Showing posts with label Unemployment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unemployment. Show all posts

Monday, July 14, 2008

Victory! 13 More Weeks of Unemployment Benefits

Coalition on Human Needs Reports from Capitol Hill:
Congress Enacts and President Signs Bill Adding Domestic Items to War Funding

Jobless insurance, veterans’ education benefits, protection against Medicaid cutbacks, and disaster relief are top domestic priorities enacted by Congress last week. These items were attached to the bill extending funding for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars that the President signed on June 30.

Backed by House and Senate leadership, these domestic provisions were initially opposed by the President and some of his allies in Congress. But the work of advocates and the bad news of growing unemployment strengthened the hand of the majority in Congress to hold firm for adding 13 weeks of extended unemployment insurance to the supplemental spending bill, at a cost of $8.2 billion over 10 years.

Similarly, there were strong advocacy efforts to improve education benefits for GI’s, to help states cope with the aftermath of flooding and tornadoes, and to stall a set of Medicaid regulations that would significantly reduce benefits and/or increase state costs. The final vote on the domestic items in the Senate was 92-6 on June 26.

The House had previously passed this package with a similarly overwhelming 416-12 vote on June 19. Such veto-proof majorities spared Congress from having to negotiate further reductions in their domestic priorities.

Although advocates feel very good about these victories, the President’s veto threats did cause Congress to scale back some of its original domestic proposals. Initially, both House and Senate approved a 13-week extension of unemployment insurance for all those who had exhausted their state benefits, plus another 13 weeks in states with jobless rates above 6 percent. The second 13 weeks in high unemployment states was dropped to get the President’s support. Similarly, language was included to restrict the extended benefits to those who had worked for 20 weeks or more.

Since many states with antiquated systems ignore a worker’s most recent 3-6 months of earnings, this provision will exclude some workers (disproportionately young and low-income) who really have well over 20 weeks of work. In other instances, states have approved UI benefits for low-income workers with relatively few weeks of work, but their benefits have also been low and of short duration. The federal extension would have only given such workers half of their state benefit after it was exhausted. Still, UI opponents made grossly exaggerated claims about how many weeks of UI could be received after only a couple of weeks of work, and the restrictions were included.

The 13 weeks additional weeks of UI benefits is extremely important because close to 4 million workers either have already exhausted their 26 weeks of state benefits or will do so by March 2009.

For more information and state impacts, see the National Employment Law Center’s statement.

The supplemental spending bill also delays the implementation of six different Medicaid regulations put forward by the Bush Administration, preventing them from taking effect any earlier than April 1, 2009, and thus allowing the next Administration to decide what to do with the proposals.

These regulations would deny federal Medicaid funds to states for such services as transportation of students with special health needs to school-based health services, certain rehabilitation services, and some case management for children in foster care or others with disabilities. If these regulations are implemented, children and other vulnerable people will lose benefits, states will face greater expenses at a time when shrinking revenues are forcing state budget cutbacks, or a combination of both. Congress had also sought a moratorium on a regulation to restrict federal reimbursements for routine hospital outpatient services, such as vaccinations or annual check-ups, but that regulation was not included among the moratoria finally agreed upon.

The GI education benefit would provide in-state college tuition and a housing stipend to veterans who have served at least 36 months, at a cost of $63 billion over 10 years. Veterans have 15 years to use this benefit and can transfer an unused portion to a spouse or dependent.

The full cost of the legislation through the end of FY 2009 is $186.5 billion, of which $161.8 billion is for the FYs 2008-2009 costs of the wars. The domestic provisions for that same period cost $24.7 billion, and also include $2.7 billion for disaster relief for the Midwest and to rebuild levees destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

December Unemployment Rate

FROM THE CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY PRIORITIES:

STATEMENT BY CHAD STONE, CHIEF ECONOMIST,ON THE LABOR DEPARTMENT'S DECEMBER UNEMPLOYMENT REPORT

Today's report shows that the economy is entering 2008 with a weakening labor market. Employers expanded their payrolls by a meager 18,000 jobs in December, private payrolls actually shrank by 13,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate rose from 4.7 to 5.0 percent. These data are very disappointing, but even so they do not mean that the economy is currently in recession, and Congress should not rush to judgment on the need to enact a fiscal stimulus package that, if not carefully designed, could do more harm than good.

Today's report also is a strong reminder that before the next recession comes, Congress needs to strengthen the Unemployment Insurance (UI) system, which cushions the impact on consumers of the economy's ups and downs. The percentage of unemployed workers who have remained without a job for more than 26 weeks (the normal duration for regular unemployment benefits) and continue to search for work is considerably higher than on the eve of the last recession. In December 2007, 17.5 percent of all unemployed workers were long-term unemployed, compared with just 11.1 percent in March 2001.

The federal government has temporarily extended unemployment benefits in every recent recession, but often not until well after the need has become evident. Having an extended benefits program ready to go if labor market conditions deteriorate significantly would be a prudent contingent stimulus policy.

In addition, longstanding gaps in the UI system leave many workers ineligible even for regular UI benefits when they lose their jobs (and hence for any extended benefits in a recession). In October 2007, the House passed a long-overdue UI reform measure that would provide states with incentives to modernize their UI systems so more female, low-income, and part-time workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own can qualify.

The House bill reflects recommendations made over a decade ago by a bipartisan, congressionally chartered commission. And it is fully paid for through a renewal of the federal UI surtax, a step President Bush called for in his last budget.

The Senate should act expeditiously on this or similar legislation when it returns this month, so these reforms are in place to reduce hardship in the next recession, whenever that occurs.