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Unemployment Aid Won't Be Enough To Turn Around The Economy

CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER   07/20/10 09:29 PM ET   AP

Unemployment Aid

WASHINGTON — For jobless Americans struggling to pay their bills and keep their homes, the restoration of unemployment benefits could keep their crisis from getting worse.

The same might be said of the broader economy.

The Senate is expected to vote Wednesday to keep providing unemployment benefits for up to 99 weeks to more than 5 million long-term unemployed. The injection of an estimated $33 billion into a $14.6 trillion economy over the next five months won't be enough to energize the recovery. But economists say it could at least help sustain it.

The vote comes as evidence mounts that growth is slowing. Consumers, facing lower home values and high unemployment, are saving more and spending cautiously. The housing market is slumping again after a tax credit expired in April. And the impact of last year's $787 billion stimulus package has begun to fade.

By extending the unemployment aid, Congress will remove one potential drag on the economy, analysts say.

"It reduces the likelihood of a double-dip recession," said Gus Faucher, an economist at Moody's Analytics.

During the recession, Congress provided up to 73 extra weeks of unemployment aid, paid for by the federal government. They came on top of the 26 weeks customarily provided by the states.

But the extra benefits expired in early June. They had been routinely extended during the worst parts of the recession. But Congress reached an impasse last month. Republicans demanded that the extension be paid for with leftover stimulus money. Democrats countered that unemployment benefits are normally considered an emergency need and paid for by adding to the deficit.

About 2.5 million people ran out of jobless aid during the political battle. They will now have the aid restored retroactively. That could create chaos if state unemployment offices are flooded with people seeking to reapply.

An additional 3 million people were still receiving aid under the extended benefits program. They will be able to keep doing so.

The legislation Congress is expected to approve will inject $33 billion into the economy by renewing the extra benefits through the end of November. That money will likely be spent quickly and generate extra economic activity, economists say. Jobless aid is widely seen as providing more "bang for the buck" than many other stimulus programs.

"It recycles very quickly into the economy," said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's. "If that's your only source of money, you're going to spend it."

Moody's Analytics estimates that every dollar of unemployment aid generates $1.61 in economic activity. Still, that translates into a boost of only $54 billion – less than one-half of 1 percent of the overall economy.

"It's not going to make or break" the recovery, Faucher said.

Weekly unemployment checks average about $309, though they vary widely by state. Benefit levels also depend on how much a recipient earned while working. The checks are financed through a tax on employers.

Many of those out of work don't receive unemployment benefits. Only those who have lost jobs through no fault of their own are eligible. Applicants must also have earned certain minimum pay, set by the states.

Partly because of the extensions, about two-thirds of the nearly 15 million unemployed are receiving unemployment aid. That's a greater proportion than in previous downturns. The Obama administration's stimulus package encouraged many states to expand eligibility to part-time workers and other groups.

In recessions, Congress usually adds extra weeks as unemployment rises and hiring slows. The federal government also pays for the extensions to lessen the burden on states, which are required to balance their budgets. Many experts argue that the program, begun in the 1930s, is ill-equipped to handle extended downturns. One result is that the program has been extended in almost every recession and often gets tangled in political fights.

The current benefit extensions are the longest on record.

Of the 2.5 million people whose benefits will be restored, nearly 430,000 are in California, nearly 200,000 are in New York, 175,000 are in Florida and 174,000 are in Pennsylvania, the Labor Department estimates. Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio and Texas also have more than 100,000 recipients who were cut off.

Unlike with some previous extensions, Congress isn't adding extra weeks. It's just keeping the extended program going.

For those who have exhausted all their 99 weeks, the Senate's vote Tuesday provides little hope. They face the prospect of looking for work even as hiring remains slow, with the unemployment rate at 9.5 percent.

"There's a lot more people than jobs out there right now," Wyss said.

__

AP Economics Writer Jeannine Aversa contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — For jobless Americans struggling to pay their bills and keep their homes, the restoration of unemployment benefits could keep their crisis from getting worse. The same might be sai...
WASHINGTON — For jobless Americans struggling to pay their bills and keep their homes, the restoration of unemployment benefits could keep their crisis from getting worse. The same might be sai...
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texastrixie
I invented the internet.
03:08 PM on 07/22/2010
Unemployment compensation will steady the economy, but otherwise won't help. Its designed to help keep families in their homes, food on the table, and shoes on the kids' feet when school starts again (can't wear flipflops all year except in TX). But the time is quickly approaching (like November) when everyone who doesn't have a job will probably be on their own - permanently. We are courting a huge underclass that barely gets by, and who rely on food stamps or food banks to feed the kids. We're going to get to revisit the 1930's minus the dust storms (at least until we truly trash the planet). I only hope the Repigs don't sweep Congress such that they do away with universal healthcare. I don't need it, but there is nothing sadder than a sick child with parents who cannot afford care, and that's what we are headed back to.
12:24 AM on 07/23/2010
This is a depression, maybe not (yet) as bad as the Great Depression, but a depression never the less. Futhermore, few countries are going to come out of this unchanged. This is especially true of our country which has been edging closer and closer to the brink of ruin over the past three decades.
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ztck5356
08:33 AM on 07/22/2010
We Dems can go on blaming Bush for years for this mess, and rightly so, but now that we have identified the cause, what is the plan? We Dems have been given a chance to do something about this, and I'm waiting to see what Obama does about the jobs and the wars. FDR did not sit around blaming Hoover for his terms. He acted, quickly. It not about Bush anymore, the crisis is here, and must be dealt with quickly. What's the plan? Let's roll!
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OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
08:01 PM on 07/22/2010
Good Point. I think that alone scares Business from hiring and keeps foreign investment off the US coast. I would not want to invest in the unknown, even less when it is the unkown and no plan.

I probably don't share your Democratic views, but you are spot on here. Faved. Thanks.
12:39 AM on 07/23/2010
As much as I loath Bush, I still have to say that, even though he may have put the final nails in the coffin, he didn't saw the planks. The only recent President that is blameless is Obama (simply because the tipping point was reached on Bush's watch.) Furthermore, our underlying economic problems are big enough, that no one President could have come even close to doing anything more than postponing the inevitable even if they would have tried (which they didn't.)
12:06 AM on 07/22/2010
I was not quite sure how to comment on this one. I do think that helping out the people is the best method, but in return I believe that instead of just giving the people free monies that they should be tracked for the help they needed and then have to repay for the assistance received once they get back on their feet again.
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MeinNH
Ooooo Silly Me
08:22 AM on 07/22/2010
If they don't make a living wage how can they repay? Also if they have paid into the system for 30 years, how is this free money?
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ztck5356
08:27 AM on 07/22/2010
Stupid alert. These people have paid with every paycheck! It's taken out before they get paid. Why on earth should they have to pay again? Free monies? Tracked? You've never been unemployed have you? Do you even work?
08:25 PM on 07/22/2010
Yes I am stupid yet you are the Polar Bear? Since you seem to not mind that there won't be any money for anyone left because of all of the bailouts then I am sure this does not bother you. Your energies remind me of a woman/man who has more children than you know what to do with them. You don't care about looking good and you seem to be a pro abortionist. There is no point for me to argue with someone of your class.
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karen1p
11:52 PM on 07/21/2010
I don't think anyone said that extending unemployment would "magically" correct the market. You can thank the banking cartel for the market....but at least the unemployed will be able to possibly eat now.
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ztck5356
08:28 AM on 07/22/2010
You took the exact words out of my mouth. Thanks.
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sueinmn
09:27 PM on 07/21/2010
As you max out your allowed weeks, you will become a 99er! The its all over with. Nothing, no hope, no change. So Congress will now pick and choose who survives and who falters. All 99ers, your out! You dont count or matter. Until this government can come up with a true jobs bill to create and ineact it, they need to help US ALL! Nothing for the 99ers, really is more than just a let down. It is life threatening. Mine, yours and all who will become 99ers.
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HarlemFreeThought
10:09 PM on 07/21/2010
I have been saying this on various social boards and Facebook pages, very few readers are will to acknowledge your exact theory. America is still sleeping.
Fanned!
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OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
08:07 PM on 07/22/2010
How is Congress picking. It is all 99ers.

How many weeks would you extend them to? How many years? Let me guess, untill the jobs come back? Look around, they are gone and won't come back for many years.

You can pretend or come to the realization that you aren't going to get more than 99 weeks. Maybe a plan is in order.

Take charge of your life. You are the only one who can.
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jeb50
Retired.
06:22 PM on 07/21/2010
Unemployment benefits were never expected to turn the economy around. To do that we need jobs. I honestly can't understand the thinking behind the gop with elections in Nov. Do they honestly believe most American's don't realize that they are behind the cause and continuation of this recession?
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NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
09:06 PM on 07/21/2010
Why wouldn't they believe that? Vast numbers of Americans have been fooled by the righties for decades. Even the WH falls for the ongoing stunts of Faux News.
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sueinmn
09:28 PM on 07/21/2010
I never understood how they want to create even a larger poverty class.
Who will pay taxes to support their lazy a@@es when we no longer have the middle class?
08:16 AM on 07/22/2010
they will keep voting for the unlimited benefits party thats why
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
04:40 PM on 07/21/2010
Of course this won't 'fix the economy' it simply helps those who have been some of the victims of it and by extension helps a few other retain their jobs, at least for a short while.

