Almost 1 in 10 US workers may have to switch jobs amid Covid-19

Women, minorities, the young and the less educated will probably be the hardest hit, according to McKinsey

Employees work as they make respiratory masks in a family-owned medical equipment factory in north Miami, Florida on February 15, 2021.  A Florida company that saw an opportunity in the N95 mask shortage when the coronavirus pandemic began last year now has 30 million unsold masks because it can't find buyers in the United States. DemeTech, a Miami-based factory, blames lower prices from China, while a wholesale buyer thinks instead that the problem is that US buyers are wary of new manufacturers. / AFP / CHANDAN KHANNA
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One out of every ten US workers – about 17 million, all told – will likely be forced to leave their jobs and take up new occupations by 2030 as Covid-19’s after-effects destroy huge swathes of low-paying positions in a labour market that was primed for disruption before the pandemic.

Women, minorities, the young and the less educated will probably be the hardest hit by what consultant firm McKinsey & Co. foresees in a new report as an unprecedented hallowing out of low-wage work in retail, hospitality and other industries.

“Covid is a big disruptor,” Susan Lund, a Washington-based partner at McKinsey Global Institute, the consultant’s research arm, said in an interview.

Covid is a big disruptor

The 17 million Americans are part of the more than 100 million people worldwide that the institute forecast will need to leave their jobs and enter new lines of work by the end of the decade. That will amount to about one in 16 workers in the eight leading economies covered by the study, which includes China, Japan, Germany and the UK, as well as the US.

In a more-than-130-page paper, the institute sees the pandemic accelerating three trends that will continue to upend the labour market in the years ahead: more remote work and working from home; increased e-commerce and a bigger “delivery economy;” and stepped-up business use of artificial intelligence and robots.

“The forces Covid-19 unleashed mean there could be a lot less demand for front line workers in food service, retail, hospitality, entertainment,” Ms Lund said.

That prompted McKinsey to lift its pre-pandemic estimate of how many workers will need to change occupations by 28 per cent, or 3.8 million, to 17 million.

The fall-out from the virus will also make it harder for many workers to make the switch. “The transition they’ll need to make will be even larger and more daunting,” Ms Lund said.

“It used to be the case that a lot of low-wage workers would go from fast food, say, into retail, then retail into hospitality,” she added.

“But now those jobs in aggregate are declining, so most of them will have to move up to a middle-skilled job, say in an office setting or manufacturing, or even higher.”

That will put a premium on the US significantly expanding the options workers have to learn new skills, Ms Lund said.

The projected hollowing out of lower-pay positions will come after decades of polarisation of the labour market which saw middle-class jobs in manufacturing and other industries decline, even as employment at the bottom and top of the income scale rose.

Another trend that could be reversed, according to Ms Lund: the increased concentration of jobs in the world’s biggest cities that was seen after the financial crisis.

Covid-19 – and the rise in remote working it’s brought about – is prompting some workers and companies to decamp to smaller, less crowded cities. While office vacancy rates have surged in places like San Francisco, they’ve declined in smaller ones like Charlotte, North Carolina, according to the report.

“Covid-19 brought massive disruption to the workforce,” the McKinsey research unit said.