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Real-World
Evidence Showing that
Unemployment Insurance Benefits Increase Unemployment
by Daniel J. Mitchell
December 15, 2011
I’ve
written before about the perverse
impact of the unemployment insurance program, and I’ve even cited how
left-wing
economists such as Paul Krugman and Larry Summers admit that you get
more
joblessness when you pay people for not working.
I’ve
even shared a very good cartoon
making the same point. And who can forget Nancy Pelosi’s mindless
comments
about unemployment benefits being a great way to stimulate job creation.
But
sometimes it helps to have
real-world anecdotes, and this letter-to-the-editor from a newspaper in
Ohio is
very educational. Here are key excerpts.
Little
did I know that attempting to
hire the employees needed, which I had thought to be the easiest part,
would
turn out to be a nightmare if not impossible. …Before 2009 if our
company
advertised for an open position, on average we would get 20 to 30
applications,
interview six to eight of the applicants, and hire one or two, based on
the
quality and potential of the candidates. This process has been
deteriorating
dramatically since 2009 and now at the end of 2011 it has completely
hit
bottom. Of all the applications that we have received this year, when
asked why
they were seeking a job with us, one out of three answered: my
unemployment is
running out and I have to go back to work. Earlier this year after I
hired two
new full-time employees, went through our company’s orientation
process, fitted
them with our work clothing and booked them to start within a week,
they both
quit. One called ahead of the start date to apologize but wanted to
inform us
he would not be coming in because the government had just extended
unemployment
benefits again. The second one just did not show on his first day and
when I
called him he said he couldn’t come in now because unemployment had
been
extended and he was making almost as much as we were planning to start
him out
with. …Our
government is considering
extending unemployment benefits again soon. The final absurdity might
be that
extending unemployment is the only thing that both the Democratic and
Republican majorities both agree on.
Read
this, plus another “real world
experience” at Townhall Finance
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