May 28, 2021
For more information, contact:
Jonas Macapinlac
Chief Marketing & Communications Officer
University of Guam
Tel: (671) 735-2944
Cell: (671) 787-1010
Email: jmac@triton.uog.edu
Reports detail COVID impact on Guam residents and businesses
One in five Guam residents has had their lives disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, experiencing loss of employment, inability to provide enough food for their families, and inability to settle household expenses.
Similarly, the pandemic caused more revenue loss, layoffs, closures, reliance on grants and loans, and significantly diminished plans for growth among tourism businesses than any other industry.
The results are published in two University of Guam reports — “Guam Recovery Research Project: The Impact of COVID-19 on Guam Residents and Business” and “Guam Recovery Research Project: The Impact of COVID-19 on Guam’s Private Businesses and Tourism” — released today from the Regional Center for Public Policy under the School of Business and Public Administration.
“This is important data to have documented as the island starts to recover from the pandemic,” said RCPP Director Dr. John Rivera. “As public and private sector leaders move forward with plans and policies to get lives and businesses back on track, it’s essential they can make data driven decisions and see who is most in need of assistance. Additionally, this data will provide a baseline to measure how well our people and our businesses recover over the next two years.”
The studies were based off of surveys from November of 702 randomly selected residents, a review of Pandemic Unemployment Assistance applications, and surveys of 413 randomly selected local businesses from the 2020 listing of business licenses.
Key highlights of the residential impact report include:
- Those most affected by the pandemic were most commonly women, of CHamoru ethnicity, under age 40, having a high school education or less, having income of less than $20,000 per year, and living with seven or more persons.
- Those least affected by the pandemic were most commonly men, of Filipino ethnicity, over age 40, having some college education or more, having income of $50,000 or more per year, married, living with four or fewer persons, and those with government jobs.
- The majority of PUA applicants were women, under age 40, Filipino, having a household income of less than $30,000, having no higher education, living in households with three to four people, those with no children, and those with jobs in service-related industries.
Key highlights of the business impact report include:
- The private sector experienced a 66% decline in revenue in 2020 compared to 2017.
- Construction industry revenues fared 45% better than all other businesses.
- The number of businesses with fewer than 20 employees increased from 82% to 89% from 2017 to 2020, with 95% of tourism-related businesses employing fewer than 20 people.
- Nearly half of tourism businesses have furloughed most or all of their employees, with 12% continuing to pay those employees.
- More than one-third of tourism businesses have laid off employees, with 20% laying off all of their employees.
- 25% of all businesses had to temporarily or permanently close in 2020. Four percent of businesses had to permanently close.
UOG Professor Roseann Jones, who holds a doctorate in economics, led the research with support from Market Research & Development Inc. and student interns. Funding support was provided by Cares Act funds through the Office of Governor of Guam.
Both reports are viewable at https://url.uog.edu/rcpp and www.guamrecovery.com
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