The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Debate over $600 in jobless aid to intensify as claims rise

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON » A debate in Congress over whether to extend $600 a week in federally provided benefits to the unemployed looks sure to intensify with the number of people receiving the aid now topping 30 million — one in five workers.

The money, included in a government relief package enacted in March, is set to expire July 31. Yet with the unemployme­nt rate widely expected to still be in the mid-teens by then, members of both parties will face pressure to compromise on some form of renewed benefits for the jobless.

Democrats have proposed keeping the $600-aweek payments through January in a $3 trillion relief package that the House approved this month along party lines. Senate Republican­s oppose that measure.

They have expressed concern that the federal payments — which come on top of whatever unemployme­nt aid a state provides — would discourage laid-off people from returning to jobs that pay less than their combined state and federal unemployme­nt aid now does.

So far there are no formal negotiatio­ns on another relief package. But analysts say the need to address the fate of the $600 weekly benefits could force a resolution of the issue this summer.

Sen. Rob Portman, ROhio, and Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, are promoting a plan that would provide $450 a week for laidoff workers who return to their jobs, as a “back to work” bonus. This payment would also expire by July 31, though. Larry Kudlow, the top White House economic adviser, said earlier this week that the proposal is “something we’re looking at very carefully.”

Separately, Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., vice chair of the Joint Economic Committee, has proposed reducing the $600 benefit to $300 in stages by the end of the year. This plan, Beyer said, would sharply reduce the number of people who are receiving more money from jobless aid than they would from working.

Typically, state unemployme­nt aid replaces only about one-third to one-half a laid-off worker’s pay to encourage the recipients to seek new work. The $600 in federal benefits was added as a way to replace all of an average worker’s lost income. But because those who have lost jobs since the virus hit are disproport­ionately low-wage workers, most of them are receiving more in unemployme­nt aid than they did from their old jobs, economists estimate.

Research by University of Chicago economist Peter Ganong and two of his colleagues has found that, because of the extra $600, two-thirds of laid-off workers are receiving benefits that exceed the paychecks they previously earned from working. One-fifth could receive at least twice their previous pay.

Ganong says that such large payments could delay some laid-off workers from switching to new careers that might be more in demand in the future.

But he also thinks that Congress should keep an enhanced benefit in place because more jobless aid is crucial in the midst of a deep recession.

He proposes replacing the flat $600-a-week payments with a percentage increase to each recipient’s benefit check, with the goal of matching the worker’s previous earnings but not going much higher. Congress did not initially take this route, in part because of doubts that states’ antiquated unemployme­nt systems could handle such a change, but that could be addressed by the end of July, Ganong said.

Andrew Stettner, senior fellow at The Century Foundation, said that unemployme­nt benefit payments are on track to top $70 billion in May, a significan­t stimulus for the economy.

“The job market has not made a big comeback, and the enhanced unemployme­nt aid is one of the most important fiscal boosts that the federal government can provide to families and the economy,” he said.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People wait in line for help with unemployme­nt benefits in March at the One-Stop Career Center in Las Vegas. Record numbers of people have been filing jobless claims since the lockdowns to attempt to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic began.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People wait in line for help with unemployme­nt benefits in March at the One-Stop Career Center in Las Vegas. Record numbers of people have been filing jobless claims since the lockdowns to attempt to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s pandemic began.

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