Orlando Sentinel

$600 weekly unemployme­nt benefit extension is opposed

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion opposes a Democratic proposal to extend a $600 per week federal unemployme­nt benefit approved in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia said this week.

The $600 payment, which is in addition to normal unemployme­nt benefits, “was the right thing to do,” Scalia said, but is no longer needed as the economy begins to recover.

The money, included in a government relief package enacted in late March, has helped millions of workers stay in their homes and pay bills even as the unemployme­nt rate surged to its highest levels since World War II.

The payments are set to expire July 31, and Democrats have pushed a plan that would extend the enhanced benefit through January. The Democratic­led House approved the proposal last month, but it is considered unlikely to advance in the Republican­controlled Senate.

Scalia pointed to an unexpected­ly rosy jobs report released last Friday. By the end of July, “we expect the economy to be deep into the process of reopening, with shutdown orders ended and millions of Americans freed to return to work,” he told the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday.

Unemployme­nt benefits will still be needed in August and beyond, “but the circumstan­ces that originally called for the $600 plus-up will have changed,” Scalia said. “Policy will need to change as well.”

Democrats challenged that view, saying the unemployme­nt rate is likely to remain at historical­ly high levels through the summer at least.

Friday’s

jobs

report showed that unemployme­nt dropped unexpected­ly in May to 13.3% as reopened businesses began recalling millions of workers faster than economists had predicted, but the jobless rate is still on par with what the nation witnessed during the Great Depression.

Watching President Donald Trump “celebrate victory” Friday as the jobs report was released “is yet another sign that he doesn’t understand what it’s like for people born without a real estate portfolio,” said Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, the panel’s top Democrat.

“Speaking conservati­vely, more than 20 million Americans are still out of work today,” Wyden said, “and I bet you’re not celebratin­g if you’re among the many people who don’t know how they’re going to pay the rent or put food on the table this month.”

Sen. Chuck Grassley, RIowa, the Finance Committee chairman, said the $600 weekly payments were “poorly targeted,” with the result that most recipients are being paid more on unemployme­nt insurance than they earned when they were working.

“This discourage­s people from returning to work or taking a new job, delaying the recovery,” Grassley said.

Grassley and other Republican­s cited a report by the Congressio­nal Budget Office indicating that extending the $600 payments through January would mean that about 5 of every 6 recipients would receive benefits higher than the amount they would have earned from working.

Grassley said he hears from Iowans every day who wonder why they are earning less than others they know who are getting unemployme­nt benefits. Employers also have complained that the generous benefits are resulting in fewer applicants for job openings, he said.

Wyden called that evidence anecdotal and said the idea that Americans don’t want to go back to work “is dead wrong and insulting.”

Scalia said he agrees that most Americans “are excited to go back to work,” but added that “at the margins, a certain number will choose not to work” because of the $600 payments.

With the unemployme­nt rate expected to remain in the mid-teens through July, lawmakers will face pressure to compromise on some form of renewed benefits for the jobless.

So far there are no formal negotiatio­ns on another relief package.

 ?? CAROLINE BREHMAN/AP ?? Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., left, elbow bumps Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia before a hearing on Tuesday on Capitol Hill.
CAROLINE BREHMAN/AP Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., left, elbow bumps Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia before a hearing on Tuesday on Capitol Hill.

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