Long-term unemployment warrants action now and is projected to get worse
By Heidi Shierholz
February 4, 2008
See Snapshots archive.
Snapshot for February 4, 2008.
Long-term unemployment warrants action now and is projected to get worse
The White House has demanded that legislators not extend
unemployment benefits as part of the upcoming economic stimulus
package, despite the fact that the latest jobs report from the
Department of Labor shows that long-term unemployment is already a
problem.
After the last recession, Congress first extended unemployment
benefits to those who had exhausted their 26 weeks of standard
benefits in March 2002. While the unemployment rate at that time
was higher than it is now—5.7% in March 2002 versus 4.9% last
month—the more relevant figure is how many jobless workers have
exhausted their unemployment insurance. The chart below shows that
the total number of long-term unemployed is substantially higher
now-1.4 million workers last month compared to 1.3 million in March
2002. In other words, today 1.4 million workers have exhausted
their entitlement to unemployment compensation but are still
actively trying to find work.
The chart also shows projections to the end of this year.
Independent researchers have forecasted that by the fourth quarter,
the unemployment rate will have increased to 6.2%. Based on that
forecast and the historical relationship between the unemployment
rate and the share of the unemployed who are long-term jobless,
nearly 1.9 million workers will likely be unemployed long term by
the end of 2008.1

Long-term unemployment places an enormous strain both on families
and on the economy. Extending unemployment benefits would not only
give aid to the families hardest hit by the economic downturn but
also provide a critical stimulus to the economy. The long-term
unemployed, their savings depleted, quickly spend virtually every
dollar they receive, mostly on necessities found in their local
economy. Extending unemployment benefits during an economic
downturn is not only the right thing to do for the families
struggling in this economy, it is also excellent economic
policy.
Note
1. Our forecast for the number of long-term unemployed comes from
various sources. Data through January 2008 are from Bureau of Labor
Statistics. We take the assumption that unemployment in the fourth
quarter of will be 6.2% from Goldman Sachs forecast in their
January 8 publication of US Economics Analyst. We then model the
relationship between the share of the long-term unemployed and the
unemployment rate using a time-series regression based on data from
1959q1-2007q4. The model regresses the long-term share on the
unemployment rate, with two AR terms and a trend variable to whiten
the residuals. We then perform a one-step-ahead forecast to
estimate the long-term share associated with an unemployment rate
of 6.2%, yielding 19.3%. To change this share into a number, we use
the CBO projection that the labor force will grow 1.1% in 2008, and
apply this to the CPS smoothed estimate of the labor force size,
given here.[PDF]
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