Cutoff of extended unemployment benefits leaves many Americans with bleak options
In this Jan. 10, 2014
photo, Stan Osnowitz poses in his living room in Baltimore. A cutoff of
unemployment benefits for the long-term unemployed has left more than
1.3 million Americans with a stressful decision: What now? Osnowitz, 67,
lost his state unemployment benefits of $430 a week in December. The
money put gasoline in his car so he could look for work. An extra three
months of benefits - one of the options Congress is debating in an
effort to restore the federal program - would enable his job search to
continue into the spring, when construction activity usually increases
and more electrical jobs become available. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A cutoff of benefits for the long-term unemployed has left more than 1.3 million Americans with a stressful decision:
What now?
Without their unemployment
checks, many will abandon what had been a futile search and will no
longer look for a job — an exodus that could dwarf the 347,000 Americans
who stopped seeking work in December. Beneficiaries have been required
to look for work to receive unemployment checks.
Some who lost their benefits
say they'll begin an early and unplanned retirement. Others will pile
on debt to pay for school and an eventual second career. Many will
likely lean on family, friends and other government programs to get by.
Osnowitz says a continuation of his benefits would have enabled his job search to continue into spring, when construction activity usually increases and more electrical jobs become available.
He says he's sought low-paid
work at stores like Lowe's or Home Depot. But he acknowledges that at
his age, the prospect of a minimum-wage job is depressing.
"I have two choices,"
Osnowitz says. "I can take a job at McDonald's or something and give up
everything I've studied and everything I've worked for and all the
experience that I have. Or I can go to retirement."
Unemployment benefits were
extended as a federal emergency move during the 2008 financial crisis at
a time of rising unemployment. The benefits have gone to millions who
had exhausted their regular state unemployment checks, typically after
six months. Last month, the extended-benefits program was allowed to
expire, a casualty of deficit-minded lawmakers who argue that the
government can't afford to fund it indefinitely and that unemployment
benefits do little to put people back to work.
The duration of the federal benefits has varied from state to
state up to 47 weeks. As a result, the long-term unemployed in Rhode
Island, for example, could receive a total of 73 weeks — 26 weeks of
regular benefits, plus 47 weeks from the now-expired federal program.
Outside Cincinnati, Tammy
Blevins, 57, fears that welfare is her next step. She was let go as a
machine operator at a printing plant in May. Her unemployment check and a
small inheritance from her father helped cover her $1,000-a-month
mortgage and $650 health insurance premium. Now, with her benefits cut
off and few openings in manufacturing, she dreads what could be next.
"I'm going to have to try the welfare thing, I guess," Blevins says. "I don't know. I'm lost."
Others plan to switch careers. After being laid off last summer as a high school history teacher, Jada Urquhart enrolled at Ohio State University to become a social worker.
Urquhart, 58, has already
borrowed against her house, canceled cable-TV and turned down the
thermostat despite the winter chill. Without an unemployment check, she
plans to max out her credit cards and take on student loans to complete
her degree by 2015.
Urquhart finds herself in sympathy with members of Congress who want to limit government spending. At least in theory she does.
"It's just hard when you're the one getting shrunk," she says.
One sign of the persistently
tight job market: The percentage of Americans either working or looking
for work has reached its lowest monthly level in nearly 36 years, the
Labor Department said Friday. The unemployment rate fell in December to
6.7 percent from 7 percent. But that drop occurred mainly because more
Americans stopped looking for jobs, many of them out of frustration.
Once people without jobs stop looking for one, the government no longer
counts them as unemployed.
Because unemployment
benefits require recipients to look for work, many who would have given
up kept seeking a job. The federal benefits eased their financial
hardship. But the fundamental problem goes beyond unemployment aid: A
shortage of decent-paying jobs for those still coping with the aftermath
of the Great Recession.
"A Band-Aid doesn't heal a serious wound, but that isn't much of a reason not to use one," Rothstein says.
The trend of people ending their job hunts once their benefits expire has already emerged in North Carolina, which started cutting off aid in July. North Carolina's unemployment rate sank from 8.8 percent in June to 7.4 percent in November, but mainly because people stopped their job searches.
But some congressional
Republicans argue that guaranteed unemployment checks that go on for
more than a year lead many workers to take excessive time to try to land
an ideal job, instead of settling for whatever they can find.
Senate Democrats and
President Barack Obama have pushed to restore the program. But they need
to agree on how to pay for it— a key demand from Republicans concerned
about a potential $20 billion hit to the federal budget deficit.
The longer people remain
jobless, the more likely their skills are to erode and the more likely
employers are to ignore their resumes, according to economic research.
The result is that many eventually stop looking for work and turn
instead to other government programs such as Social Security Disability
Insurance.
"If those workers don't ever
get back, they're not going to be earning income, they're not going to
be paying taxes," says Josh Mitchell, an economic researcher at the
Urban Institute.
Compared with people who've
been out of work for weeks, the long-term unemployed tend to be older
and more concentrated in manufacturing and construction, according to
research by Mitchell.
A majority of the long-term
unemployed have children. An increasing share — 28.6 percent vs. 24.2
percent in 2007 — attended college but didn't receive a degree. And most
live in the South and West, where the housing bust that sparked the
recession was most intense.
About 38 percent of all
unemployed workers — or 3.9 million — have been out of a job six months
or more. That's nearly double the proportion it was when Congress
previously ended emergency benefits in 2003 and in 1994, notes Heidi
Shierholz, an economist at the liberal-leaning Economic Policy
Institute.
But many workers say they would rather have jobs than more benefits.
"It's just been a struggle forever," says Blevins, the laid-off machine operator. "I don't want nothing for free.
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