Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CALIFORNIA reports fraud-inflated jobless claims for pandemic aid.

- OLIVIA ROCKEMAN

Scammers appear to have inflated jobless claims numbers in California by the hundreds of thousands in recent weeks, likely making national tallies of Americans on unemployme­nt benefits look even worse than they already were.

Between mid-August and the first week of September, applicatio­ns for Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance — a federal relief program intended for self-employed workers and independen­t contractor­s — doubled in California to more than 524,000, far above claim levels when the federal program first launched in April, the state’s Employment Developmen­t Department said Thursday.

After the most populous state took action to deter suspected scammers from filing false applicatio­ns in hopes of getting payments, Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance applicatio­ns dropped sharply to 145,790, a decline of more than 72%, the department said.

In addition, California’s figures show a wide discrepanc­y with nationally reported data on continuing Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance claims in California.

While the federal Department of Labor reports that more than 6 million California­ns are claiming Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance benefits each week, the state’s labor department shows that figure below 2 million, pointing to further data-reporting issues.

The Department of Labor didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Those figures feed into a national total that the De

partment of Labor continues to report each week as an official tally of almost 30 million Americans receiving unemployme­nt benefits, despite problems with inflated numbers that have been evident for months.

On the other hand, weekly national figures on initial unemployme­nt claims — the widely watched headline number, which is separate from Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance — may also be overstatin­g the pace of layoffs: the California numbers showed 46,062 applicatio­ns submitted last week for regular state benefits, compared with 230,225 that were processed, a number that correspond­s with the state figure in the national report released Thursday.

That indicates the national figures may reflect states catching up with backlogs rather than representi­ng the most recent levels of actual job losses.

In any case, the fraud issue in California underscore­s the widespread unemployme­nt data challenges — including clerical errors and double counting — that state employment department­s have faced since the pandemic began in March. Errors can skew economists’ outlook for the labor market because claims data are used to look for signs of distress in the job market and any recovery, along with details at the state level.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on Wednesday cast doubt on the reliabilit­y of the national Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance figures, saying during a news briefing that the “actual counting of the claims is volatile” and it’s difficult to “take much signal about the particular level.”

Since the beginning of August, 34 arrests have been made in California related to unemployme­nt fraud, with more expected in the coming weeks.

“Aggressive efforts to fight fraud are yielding results in curbing the recent uptick in suspicious Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance claims in California,” the state’s employment department said.

 ?? (AP) ?? People arrive to seek employment opportunit­ies at a JobTrain office in Menlo Park, Calif., in July. The Department of Labor reports that more than 6 million California­ns are claiming Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance benefits each week.
(AP) People arrive to seek employment opportunit­ies at a JobTrain office in Menlo Park, Calif., in July. The Department of Labor reports that more than 6 million California­ns are claiming Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance benefits each week.

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