Back when the virus that would soon be known as Covid-19 was just a blip on the radar, Selco wrote an article called, It’s Not the Virus You Need to Worry About. It’s the System. And like much of what Selco writes, it was prophetic.
Here
we are, coming up on a year after the virus first began making itself apparent
and the world is dramatically different. Not only are there the inevitable
arguments about masks, lockdowns, vaccines, and hypocritical politicians using
the whole thing as a power grab, but there are very real effects on everyday
families all over the world.
In
the United States, our personal finances have taken blow after blow. Eight million more Americans than
last year are now living in poverty as millions of jobs have disappeared,
never to return. Data from the review site Yelp shows that 60% of the
businesses that shut down due to Covid have permanently closed.
People who were formerly struggling are sinking, and many of those who were
comfortably middle class are desperately trying to stay afloat.Buy
New $325.00(as of 05:25 EST - Details)
It
isn’t so much the virus that has caused our financial woes – it’s the response
to the virus. Federal, state, and local governments have deemed what businesses
are allowed to operate and how they must do so. This has resulted in the loss
of businesses themselves, loss of sales, and loss of jobs. Nearly every family
is feeling the effects to some degree. Please check
out our new frugality website for practical solutions if you
are dealing with financial issues.
Here are some of the ways
American families are suffering financially due to the response to the virus.
More
people are living paycheck to paycheck.
Back in February of this
year, a report was released that showed 40% of American workers were living
paycheck to paycheck.
Willis Towers Watson’s Global
Benefits Attitudes Survey discovered that although 58 percent of workers think
their finances are heading in the right direction, 38 percent of employees are
living paycheck to paycheck…
…Almost
one-fifth of those making more than $100,000 are living paycheck to paycheck,
and about one-third say their financial problems negatively affect their lives.
The survey polled 8,000 American workers. (source)
That
early 2020, pre-lockdown report looks like a glimpse of nostalgia from the good
old days. A more recent report has found, due to the Covid response, that now
almost two-thirds of Americans are living the paycheck to paycheck life.Buy
New $100.00(as of 05:25 EST - Details)
With
government shutdowns forcing countless businesses to close and then lay off
workers, one in four respondents now feel their income is not stable. Nearly
two in three (63%) say they’re going paycheck-to-paycheck since
March 2020. Millennials seem to
be the hardest hit, with 64 percent saying they’re living off their paychecks.
“After
the unemployment rate spiked to more than 14% in April, Americans continue to
be wary about their job security and income,” writes Highland President Jon
Berbaum in a media release. (source)
Anyone who has ever lived
through this situation knows that paycheck-to-paycheck is a delicate dance and
it only takes one small thing to go wrong to cause your house of cards to come
tumbling down.
NSF
fees, late fees, reconnection fees, extra deposits, overdraft interest, and
payday loans can all destroy the financially fragile, leaving them in a downward spiral designed to keep them trapped.
There’s a reason that broke people tend to stay broke, and it’s not because
they’re simply lazy and irresponsible. It’s because the system is set up in a
way that it earns more money by charging poor people extra.
Hardly
anyone has an emergency fund left.
Back in 2019, Bankrate
released a survey that said only 40% of Americans would be able to pay for an
emergency costing a thousand dollars out of their savings. Yet again, those
were the good old days.
A more recent survey said
that an astounding EIGHTY TWO PERCENT of Americans could no longer handle an
emergency costing $500. Zero Hedge reports:
But perhaps the most
alarming number from the entire survey: a whopping 82% of respondents said they
wouldn’t be able to cover an emergency $500 expense without borrowing money.
For
context, prior to the pandemic, surveys showed that roughly half of Americans
couldn’t afford a $500 emergency expense, which means the number of people who
say they couldn’t cover a small emergency has risen by 60%. (source)
An
emergency fund is the most important financial prep you can make.Buy
New $75.00(as of 05:25 EST - Details)
When your finances are
tight, sometimes your first impulse is to spend every dime. Many people
focus on things like paying off debts, stocking up on food and supplies, or
paying more than the minimum payments on bills.
However, that may not be your best bet. Don’t get
me wrong – paying off debt is
absolutely vital, but most experts recommend establishing an emergency
fund as the first step back to financial security. (source)
Many people report making up
the difference between their income and output with credit cards and other
forms of personal debt. Unfortunately, with our somber economic forecast,
this is just delaying the inevitable implosion of their personal finances.
People
are unable to find work.
An October jobs report showed
that millions of the positions lost back in March have not returned, and that
millions of people have now reached the classification of “long-term
unemployment.” The New York Times reported:
The Labor Department said on Friday that
2.4 million people had been out of work for 27 weeks or more, the threshold it
uses to define long-term joblessness. An even bigger surge is on the way: Nearly five million people are approaching long-term
joblessness over the next two months. The same report showed that even as
temporary layoffs were on the decline, permanent job losses were rising
sharply.
