We are watching 'millions of people who are now having to claim unemployment': Robin Hood CEO

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Robin Hood CEO Wes Moore joins Yahoo Finance’s On The Move panel to discuss how millions of individuals are seeking financial aid after becoming unemployed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Video Transcript

ADAM SHAPIRO: We have hundreds of thousands of people, not only in New York, but across the country who have been put at risk in so many ways because of coronavirus. And to talk about this, we want to invite back to our program Wes Moore. He's the CEO of Robin Hood. And this organization is committed to helping the less advantaged in our society get through normal times. Wes, this is not a normal time. And we have people, our neighbors, who need food and they need cash. So-- so what is happening?

WES MOORE: Yes. Thank you so much for having me. And thank you for putting a focus specifically on this issue. You know, this is-- this is not a normal time for our large society. Where-- where we're watching going from a-- a relatively robust-- robust economy to now where we are having millions of people who are now having to claim unemployment and a government who's being able to force to respond and react quickly to it.

But the reality is, for so many of the communities that we serve, for so many of the communities that we live in and we work with this unfortunately is terribly predictable.

And the crisis that we're seeing, or crises, that for many of our families and communities, they've been living with for a very long time. I think what this-- what this moment has shown and expose has been the extraordinary vulnerability that many people have and many people are living with, where even prior to COVID-19, close to half of all people in this country, half of all New Yorkers, could not afford a $400 emergency-- not a $400 emergency shock.

And so what we're now seeing is that shock playing itself out in real time. And we're watching a very real and present human vulnerability that's now being able-- that's now being pushed throughout our community. So this is a hard time for our community. But the reality is, for many people who are living in poverty, these have been hard times. And I think it's something that our larger society has to confront and has to wrestle with that.

JULIE HYMAN: Wes, it's Julie here. It's good to see you and I hope that you are well. There has been this concern, right, that lower income populations would be most at risk from this. Because folks are still going to work out of necessity, for example, or are acting as essential workers. I don't think we've seen the actual data on that as of yet. But I'm curious what you're seeing from your perspective. And at this time, I know you're primarily a sort of economic aid organization, but do you find yourself also having to step in as a health care aid organization?