Townhall...
Jobless
Workers
By Debra J. Saunders
9/1/2011
There
are two Americas. In one
America, working stiffs wonder whether it makes sense for the
government to pay
unemployment benefits for 99 weeks. In this America, folks have a lot
of
sympathy for those who are out of work through no fault of their own,
but they
also fear that when government writes unemployment checks for almost
two years,
that’s an incentive not to get a job.
In
another America, there is strong
support for President Barack Obama’s call for another extension of
jobless
benefits to 99 weeks. Like Obama, these Americans believe that
unemployment
benefits stimulate the economy. Some want to extend benefits further.
Rep.
Barbara Lee, D-Calif., has introduced a measure to add another 14 weeks
on top
of 99 weeks.
These
two Americas are about to
collide.
The
president has called for another
extension of benefits. He is expected to bring up the issue next week
as part
of his jobs package. Since 2009, Obama has been successful in pushing
for a
99-week extension, which has been reauthorized five times -- most
recently as
part of the 2010 tax deal that extended all of the Bush tax cuts. But
last
month’s debt ceiling package did not include an unemployment extension.
The 99-week
benefit is set to expire in January.
Now,
with the August debt ceiling
deal, at the very least, Republicans have to demand spending cuts to
pay for
the $56 billion tab for an extension. Moreover, they have to ask
whether paying
unemployment benefits for almost two years would be good for the U.S.
economy.
Obama
didn’t help his cause when he
picked Alan Krueger to chair his Council of Economic Advisers. Krueger,
The
Wall Street Journal editorialized, has written about unemployment
insurance’s
tendency to extend how long recipients remain unemployed.
Labor
economist James Sherk of the
right-leaning Heritage Foundation argues that Congress should shorten
unemployment benefits and pay for the rest of the freight with spending
cuts.
“You want more than six months” because it’s a tough job market, Sherk
told me.
But after people have been out of work for two years, he noted, they
are less
attractive to employers.
Democrats
counter that unemployment
benefits stimulate the economy. In a statement in favor of her 113-week
plan,
Lee argued, “Not only do jobless workers need assistance for food and
shelter
month to month, but unemployed workers immediately spend the assistance
they
receive, which stimulates the economy.”
“Jobless
workers.” That’s a new one.
No
surprise, there now are
organizations for people who have exhausted all 99 weeks of
unemployment
benefits -- such as the American 99ers Union and Advocacy for the
Long-Term
Unemployed. I have a lot of sympathy for the unemployed, but when I
read the 99er
rhetoric in favor of the 113-week plan, I can’t help but wish these
folks would
focus more on getting a job than turning unemployment into a career.
Another
caveat: Because employers pay
for unemployment benefits, extended benefits hinder job creation. “It’s
not
like a flaming stake to the heart of the economy,” Sherk observed, “but
on the
margins, higher (unemployment insurance) taxes discourage employers
from
hiring.”
As
Sherk noted, it’s a tough job
market out there; 44 percent of the unemployed have been out of work
for more
than six months. So the question is this: Is Washington doing these
folks a
favor by giving the jobless an incentive to remain “jobless workers”?
Read
it at Townhall
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