Congress extends jobless benefits; stocks fall 400

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JIM ABRAMS | November 20, 2008 11:47 PM EST | AP

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Paul Nawrocki, from Beacon, N.Y., wears a sign as he walks through Times Square seeking employment, New York, Tuesday Nov. 18, 2008. The government says new claims for unemployment benefits jumped last week to a 16-year high, providing more evidence of a rapidly weakening labor market. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

WASHINGTON — Jarred by new jobless alarms, Congress raced to approve legislation Thursday to keep unemployment checks flowing through the December holidays and into the new year for a million or more laid-off Americans whose benefits are running out.

The economic picture was only getting worse, if Wall Street was any indication. The Dow Jones industrials dropped more than 400 points for a second straight day, reaching the lowest level in more than five years, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell below lows established six years ago.

The Senate's vote followed Thursday's government report that laid-off workers' new claims for jobless aid had reached a 16-year high and the number of Americans searching for work had surged past 10 million.

The White House, which had opposed broader legislation containing the benefits extension, urged passage of the new version and said President George W. Bush would quickly sign it.

As Congress prepared to leave town _ perhaps for the year _ there was no such resolution on helping the auto industry, a disaster in the making that could lead to hundreds of thousands if not millions of additional lost jobs. Democratic leaders said they could return to Washington in mid-December to vote on rescue loans if the carmakers first present a plan on transforming and modernizing their operations.

Discouraged by the stalemate over auto aid, investors sent the Dow Jones industrials down to another big loss, 445 points.

As for the jobless benefits, about 1.2 million people would exhaust their unemployment insurance by the end of the year without the extension, sponsors said. The measure is estimated to cost about $5.7 billion, although economists put the positive impact at $1.64 for every dollar spent on jobless benefits because the money helps sustain other jobs and restores consumer confidence.

"Putting money in the hands of unemployed families means they will be able to pay their rent and utility bills, buy groceries and clothe their children," Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said after the voice vote in the Senate. "It is money that will create economic growth in America."

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The House had approved the bill in October.

More than 1.2 million jobs have been lost so far this year, and the civilian jobless rate is at a 14-year high of 6.5 percent.

Thursday's Labor Department report said claims for unemployment benefits jumped last week to 542,000 the highest level since July 1992 and fresh evidence of a rapidly weakening job market that is expected to get even worse next year.

The legislation as approved would provide seven additional weeks of payments to people who have exhausted their benefits or will exhaust them soon. Those in states where the unemployment rate is above 6 percent would be entitled to an additional 13 weeks above the 26 weeks of regular benefits. Benefit checks average about $300 a week nationwide.

The benefits provided would be in addition to 13 weeks of federally funded extended benefits approved by Congress last June.

The vote could wrap up this session of Congress _ with the possibility of the December return. The Democratic leaders' main condition for that special session was that the Big Three automakers first present a plan showing how federal aid would help them modernize.

"Until we can see a plan where the auto industry is held accountable," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, "we cannot show them the money."

"We are prepared to come back into session the week of Dec. 8 to help the auto industry," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said. "But only if they present a responsible plan that gives us a realistic chance to get the needed votes."

Congressional Democrats had sought to move legislation that would direct $25 billion from the $700 billion financial rescue plan to the automakers to ensure they can stay in business until the spring. They abandoned those plans this week in the face of resistance from the White House and Senate Republicans.

The broader economic questions of what further actions Washington must take to avoid more home foreclosures and rectify staggered financial markets will probably have to wait until January, when the new Democratic-dominated Congress will convene and Barack Obama will be in the White House. An economy-stimulating package that could run into the hundreds of billions of dollars is likely to be on the agenda when the next Congress opens.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Thursday that the financial crisis now plaguing the world economy is something that happens "once or twice" in 100 years.

The need to address the deteriorating job situation was one area that everyone could agree. "The recent financial and credit crisis has slowed the economy, and it's having an impact on job creation," White House press secretary Dana Perino said in urging Congress to pass the benefits extension.

Congress has enacted federally funded extensions seven times in the past 50 years during economic slumps _ in 1958, 1961, 1972, 1975, 1982, 1991 and 2002.

The Bush administration contends that past extensions occurred only when the unemployment rate was considerably higher.

Unemployment insurance is a joint program between states and the federal government that is almost completely funded by employer taxes, either state or federal.

