Leisure jobs recovering faster in highly vaccinated states, report shows

New COVID cases drop nationwide following summer surge

The COVID-19 vaccine appears to be helping revive industries hit by the pandemic. Jobs in the battered leisure and hospitality industry are rebounding faster in states with higher rates of vaccination, according to a new report from Fitch Ratings. Conversely, such jobs have been much slower to return in states with low vaccination rates, the credit rating agency found.

In early August, states where more than 66% of residents were inoculated against the coronavirus saw jobs in restaurants, bars, hotels, tourism and related areas grow  an average of 12% between March 2021 and August 2021, according to the analysis. States with less than a 50% vaccination rate saw leisure and hospitality jobs grow by less than 4% during the same period.  

"For states with very low vaccination rates and high numbers of Delta [variant] cases, that affected job growth because people pulled back. That fear of infection came back in some of those states," said Olu Sonola, senior director of credit research and risk analytics at Fitch

Workers in states with low vaccination rates could also be leery of going back to public-facing jobs that make them vulnerable to infection. 

"With high vaccination rates, people are more comfortable dining out and engaging in activities where they have to mix with many other people," Sonola said.

Take Vermont, which in August had the highest vaccination rate in the U.S., with 75% of the population fully vaccinated. The state has recovered 23% of its leisure and hospitality jobs since March 2021. Wyoming, where 44% of people are fully vaccinated, lost 8% of leisure and hospitality jobs during the same time frame.

The industry has a long way to go before it regains all of the jobs lost during the pandemic. Although the sector accounted for just 11% of total U.S. employment before the health crisis, since February 2020 it represents roughly a third of all job losses. Fitch expects it will take until 2024 for businesses to fully recover.

"This is clearly an industry that is still plagued by the lack of international travel, the lack of office workers in major cities, so it's going to take some time before we see rebounds in jobs to pre-pandemic levels," Sonola said. 

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