Greater disparities to emerge in Texas as unemployment benefits, protections against evictions and utility shutoffs end

The financial safety net for the pandemic will vanish this summer, and there’s two very different economic realities for Texans returning to “normal.”

By Erin Douglas

Still, almost three years’ worth of jobs created in Texas have been destroyed in the recession; the state’s economy has more than 400,000 fewer jobs than before the pandemic, according to seasonally adjusted state data. The pain isn’t distributed equitably.

Texas’ unemployment rate decreased in May

Texas’ unemployment rate in May was 6.5% — a decrease from the 6.7% April jobless rate, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report released on April 16.

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Note: The May 2021 rate is preliminary. Rates are adjusted to account for seasonal patterns.
Source: Texas Workforce Commission
Credit: Anna Novak and Mandi Cai

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This story originally published by the Texas Tribune.

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