KEY POINTS
  • There is evidence that school closures due to the pandemic will have a devastating impact on the economy for decades as this generation of school children hit their prime earning years.
  • What's more, the damage will be felt most acutely by the poorest in the land, further widening the gulf of income inequality in the U.S. and around the globe.
  • In 2045, when these students hit ages 29 to 39, their peak time for earning potential, those losses could reach nearly $150 billion, adjusted for inflation.
Jay Horton, 6, attends virtual first grade on the first day of school at the Horton familys home in Arlington, Virginia on Tuesday, September 8, 2020.

Newly confirmed Education Secretary Miguel Cardona will have his hands full as he navigates the perilous journey to reopening schools that have been largely shuttered for a year during the Covid pandemic.

"We have many great examples of schools throughout the country that were able to reopen safely and do so while following mitigation strategies," Cardona said at his confirmation hearing last month.