/PRNewswire/ The KeyBank 2022 Financial Mobility Survey, released today, finds many Americans are reconsidering their work and financial priorities, with.
Pandemic drives Americans to pursue financial mobility and personal priorities, KeyBank survey finds vermontbiz.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vermontbiz.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Pandemic’s Disruptive Path Still Haunts the Unemployed June 28, 2021
Fallout from the pandemic is discouraging a significant number of unemployed southwestern Pennsylvanians from looking for work, even as businesses reopen and COVID cases decline, according to a recent survey.
Caring for children, dependent older adults and others was the most common reason for not looking for work that was given by unemployed workers who are not retired.
Residents of 10 southwestern Pennsylvania counties are surveyed monthly by the Allegheny Conference on Community Development and Schmidt Market Research to gauge consumer confidence, personal finance and other issues during the pandemic.
The latest survey, done in May, sheds some light on a pandemic phenomenon: Although jobs are steadily returning and the unemployment rate is shrinking, the region’s workforce is struggling to add workers to fill the hole left when the COVID pandemic forced tens of thous
In a new survey, about one-third of southwestern Pennsylvanians who have exited the labor force say they're staying home to manage childcare or other responsibilities.
Getting Vaccinated Gains Popularity February 15, 2021
Supplies are short and the roll-out of the COVID-19 vaccine is slow, but the willingness to get the shots is sharply rising across southwestern Pennsylvania, a new survey suggests. And hesitancy over getting vaccinated is fading the most among non-whites.
Some 60 percent of southwestern Pennsylvanians said they were ready to get the shot in January, according to a regional survey done by the Allegheny Conference and Schmidt Market Research.
Only 26 percent of people in the region felt that way in November, when two U.S. drug makers announced they had developed vaccines effective at preventing COVID-19 infection.