Eakinomics: Federal
Unemployment Supplement — Part 2?
Guest authored by Isabel Soto,
AAF's Labor Market Policy Data Analyst
Since the passage of the CARES Act, legislators have debated the best
course for extending the $600 Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation
(FPUC). This unemployment supplement will expire on July
31—tomorrow—leaving millions without access to additional income support
during one of the country’s worst economic downturns in recorded history.
As of Tuesday, both parties have released their plans for the future of
supplemental unemployment compensation.
The stakes are high. While the unemployed would still receive regular
unemployment compensation, this is far from a regular time.
Both parties seem to be in favor of some level of additional income support
through the FPUC and even direct assistance to individuals with a second
round of stimulus checks, as included in both Senate Republicans’ HEALS
Act, and House Democrats’ HEROES Act. Democratic Senators Wyden and Schumer
have also introduced a plan to gradually scale down the FPUC over the next
four years. Republicans are concerned with a medium- to long-term work
disincentive and the damage of long-term unemployment. Democrats worry that
the drop in benefits could mean added difficulty to families that have come
to rely on the supplement during an economically unpredictable period.
My latest analysis
outlines the concerns of both parties and the costs of their respective
plans in more detail.
“A plan introduced by Democratic Senators Wyden and Schumer could cost
upward of $960 billion over the next 4 years or longer, given that there is
no clear expiration date attached to their proposed benefits, and would
likely cause significant problem in implementation if it were passed. Republicans’
plan for unemployment assistance contained in the HEALS Act would reduce
the FPUC in two stages—$200 until the end of September and then at 70
percent wage replacement—and would cost $110.7 billion.”
Even if legislators are able to come to an agreement quickly, there is
still the problem of outdated unemployment insurance (UI) systems that were
the main reason behind such a general flat rate benefit in the first place.
Both plans will need to contend with the fact that changes to UI are not going
to happen overnight, meaning that all those currently receiving benefits
will likely see a period of reduced compensation as understaffed
unemployment offices with outdated systems implement the new extension.
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