State to reduce $1.8 billion federal unemployment debt by $450 million
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[September 28, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker announced a plan Tuesday to reduce a $1.8
billion Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund deficit by $450 million
through an infusion of unemployment-related revenues.
The trust fund is the pool of money paid into by employers to provide a
social safety net for unemployed individuals. The employer’s insurance
premiums are essentially collected via payroll tax.
The “deficit” figure represents money Illinois must repay to the federal
government. It was borrowed under Title XII of the Social Security Act
so the state could continue to pay unemployment claims amid the COVID-19
pandemic and is accruing interest at a rate of 1.59 percent annually.
While that balance exceeded $4.5 billion as the unemployment rate
reached 16 percent at the height of the pandemic, lawmakers in March
dedicated $2.7 billion in federal American Rescue Plan Act funding to
pay down the deficit to the balance of roughly $1.8 billion. While
Democrats lauded that action as a stop gap to allow for continued
negotiations on the trust fund deficit, Republicans criticized the
majority party for not allocating more of the state’s $8.1 billion in
ARPA funds to the deficit.
The $450 million announced Tuesday will bring the deficit below $1.4
billion.
“Our unemployment system is back on track and the balance of the
unemployment trust fund continues to experience strong and steady
growth,” Pritzker said Tuesday at a news conference in Chicago. “Thanks
to Illinois’ economic recovery, the Illinois Department of Employment
Security has advised me that the UI trust fund balance is sufficient
enough to pay down another $450 million of its pandemic related debt.”
Pritzker said he expects the move to save the state about $10 million in
interest costs.
Last week, the state announced unemployment rates were down from one
year ago in all 14 metro areas, ranging from 3.8 percent in the Moline
and Rock Island area to 6.8 percent around Decatur.
Pritzker said business and labor interests continue to negotiate a
solution for reducing the deficit further. But they’re approaching a
Nov. 10 deadline after which federal tax hikes would take effect if the
balance isn’t erased by that date.
That process is spelled out in the Federal Unemployment Tax Act, or FUTA.
Federal law requires an employer to pay a FUTA tax on an employee’s
first $7,000 of wages at a rate of 6 percent. But it also offers
businesses a 5.4 percent tax credit, putting the effective rate at 0.6
percent.
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Gov. JB Pritzker announces a plan
Tuesday for the state to pay down $450 million of its outstanding
$1.8 billion Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund debt to the federal
government. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
If a state has a negative balance in the trust fund on Jan. 1 for two
consecutive years – as Illinois has had – it has until Nov. 10 of the
second year to retire that deficit, or the federal government will start
clawing back 0.3 percent of the FUTA tax credit from employers each year
until the deficit is gone.
A spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Employment Security said
in March that the tax credit reduction would apply to businesses for the
2022 tax year if a balance remains in place on Nov. 10. That would drive
the effective FUTA tax rate from 0.6 percent to 0.9 percent, an increase
of $21 in federal taxes per employee.
Generally, unemployment trust fund deficits are addressed by hiking
employer insurance premium rates, decreasing benefit amounts and benefit
periods for claimants, or an infusion of more state, federal or other
funding.
In the past, negotiations in Illinois have been part of an “agreed bill”
process in which labor interests identify cuts they are willing to
accept, and business groups offer means of increasing trust fund
revenues.
The solution to a $2.3 billion hole in 2010 amid the Great Recession
included benefit cuts and raised premium rates for employers. Lawmakers
also dedicated a portion of those premiums as a revenue stream to pay
back 10-year bonds, which they used to replenish the trust fund. Those
bonds were paid back in about 7.5 years, and the trust fund was back
above water by 2012, according to IDES.
Illinois lawmakers have not yet adjusted the tax rates on employers or
cut benefits for claimants since 2020. Instead, they’ve pushed back
statutory rate hikes and benefit cuts multiple times, scheduling them to
take effect Jan. 1 if lawmakers can’t come to a compromise.
Pritzker said negotiations for a broader fix are ongoing. But lawmakers
are not scheduled to return to the Capitol until Nov. 15.
“As the economy continues, stabilized, we believe that we'll be able to
reduce that even more in the agreed bill process, working with the
legislature, we'll be able to pay it off by year end,” he said.
While Pritzker described the crush of unemployment claims amid the
pandemic as a nationwide strain on unemployment systems, as of Tuesday,
Illinois was one of five states and the U.S. Virgin Islands that had an
outstanding trust fund balance, according to the U.S. Treasury.
Other states included California at $17.8 billion, New York at $7.9
billion, Connecticut at $97 million, Colorado at $33 million and the
Virgin Islands at $96 million.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |