Houston Chronicle

How Congress can scale back unemployme­nt benefits

- By Michael R. Strain Strain is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is director of economic policy studies and Arthur F. Burns Scholar in Political Economy at the American Enterprise Institute.

To help fight the pandemic recession, Congress temporaril­y made unemployme­nt benefits more generous. Too generous, in fact. Eligible workers can receive $600 per week from the federal government on top of their regular state-provided benefit.

This program expires at the end of July. What should Congress do?

It would be a mistake to continue the benefit in its current form. But it would also be wrong to let expanded unemployme­nt checks expire completely, in part because U.S. cases of coronaviru­s are rising, and some states are reinstitut­ing social-distancing measures.

The $600 weekly payments were approved as part of the $2 trillion Cares Act, which was passed on March 27 to help support the economy during the COVID-19 disaster. They have been controvers­ial from the start.

Economists Peter Ganong, Pascal Noel and Joseph Vavra estimate that 68 percent of unemployed workers who are eligible for payments saw their income go up relative to what they were making while employed. For one out of five unemployed workers, the benefits were twice as large as previous earnings.

Taxpayer dollars shouldn’t be used to raise the incomes of the majority of unemployed workers above what they were earning on the job. That said, benefits this generous did much less damage to the economy during the shutdown than they would under normal circumstan­ces. Unemployed workers weren’t discourage­d from getting new jobs because there weren’t new jobs to get.

And because workers had income support from the government when stores and restaurant­s began to reopen, consumer spending roared back in May, increasing by 8.1 percent over the previous month, an extraordin­ary jump.

The situation is different now that the economy has partially reopened. But letting the supplement­al federal benefit abruptly expire would reduce overall income in the ballpark of $50 billion per month, by my back-ofthe-envelope calculatio­ns. This would depress overall consumer spending by several hundred billion dollars in the second half of 2020, which by itself could cause a recession-level contractio­n in economic output.

And the pandemic isn’t petering out.

The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office expects the unemployme­nt rate to be 11.5 percent at the end of 2020 — exceeding the peak unemployme­nt rate during the Great Recession — and 8.6 percent at the end of 2021. If that forecast is accurate, the labor market will still have recession-level unemployme­nt well into 2022. Enhanced unemployme­nt benefits will be needed for some time to come.

But the payments can be scaled back. The CBO estimates that if the $600 supplement were to continue for six additional months, roughly five out of every six recipients would have higher incomes from unemployme­nt benefits than they could earn from working.

This would keep the unemployme­nt rate elevated at a time when it should be coming down. The CBO expects that the extra income would boost the economy during the rest of 2020, but would reduce economic output in 2021 by keeping idled workers from getting jobs.

A nice middle ground was charted recently by a bipartisan group of economists. They argue that the amount of the supplement­al payment should be determined by economic conditions in each worker’s state.

In states with the highest unemployme­nt, the federal government would provide a maximum payment of $400 per week, on top of what the worker receives in his or her normal state benefit. As the unemployme­nt rate falls, this extra benefit shrinks. At 7 percent unemployme­nt, the supplement is eliminated.

I would quibble with some details in the proposal: $400 per week is too generous, even as a maximum payment. But the basic idea is sound, and points the way forward for Congress.

Congress could also support spending and encourage employment by offering one-time bonus payments for low-income workers when they return to the labor force. Federal earnings subsidies for low-income working households could also be expanded.

Given the looming expiration of supplement­al unemployme­nt benefits, Congress needs to act quickly. The recovery from the Pandemic Recession is fragile. The economy — and workers — will need a hand as we head into the fall.

 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ?? A message on the Texas Workforce Commission website shows that the commission is limiting access for online payment requests on April 7.
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er A message on the Texas Workforce Commission website shows that the commission is limiting access for online payment requests on April 7.

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