Analysis: Push to end pandemic benefits may not be panacea for U.S.
labor shortage
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[June 11, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The 25 U.S. states
calling an early halt to pandemic-related federal unemployment benefits
have recovered more of the jobs lost during the crisis than other
states, possibly limiting how much of a dent ending the weekly $300
payments will make in the national battle to fill record job vacancies.
Republicans have taken aim at the enhanced benefits, which were first
approved by Congress in a massive relief package last year and later
extended, arguing they discourage people from returning to work and are
no longer needed given the easing pandemic. Four Republican-led states
are ending the payments as of Saturday, with 21 others following suit
through early July.
"Business owners ... are struggling not because of COVID-19 but because
of labor shortages resulting from these excessive federal unemployment
programs," Missouri Governor Mike Parson said last month as he announced
a June 12 cut-off to the payments in his state. Payments to sole
proprietors and contractors typically not eligible for unemployment
insurance also will end.
But in Missouri, as in the other states pulling the plug early on the
benefits, the margin to boost local labor supply may be thinning.
The state already has clawed back about 90% of the jobs it lost last
year as the spread of the coronavirus devastated the U.S. economy. As of
April, when its payroll jobs topped 2.94 million, there were only 16,000
more unemployed Missourians than before the pandemic, and about 93,000
collecting pandemic unemployment benefits. That pool includes solo
contractors and gig workers on benefits for the first time during the
crisis, and it is unclear how many will shift to conventional payroll
jobs or resume old ones.
Job recoveries and unemployment
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBLESS/
gjnvwmbbdvw/chart.png
Overall, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data for April, the latest
available, showed the 25 states planning to cancel benefits early have
recovered about 80% of the jobs they lost during the crisis, versus a
66% recovery rate in the rest of the nation.
About 2.4 million more people in the states stopping the benefits early
are either unemployed or no longer looking for work than before the
pandemic, versus about 7.5 million payroll jobs still missing
nationwide, and 9.3 million open jobs in April.
Stopping versus non stopping states
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBLESS/
qmypmzxqjvr/chart.png
The numbers suggest the job market may remain clogged - and hiring slow
- for months amid a gulf between the workers needed as the economy
reopens and the willingness of people to take jobs at the offered wage
or unable to work at all given issues like child care that were
intensified by the pandemic.
The enhanced unemployment benefits expire nationwide in September.
REAL-TIME EXPERIMENT
The situation has led to a confused run of statistics: there is
currently about one job opening nationally for every unemployed person,
something usually associated with very healthy labor markets. Wages are
rising. Yet there are about 3.6 million more people unemployed than
before the pandemic, and about 3.5 million have left the job market
altogether.
Job openings to unemployed
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOLTS/
azgpogkqxpd/chart.png
The early end of benefits in half the country has set up an experiment
around how much the weekly $300 is influencing behavior and how many
more people can be coaxed back into the workforce. The supplement led
some people to earn more than they did while working.
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: People line up outside a newly reopened career center for
in-person appointments in Louisville, U.S., April 15, 2021. REUTERS/Amira
Karaoud/File Photo
Even in the states where benefits are ending, the situation may be hard to read.
On a nonseasonally adjusted basis, continuing claims for unemployment insurance
fell by around 5% nationwide for the week ending May 29; the decline was about
the same in states stopping benefits early and those that are not. Unadjusted
continuing claims in Alaska, Iowa, Mississippi and Missouri - the four states
ending benefits as of June 12 - rose 1.8%.
A red state roll off
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/EMPLOYMENT/
gjnvwmwzlvw/chart.png
Jed Kolko, chief economist at Indeed Hiring Lab, said state-by-state data showed
a "modest, brief" increase in job searches as states announced that benefits
would end early, but it has tended to fade.
"If overly generous federal (unemployment insurance) benefits were holding back
job seekers, then we would expect search activity to increase, relative to the
national trend, in states where those benefits are ending sooner," he wrote.
Instead, job searches in states ending benefits this week and next are below the
national average, and "it is unclear why."
Job search and unemployment benefits
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/
xlbvgkmoevq/chart.png
ST. LOUIS CARVE-OUT?
In one major city at least, local policy may end up pulling against the state.
Officials in St. Louis are discussing a plan to make up the benefits that around
9,600 residents will lose when Missouri stops the federal unemployment
supplement. The source of money: other federal funds provided under the Biden
administration's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan relief package, which is
sending around $110 billion to local governments with broad discretion for them
to use as needed.
The idea, which still needs to be approved by local elected officials, could
restore the lost benefits for some residents by early July.
"Families are going to get hit next week and hopefully they can weather a week
or two," while St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones and the city's aldermen decide
whether to spend about $35 million of the available $517 million in federal
pandemic aid to make up for the lost unemployment payments, said Richard von
Glahn, policy director of Missouri Jobs with Justice.
Restoring the job market to its pre-pandemic normal, with ultra-low unemployment
and increased gains for less-educated and lower-income workers, is the critical
missing link in a U.S. economic recovery where the rebound in overall output has
outpaced the jobs recovery. It's a priority for President Joe Biden's
administration, and the driving logic behind the Federal Reserve's intent to
keep monetary policy in crisis-fighting mode until job markets are healed.
The fast rollout of coronavirus vaccination programs this year and the broad
easing of restrictions on commerce and movement seemed to set the stage for just
that, as companies planned to expand their headcounts to meet a surge in new
business.
After a jump of nearly 1 million new jobs in March, however, hiring slowed in
April before picking up in May - even as the number of job postings reached
record highs. Calls to end the unemployment benefits have increased as a result.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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