Those two problems —
rising long-term unemployment and permanent job losses — are separate but
intertwined and, together, could foreshadow a period of prolonged economic
damage and financial pain for American families.
Companies
that are limping along below capacity this far into the crisis may be
increasingly unlikely to ever recall their employees. History also suggests the
longer that people are out of work, the harder it is for them to get back into
a job. (source)
In
September and October, many large corporations made the decision to end even
more jobs.Buy New $64.25(as of 05:25 EST - Details)
Disney
announced this past week that it would lay off 28,000
U.S. employees as its theme parks struggle. Layoff notices filed
with state authorities show that hospitality and service companies across the
country, from P.F. Chang’s restaurant branches to Gap stores, are making
thousands of long-term staff reductions. Airport bookstores in Pennsylvania and
Tennessee are cutting jobs
as travel dwindles. So are wineries and
upscale sports clubs in California.
Airline
job cuts run to the tens of thousands. American Airlines started to send
furlough notices to 19,000 workers and United Airlines to 13,000 after a federal moratorium expired on
Thursday. Those are on top of reductions at other carriers, and existing
firings across the industry.
Altogether,
nearly 3.8 million people had lost their jobs permanently in September,
according to the Labor Department’s latest monthly survey, almost twice as many
as at the height of the pandemic job losses, in April. (source)
And
then, things had just begun to look up just a little bit for those in service
industries when the second round of lockdowns hit
crushing the hopes of many of those who were just beginning to get back to
work.
The
closure of schools has kept many parents from returning to work or caused
financial hardship.
It isn’t just the
unavailability of jobs that has made things difficult. The erratic 2020 school
year has also caused financial hardship and in many cases, made it impossible
for parents to return to work.
Now, I know a lot of
homeschool parents will say that people shouldn’t be using public school as a
free babysitter. But the fact remains that many families require two incomes to
survive. In my case, as a single mom, the school year allowed me to make a
living. During the summer, my children had wonderful vacations with both sets
of grandparents, mercifully, because paying for full-time childcare for both of
them would have taken almost every dime I was earning, leaving nothing for
housing, food, and other costs.
If you aren’t familiar with
current childcare costs, a person quoted in the article cited below reported
that she and her husband were spending an eye-watering $5300 per month for
their three children.
While wealthier
parents can afford to “get creative,” lower income and many single parents have
far fewer options, said Caitlyn Collins, a professor of sociology at Washington
University in St. Louis who studies women and families. Some are leaning on
family members or just doing the best they can on their own. Others have been
laid off, or have had to quit their jobs to take care of their kids…
…The
United States has been an outlier on child care long before the coronavirus,
Collins said, with price tags far exceeding those in other high-income
countries. The average cost of child care for a child under 4 is $9,589 per
year, according to New America’s Care Report — more than the average cost of in-state
college tuition. It’s much more expensive in big cities: In Washington, D.C.,
the average cost of care for an infant is
more than $24,000.
Rising
child care costs are particularly “terrifying” for U.S. families, Collins said, because child care already
accounts for an enormous part of their budget, often second only to a family’s
rent or mortgage. (source)
Financially speaking, women
are suffering the most with regard to pandemic related job losses. Hundreds of
thousands of women left the workforce in September – approximately 849,000 – in
comparison to 216,000 men. Betsey Stevenson, a professor of public policy and
economics at the University of Michigan, explained in an interview why women
have been unevenly affected.
…the
age group that had the biggest decline was thirty-five to forty-four. And it’s
not at all surprising to me, in the sense that the people who are really
struggling are people with young kids and multiple kids at home. It’s the
parents who have a four-year-old, a six-year-old, and a nine-year-old, and
those kids are at home, and they’re trying to do Zoom school. It’s really
difficult. Even if both parents had the opportunity to work from home, that’s a
really hard thing to manage. I want to make sure that I emphasize that that’s
one kind of hardship, and then there’s another kind of hardship, which is
parents or single moms who had an in-person job and no child care. (source)
I have more than one friend
who has been attempting to oversee “distance learning” while keeping her job
remotely and the stress levels are through the roof. If you can’t afford a
nanny or you don’t have a family member willing to take on the task, quite
simply, someone is going to have to stop working at a time when we can least
afford to have our incomes drop any further.
The
price of food has increased dramatically.
Food
prices increased for the fifth month in a row, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization. People around the world are seeing a 6.5% increase in
their costs of commodities such as cereals, dairy, vegetable oil, meat, and
sugar.
But
your trip to the local grocery store may look like a much greater increase than
six and a half percent. There’s a variety of reasons that prices have gone up.
Everything from supply chain shortages to production issues has caused costs to
increase. There are other Covid-related reasons that explain why you may
be experiencing sticker shock:
Shift to eating at
home: In a matter of two months, approximately $23 billion in consumer spending
away from home was redirected toward grocery stores as restaurants were forced
to close due to COVID-19, according to FMI – The Food Industry Association.
