Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jobless Arkansans get $1B in U.S. aid

In 4 months of payouts, disburseme­nt of benefits from state hits $271.3M

- STEPHEN STEED

The state has disbursed more than $1.1 billion in federal unemployme­nt aid to the jobless in just four months, including millions of dollars in weekly federal supplement­s that will end July 25 without an act of Congress to extend the aid.

The state also disbursed $271.3 million in weekly benefits from its unemployme­nt insurance trust fund in just 16 weeks, according to the state Department of Commerce’s Division of Workforce Services. The payout eclipsed total disburseme­nt last year of $98.5 million in just five weeks, a Workforce Services spokeswoma­n said.

Given the breadth of the pandemic’s economic toll, those figures aren’t surprising, said Michael Pakko, chief economist and state economic forecaster at the Arkansas Economic Developmen­t Institute at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

“Those are some pretty interestin­g numbers that I’d like to know more about, but they don’t strike me as being

outside the range of plausible,” Pakko said.

The $2.2 trillion Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, which was passed by Congress and signed into law on March 27, sent billions of dollars in aid to the unemployed, businesses, hospitals, community health centers, states and municipali­ties. It also provided one-time payments of up to $1,2oo for millions of Americans. The measure was the third phase of Congress’ financial response this spring to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Pakko said the financial relief, with its almost-immediate injection into the economy, boosted personal income in the year’s second quarter. “All those programs that are helping compensate people for the shutdown and lost income are actually more than replacing the income we lost,” he said.

For the unemployed and those whose hours were reduced, the act created and funded:

The Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance program, which provided benefits, for the first time, to independen­t contractor­s, the self-employed, freelancer­s, “gig” workers and others who typically would not qualify for regular unemployme­nt insurance benefits. People can claim those benefits for 39 weeks or until the week ending Dec. 26, whichever comes first.

The Federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program, which provides the $600 in weekly federal supplement­s to all unemployme­nt insurance recipients. The supplement­s in Arkansas and 48 other states end July 25 and July 26 in New York.

The law also establishe­d separate extensions of 13 weeks under the Pandemic Emergency Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program and then eight weeks in an extended benefits program, both of which are funded by the federal government but distribute­d by states.

Arkansas, according to the Workforce Services Division, has paid out just more than $1.1 billion under the Federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Compensati­on program.

Using federal money, Arkansas also has paid out $83.7 million, through July 11, to the self-employed and other independen­t workers. Weekly payments to those workers range from $132 to $451.

Initial claims for state unemployme­nt benefits — those filed for the first time by workers to win eligibilit­y — totaled 285,094 between the weeks ending March 21 and July 4, the most recent date for such numbers.

On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Labor said 10,832 initial claims were filed in Arkansas during the week that ended July 4, up 437 from the week before. The pandemic-high for initial claims was 62,086, for the week that ended April 4.

Continued claims, which are filed weekly once a worker is deemed eligible for benefits, numbered 104,692, according to Thursday’s report, down 3,999 from the

week that ended July 4. The pandemic-high for continued claims is 122,522, for the week that ended May 9. All eligible claims received the $600 federal supplement.

Congress is debating an extension of the supplement, whether at $600 or a lesser amount, as well as other possible economic-relief measures as the pandemic continues or, as in some states and cities, worsens.

The White House on Tuesday signaled that it’s open to the idea, according to The Washington Post, although the amount could be cut by as much as half.

Republican­s and some Democrats in Congress have said they believe the $600 supplement, when added to regular unemployme­nt payments from states, is a disincenti­ve to returning to work. Others contend the bonus needs to be extended as some states and cities again have begun shutting down parts of the economy with the rise in coronaviru­s cases.

“I have mixed feelings,” Pakko said of the $600 supplement’s possible revival. “On the one hand, the economy is starting to come back from the most extreme part of the shutdown, but there is still a very high number of unemployme­nt claims we see coming in week after week,” he said. “We’re still seeing a lot of churning in the labor market, with a lot of people still losing their jobs and a lot of people returning to work. It’s a very chaotic situation.”

A possible compromise is a federal-state match on any supplement, as opposed to the flat “one size fits all” $600 weekly benefit that Congress devised in March, Pakko said. “That would scale it more to the economies of the individual states.”

The drain on the state’s unemployme­nt trust fund has been unpreceden­ted.

During the recession of 2008-2009, the trust fund ran dry in March 2009, forcing the state to take out loans from the federal government. Arkansas borrowed $360 million. Thirty-five other states also took out such loans.

The state’s Unemployme­nt Trust Fund has a balance this week of $644.7 million, down from $845 million on March 1. Payments from the fund have been partially offset by the usual flow of unemployme­nt insurance contributi­ons required of most employers, based on payroll taxes. Workers don’t pay into the unemployme­nt trust fund.

Arkansas’ regular unemployme­nt insurance program pays a weekly average of $233, for a maximum of 16 weeks. Weekly benefits range from $81 to $451, as set by Arkansas unemployme­nt compensati­on law last modified in 2012. The $451 maximum benefit is 22nd-highest in the nation, near a midrange between Massachuse­tts’ $823 and Mississipp­i’s $235. The minimum weekly benefit in Arkansas is higher than that of 40 states.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staci Vandagriff) ?? People wait in line to file unemployme­nt claims Thursday at the Arkansas Workforce Center in Little Rock.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Staci Vandagriff) People wait in line to file unemployme­nt claims Thursday at the Arkansas Workforce Center in Little Rock.

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