Abstract
The United States requires an enormous class of workers to keep essential services online. The Department of Homeland Security uses a sweeping definition of such essential industries from grocery stores to hospitals to warehouses, which collectively employed 90 million workers prior to the COVID-19 outbreak. A portion of these essential workers—or “frontline” workers—must physically show up to their jobs and have been especially vulnerable to additional health and economic risks, including many employed in infrastructure-related activities. This analysis—based on Brookings Institution posts written in March and June 2020—defines the country’s essential workforce and explores their economic and demographic characteristics in greater depth, revealing a need for continued protections and investments as part of the COVID-19 recovery.
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Kane, J. W., & Tomer, A. (2021). Valuing Human Infrastructure: Protecting and Investing in Essential Workers during the COVID-19 Era. Public Works Management and Policy, 26(1), 34–46. https://doi.org/10.1177/1087724X20969181
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