Loss of foodservice
demand: When restaurants closed, farmers and ranchers lost a key channel for
their product. With fewer buyers, it is costly or impractical to harvest,
preserve or store some food and beverage products.Increasing production and
processing costs: During COVID-19, companies have made investments and
adjustments to safeguard their products and employees. This means costs for
food production are higher. Some manufacturers have been able to innovate and
find new markets for their products, but these changes often entail added
costs.
Increasing operating
costs for grocery stores: Compared to 2019, supermarket operating costs were up
7.9% in April 2020 and 6.7% in May 2020, according to USDA Economic Research
Service.
Grocery
stores have remained open during the pandemic and have had to quickly adjust to
new regulations, safety and sanitation practices and enhanced customer
education – all requiring resources. In addition, some areas of the grocery
store, including salad bars and hot bars, have had to shut down, meaning a loss
of revenue. (source)
There are also fewer sales:
Usually,
31.4% of grocery store items are purchased on some sort of sale, but at the end
of September the share was 26%, according to market research firm Nielsen. The
biggest impact was in the household care department, where just 15% of items
were sold on promotion, half the usual amount. Heightened consumer demand and
strained supply are giving stores little reason to mark down prices, Nielsen
said. (source)
While the statistics only
note a few percentage points, the real picture looks a lot different.
Eva Rosol was stunned
during the summer when a rotisserie chicken that she could normally find on
sale for $6 suddenly set her back $15…
….Ariel Neal, owner of
Leira Knows Cocktails and Events, has been opting for more potatoes and
starches and fewer fruits and vegetables…She didn’t qualify for unemployment
benefits or small business relief, and has been subsisting on her savings and
the government’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as
food stamps.
“Before, $20 would
have gotten me at least two to three meals,” said Neal, 42, who lives
in Calumet City. “Twenty dollars doesn’t do that anymore.”
…Yvernia Wilson, who
is on a fixed income and vigilant about grocery prices, was taken aback early
in the summer when a large package of hamburger meat she’d normally pay $8.99
for was listed at $14 at the Jewel-Osco she shops at on Chicago’s South Side.
A nice-sized pot roast
for Sunday dinner was almost $20, $6 more than she’d usually spend. Even a
package of chicken wings cost $3 more…
…Wilson
restricts herself to two meats and for some items has resorted to buying
cheaper brands she doesn’t necessarily like. She bypasses the organic aisle and
sometimes forgoes fruit altogether if it isn’t on sale. (source)
Don’t look for food prices to
decrease any time soon. Our supply chain is still broken and getting worse.
Another lockdown means that store owners will be trying to get the most money
possible from customers in order to keep afloat for as long as possible. The
current price increases could be permanent.
The
eviction moratorium runs out soon.
And
finally, to make matters even more difficult for struggling families, a federal
moratorium on evictions will be running out on December 31, leaving as many as
19 million people at risk of being homeless as 2021 begins. A few states will continue eviction
bans but most will follow the federal guidelines.
It’s important to note that
people who were not paying rent based on the moratorium will now have to catch
up immediately or risk being evicted.
The
federal mandate doesn’t prohibit late fees (although some local ordinances do),
nor does it let tenants off the hook for any back rent they owe. It also
doesn’t establish any kind of financial assistance fund to help renters get
caught up, a safeguard some say is critical to preventing a massive wave of
evictions when the ban eventually lifts…be aware that you may still be held
responsible for any back rent you currently owe as well as any rent that
accrues between now and the end of your lease (if you have one), whether or not
you vacate. (source)
It’s projected that 6.7
million households could be affected by the end of the moratorium.
This
is, of course, a double-edged sword. Not all rental property owners are massive
corporate entities with teams of lawyers diligently searching for loopholes.
This has been a tremendous hit for Mom and Pop landlords, many
of whom invested in real estate to have a bit of income during their
retirement. They have been unable to evict tenants who aren’t paying their rent
but still had to maintain the property in a manner according to the local
bylaws, pay their mortgage payments, and make timely property tax payments.
2021
isn’t going to be a magical solution.
A lot of folks have just
written off 2020 as “a bad year” and seem to believe that the moment this year
is over, the curse will be lifted and we’ll all be able to go on with our lives
having survived it and gotten through it.
Unfortunately,
the changes that I’ve written about aren’t going to disappear when you put that
new calendar on the wall. Businesses that hung on through Christmas to try and
sell their remaining inventory could be closing right after the holiday,
leaving even more jobs in the dust. Lockdowns could very well become even more
stringent after the inauguration, which would keep all the same problems going.
It’s time to redouble your preparedness
efforts and really examine your situation.
This has been more than a pandemic.
It’s been a major economic catastrophe, just as predicted,
and we’re in it for the long haul.
Reprinted
with permission from The Organic Prepper.
Daisy Luther [send her mail] is a freelance writer and
editor. Her website, The Organic Prepper, offers information on
healthy prepping, including premium nutritional choices, general wellness and
non-tech solutions. You can follow Daisy on Facebook and Twitter.
Copyright © The Organic Prepper