USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing view: $ 200- a- week federal bonus is still generous

- Matt Weidinger Matt Weidinger is the Rowe Fellow in poverty studies at the American Enterprise Institute. He is a former deputy staff director of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Congressio­nal negotiator­s debating whether to extend federal unemployme­nt benefits should support the Senate Republican­s’ plan because it helps more Americans return to work while providing the unemployed with significant support.

In March, legislator­s argued that $ 600 bonuses were needed while “the consumer economy is shuttered.” Since then, lockdowns generally have ended and weekly bonuses have expired. If the $ 600 bonuses were to extend into 2021, as the Democratic- led House proposes, the unemployed would continue being discourage­d from work by getting more in unemployme­nt benefits than they earned while working.

One study found 2 in 3 did just that, and another study estimates it would be 5 in 6 in the future. The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office projects that continuing such benefits “would reduce employment in calendar year 2021.” Even Democrats like Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont admit on $ 600 bonuses that “sometimes it discourage work.”

Americans agree. According to a recent Harris poll, “Most American adults ( 58%) say the $ 600 a week in enhanced unemployme­nt benefits should expire by the end of August.” The reason? “Two- thirds of Americans ( 62%) also think the enhanced jobless benefits discourage people from going back to work. Even among unemployed Americans, nearly half ( 46%) say they would avoid returning to work if the benefits are continued past July 31.”

That’s why Senate Republican­s propose reducing bonuses to generally $ 200 per week in the months ahead ( some states might provide more, but benefits would still be less than earnings). The $ 200 bonus is still generous; it is eight times the $ 25 bonus included in the 2009 Obama stimulus plan.

Paid in addition to state unemployme­nt benefits averaging $ 342 per week, the resulting $ 542 per week average offers unemployed workers more than they have ever received previous to the pandemic ( and they are expected to get another round of $ 1,200 stimulus checks soon).

This would maintain significant federal assistance while reducing disincenti­ves holding back workers and the economy.

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