager has warned renters not to fall too far behind, otherwise they'll be evicted once the
statewide moratorium on evictions
Anabel says she picks up food from the local church and a food pantry. She's sewing masks to try and make some money. Anabel asked NPR to use only her first name, since she is undocumented.
Activists and economists who track the Latino community worry that Anabel's plight is widespread. Many domestic workers who are undocumented have also lost income in large numbers. This largely hidden workforce is more than 2.5 million strong, according to the
National Domestic Workers Alliance
More than half of them
identify as Hispanic or Latina
The Hispanic population has more than doubled in the past two decades. They have made enormous strides during the economic recovery of the last decade, but they are still very vulnerable. Hispanics still earn about 25% less than white workers do. And even though their poverty rate fell to
an all-time low
The hope was that the recent wins would continue, and lift the community from out of
America's underclass
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