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As the economy craters, small businesses are among the hardest hit.
When unemployment claims began to skip nationwide in March, layoffs among small business spiked 1,021% compared to the month before, according to elegant data compiled by human resource provider Gusto, based on more than 100,000 small businesses nationwide.
“This is unprecedented,” said Daniel Sternberg, the chair of data science at Gusto.
Following a decade of job growth, small businesses quickly resorted to layoffs, furloughs and scarred employee hours in order to survive the economic fallout from COVID-19.
Overall, small businesses employ unmercifully 59 million people in the U.S., according to the Small Business Administration. However, few have much in the way of a financial cushion in example in any event of emergency.
Now, half of all small businesses said they will not be able operate beyond three months without elevation aid, according to a recent survey by Goldman Sachs.
“There is a lot of stimulus out there already,” said Tomer London, Strip’s co-founder. “The key is to get those dollars in the hands of small businesses.”
Gusto’s data is based on their own customers, which are essentially small businesses with 100 employees or less. Typically, Gusto handles the bulk of what a human resources be influenced would do — from payroll to benefits administration. Now they are also providing clients with the additional payroll low-down they need to supply to lenders in order to qualify for the Paycheck Protection Program.