Before Thursday's quick resolution, the White House had threatened to veto a broader, $61 billion stimulus bill that would have helped states maintain Medicaid benefits and extend funds for public works projects in addition to the extending the jobless benefits.

In yet another bad sign for the economy's near future, the private, New York-based Conference Board said Thursday that its monthly forecast of economic activity declined 0.8 percent in October. Over the past seven months, the index has declined at a 4.7 percent annual rate, faster than at any other time since 2001.

Most of the decline was due to the drop in stock prices, a decline building permits and sagging consumer expectations.

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Associated Press writers Jeannine Aversa, Christopher S. Rugaber, Deb Riechmann, Ellen Simon and Ken Thomas contributed to this report.

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The bill is H.R. 6867.

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On the Net:

Congress: http://thomas.loc.gov

(This version CORRECTS DELETES 22nd graf to correct that June extension was not blocked. Multimedia: A series of animated graphics that explain the economics behind the recent upheaval in the market _ the problem, the cause and the proposed solution _ are in the _business/financial_explainer folder. A comparison of previous federal bailouts with a list of the financial institutions that have received aid this year is in the _business/bailout_compare folder. AP Video.)

WASHINGTON — Jarred by new jobless alarms, Congress raced to approve legislation Thursday to keep unemployment checks flowing through the December holidays and into the new year for a million or...
WASHINGTON — Jarred by new jobless alarms, Congress raced to approve legislation Thursday to keep unemployment checks flowing through the December holidays and into the new year for a million or...
 
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This 13 week extension of un-employment benefits is a small step in the right direction of helping Main St.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 PM on 11/20/2008
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And then you have the problem with the "phantom GDP" which means the economy is probably far worse than we can imagine.

Real GDP is designed to measure domestic output. If a furniture factory in Virginia makes lots of chairs, that falls under GDP. But now if the owner decides to close his furniture factory in Virginia, move it to China (i.e., offshoring) so he can import chairs from China to the U.S., how is this real GDP? It ain't.

Because of the massive amount of importing and offshoring, reported U.S. GDP is probably not real GDP but "phantom GDP" which means our economy is also a phantom -- and not real. BTW, Susan N. Houseman, an obscure economist with the Upjohn Institute, discovered this flaw in the way GDP is calculated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 PM on 11/20/2008

Wall Street, long masquerading as a bastion of economic fortitude, has finally been revealed as nothing more than a Ponzi Scheme that has folded liike a house of cards and, a whole lot of folks should be charged under section 1964(c) of the RICO Act and sent to jail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 11/20/2008

I'm starting to think this was all about maintaing the viability of a lucrative instrument financial institutions had developed ... the credit defautlt swap. Some dweeb has run the numbers and figured out they can make a lot of money just betting on whether a bundle of bonds is going to go under and doesn't want congress outlawing them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 11/20/2008

These clowns just do not get it.
This is something, new, different and like nothing any of them have ever dealt with before.
Dropping the interest rate, has not worked so far and even if they make it zero, things are not going to change. The best case, is stocks will go up just long enough for a select few to make a few bucks and then it will drop again.
Time to change your game book guys, because the old one is not working any more.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 11/20/2008

Businesses will retrench themselves with a smaller footprint that's all. The economy of scale argument the idea that businesses have to be big has failed. Business that big have a fatal flaw ... they put economies at risk as they fail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 11/20/2008
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Can you say depression?

Dow will go below 5K.

Even Cave dwellers will be homeless.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 11/20/2008
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CRISIS OF FINANCIAL FEES
(including salaries, bonuses, and parachutes)

FEES by Banks and INVESTMENT BANKS:

1. $10's to $100's Million in salaries, bonuses, and other incomes
2. Incrementally High "TRICKY" adjustable mortgage Fees for subsidiaries of Investment Banks
3. High Second Mortgage Fees above property values
4. "Fake" Appraisal Fees
5. Selling loans that exceed value of the property with MORE Fees added
6. Slice and Dice mortgages into packages (Derivatives) by Banks for "MASSIVE" Added Fees
7. Rating Agency Assigns "AAA" rating to High Risk Derivatives and takes Large Fees
8. Sell Derivatives to Customers including HIGH Fees
9. Front end and Back End Insurance Fees
10. Financial Product Maintenance and Customer Service Fees

Note: The Reason Banks will not MARK TO MARKET and want that removed:

With decline in home values some products now would take a 80% tp 90% write-off of the Fees paid by Derivatives Clients, showing the "degree of greed" in this FEE driven system.

