Covid unemployment: A new crisis?

Published: Sept. 18, 2020, 9:50 a.m.

b'

Millions have been left without work as the coronavirus pandemic continues to devastate economies across the globe. This week, there\\u2019s been a sharp rise in the unemployment rate in Britain. This follows recent increases in other European countries. The International Labour Organisation has warned the pandemic is having a \\u201cdevastating and disproportionate\\u201d impact on youth employment. In the United States, unemployment remains above 10 percent in black and Hispanic communities. After India\\u2019s lockdown ended, many living in cities have found their old jobs gone - with former office workers, builders, drivers and factory workers left scrambling to find alternative employment. But analysts warn that the longer the crisis goes on, the more jobs simply won\\u2019t return - replaced, they say, by automation or artificial intelligence solutions that don\\u2019t get sick and don\\u2019t need to socially distance. And while this trend existed before Covid, there are signs the virus has brought forward an employment challenge many governments had hoped to address years down the line. So how can governments minimise job losses, help retrain those whose past careers have gone, and make sure younger workers are prepared for the jobs of the future - all during a time of reduced revenue from taxation and ballooning deficits? Dan Damon and a panel of experts discuss what should be done about rising unemployment in the age of Covid-19?

'