When this was an actual 'Jobs bill' before the GOP got a hold of it and the DEMS allowed them to cut away at it, it would have actually made a difference.
04:56 PM on 07/21/2010
That $300 billion jobs bill did not fit in Obama's PayGo ideology, so the Republicans merely reminded him.
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LightShadow62
The answers are not found in the extremes
05:02 PM on 07/21/2010
While extolling the virtues of extending the Bush tax cuts that will add, by the most conservative estimates, $1trillion to the deficit. But we shouldn't worry about that according the the GOP.
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OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
08:08 PM on 07/22/2010
Victems?
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Yikes11
04:07 PM on 07/21/2010
Here here. The 99ers thank you. Come November, more will be included in this group. This has to stop.
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Yikes11
04:05 PM on 07/21/2010
There are millions of 99ers out there who are not being counted. In November, once the current benefits end, more will be included in this group. I cannot say that no new jobs have been created because I don't know that for sure. I can say that not enough have been created. Two years is not sufficient to sustain a livelihood in this economy. Extend the da m n benefits for all those, including the 99ers who are out of work.
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GeorgieGirl9
Liberty, In God We Trust, and E Pluribus Unum
05:12 PM on 07/21/2010
If you're out of work for almost 2 years, assistance isn't unemployment insurance anymore, it's welfare. By all means apply for any and all assistance you qualify for after UI expires.
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sueinmn
09:30 PM on 07/21/2010
Once your kids are grown and if you are more than a single household without dependants, forget the Welfare plan. Denied!
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karen1p
11:58 PM on 07/21/2010
Assistance? At that point, you are homeless.
03:57 PM on 07/21/2010
By not extending unemployment benefits, the Government is violating a social contract. Workers pay taxes into the system and they expect the system to pay them back.

The excuse that "they lasted too long" is not valid, because we could also say to the government "taxes lasted too long, we' re not paying them anymore".

Unemployment benefits is one of the very few government programs that are worth it right now. Much of even the "non-discretionary spending" is worthless.

I propose that a list is published (or a big book or something, online), which would contain all government spending down to the last penny. So that We the People can actually see where our tax money goes.

40 million Americans on food stamps? You call this a developed economy? Sounds more like a country that needs emergency aid from the United Nations. How can a country become like that WITHOUT war and without any major earthquakes etc?
04:03 PM on 07/21/2010
Interesting points, very thought provoking thanks!
04:27 PM on 07/21/2010
The government violating a social contract is an interesting statement!
Have you ever heard of a government program called Social Security?
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05:37 PM on 07/21/2010
as long as you know it's not an entitlement program but an insurance program....
03:28 PM on 07/21/2010
I hope ESOPs and the idea of creating employment takes off soon. I will see true change when corporate books reflect a more realistic payroll up top. Decision makers who don't actually perform a service or make a product should be paid a whole lot less. Times have changed and salaries of upper management should reflect that.
02:57 PM on 07/21/2010
The Economy will not recover till we outlaw Swaps,

and force investment back to main street.

The Bankers robber the world of the money needed to invest in Main Street, and all they do is spend it on derivatives amongst themselves.

Swap are Fraud.

Swap are a Ponzi Scheme.
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05:37 PM on 07/21/2010
the entire economic framework we have is a Ponzi scheme, there is only one way out for Main Street, and we need a critical mass of citizens and candidates who know about it and how to cure it; because the cure is oh so very simple...

get the dvd at secretofoz.com and then read Web of Debt. If you have the stamina, also look at newdeal20.org and ineteconomics.org, because change will come if we bring it
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IfIonlyknew
Politics is Hollywood for ugly people.
02:38 PM on 07/21/2010
Man is that a stupid headline.
03:53 PM on 07/21/2010
Yeah, the author has a keen sense of the obvious.
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
01:33 PM on 07/21/2010
AND WALL STREET SAID NAFTA WOULD BRING US MILLIONS OF JOBS.
04:21 PM on 07/21/2010
Today's issue isn't NAFTA... NAFTA shifted jobs from one part of the country to another, you might even be able to argue a transformation of jobs from "semi-skilled" positions to service related positions...

The China trade agreements without regulation in 2001/2002 are the real culprits...

The Bottom line US jobs were sold to China in exchange for $150 million paid for Afghan reconstruction (who got paid that)...?

... and support of the 2 wars, as well as a vote on UNSCR 1373...
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
02:08 AM on 07/22/2010
so wheres the jobs from the free trade deals?.
01:30 PM on 07/21/2010
Who the heck thought unemployement aid would turn the economy around?!?

It's a stop-gap measure - not in place of. But for the ravaged private sector - that's all there is. And these clowns in Congress act like their proud of themselves for finally doing it. They can now go on vacation.

Disgusting!
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MeinNH
Ooooo Silly Me
08:25 AM on 07/22/2010
They were afraid of seeing the unemployed and homeless on their front door when they went on vacation...they only reason this was passed.