At least this LEVEL of CORRUPTION has not hit the Auto Industry! So lets save millions of Blue, Green, and white collar jobs!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 11/20/2008
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The economy will be worse than weak when the auto makers shut down. Remember what happened after Lehman Brothers collapse? When auto makers go the same will happen in real economy. Do these bozos really believe that the unraveling will stop there?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 11/20/2008

There are many ways out of the mess we're currently in. One approach worth considering is worker ownership. When Argentina's economy collapsed in 2000-2001 and factories closed en masse, factory workers took over the reigns from owners who walked away from their plants. They managed to produce and sell the goods that previous owners had given up on, and they did it (and continue to do it) more effectively. In Spain, the government allows for individuals eligible for unemployment benefits to receive their maximum benefits all up front, but only if they are going to use the money to start up a cooperative business. This is a great way to invest in the long term growth of local economies. There is no reasdon for us to accept the same worn out formula for economic development. There are many ways to put food on our tables that don't require bailing out billionaires and allowing millions to go hungry or homeless. For information on worker cooperatives here in the U.S. check out the U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives (www.usworker.coop) or the Bronx based co-op incubator Green Worker Cooperatives (www.greenworker.coop).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 11/20/2008
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Summary of the financial crisis in the United States to this point.

1) We are warned of impending system-wide failure due to lack of "liquidity" [which in fact is lack of value] and commanded by Henry Paulson to grant him $700,000,000,000 unconditionally, or be killed [by unemployment, food riots, etc., cunningly not quotable but definitely said]

2) After $290,000,000,000 fails to have any perceptible indication of the advertised benefits, W's entire administration, including Paulson, punt

3) Citizens, including even borrowers of "liar loans" have done our jobs. It was the loan officers and their bosses who are professional failures.

Summary: This has been a deliberate re-distribution of wealth specifically to the fraction of voters who are least deserving of it. They have earned their losses, and we have earned their profits.

100%

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 11/20/2008

Congress sitting around and chatting about more rate cuts isn't going to solve anything. We need to start sending people to prison. Anything less is unacceptable. We need to start with the Wall Street Boys and then go on to Congress and anyone in the White House who is involved in these crimes.

Phase I should be independent prosecutors, not Congress, filing charges against everyone on Wall Street involved in this theft of our money. Seize their assets. Throw them in prison. Phase II will be an investigation of all the money paid by Wall Street to Congress, and what they got in return. Make Congress pay into a public fund every penny they took from Wall Street during the past 8 years. Make them publicly testify about ever communication inside Congress and/or with any Wall Street lobbyist. Is it true that the credit card industry handed them a pre-written law saying people can no longer discharge credit card debt in bankruptcy, along with a big wad of money, and they agreed to pass that law. In exchange for money. Yeah, I could think of a few questions.

Isn't there one prosecutor in the entire nation who is willing to stand up and file the first set of charges, get serious. Enforce the law. Get the money back. http://www.NABNYC.blogspot.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 11/20/2008
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Heating oil is still $360.00 a gallon !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Bailouts not helping heat any homes !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 11/20/2008

Lower interest rates don't help the homeless and those freezing out side right now because they lost their home. Keeping people in there homes is what's necessary but what would a multi-million dollar elitist like Paulson know about that? I'm sure his lunch was terrific today and his house is nice and warm and cozy every night when he gets home. These people are so freakin clueless.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 11/20/2008
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Clueless, no, ruthless, yes. They are busy stealing what they can while covering their tracks to make it look like they care about anything other than their own greed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 11/20/2008

Patriot, when are these donuts gonna get it---There's no ineptitude in any of this. These guys are good, real good, as Butch Cassidy once said.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 PM on 11/20/2008
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How bout this idea? Bring the troops, and all the jobs, careers, and factories we've exported out of the country the past 18 years back home?

Or are we going to settle for . . .

China to build home appliance factories in United States.
Japan to expand U.S. operations to keep costs down.
Venezuela to open two new refineries in U.S.
Saudi Arabia to open major banks in L.A. N.Y. markets.
Mexico to move factory's to U.S.
India opening two hundred call centers in U.S.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 11/20/2008
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