Cutbacks to Unemployment Insurance Came Long Before the Great Recession
You may have heard that we’re in the middle of
an unemployment crisis. It’s little wonder that an average of 365,500
people per week made new claims
for unemployment benefits over the past month. These high numbers have
been straining unemployment insurance programs at the federal and state
level, and many states have run out of reserves to pay for them,
triggering a reduction in benefits. But this crisis wasn’t inevitable.
The pull back in unemployment benefits is just another result of
state-level choices to cut taxes at the expense of state spending,
spending that could be cushioning the blow of the Great Recession.
States are unable to adequately finance their unemployment insurance
programs just when they are most needed not because they were
unexpectedly overwhelmed. As a new report from the National Employment Law Project
shows, it was because they failed to finance them during the good times
like they’re supposed to. Here’s the way it works: federal law requires
each state to collect unemployment insurance contributions from
employers and deposit them into a state trust fund held in the treasury.
During good times, the trust funds accumulate reserves so that claims
can be paid out during downturns. This makes the program
countercyclical, helping to pump money into workers’ pockets and
therefore businesses (via their spending) when times are tough.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
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