EPI Statement on Extending Unemployment Insurance
By Heidi Shierholz
04-14-08
[THIS TESTIMONY WAS GIVEN BEFORE U.S.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES' SUBCOMMITTEE ON INCOME SECURITY AND
FAMILY SUPPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON WAYS AND MEANS ON APRIL 10,
2008.]
EPI's statement on extending unemployment insurance
Good Morning Chairman McDermott, Ranking Member Weller, and distinguished members of the Subcommittee on Income Security and Family Support. My name is Heidi Shierholz and I am an economist who studies labor market issues at the Economic Policy Institute. I am delighted that you have chosen to hold a hearing on the urgent issue of extending unemployment insurance and I appreciate the opportunity to appear before you today to share my views.
The unemployment rate—at 5.1% in March—is not at an historically high level, but it is higher than average for the beginning of a recession. The unemployment rate at the start of the last ten recessions—going back 60 years—averaged 4.7%, including 4.3% at the start of the last recession in March 2001. The fact is that the unemployment rate is naturally a lagged indicator of an economic slowdown, exhibiting low levels at the beginning of a recession and sharp increases during a recession. In what follows I will present evidence on why the current unemployment rate should in no way preclude the immediate extension of unemployment insurance benefits. To the contrary, my analysis of historical and projected trends in long term unemployment, as well as a comparison of where relevant economic indicators are today compared to when Congress first extended benefits during the last recession, strongly indicate that an immediate extension is warranted.
Long Term Unemployment is Unusually High
Long term unemployment—defined here as the share of the
unemployed who have been jobless for more than six months—is a
crucial measure in this context because six months is the mark at
which most workers exhaust their regular unemployment insurance
benefits. Currently, long-term unemployment is unusually high
given the unemployment rate. Figure
1 presents the unemployment rate and long-term unemployment
over the last forty years. Two things pop out when looking at
this plot: first, the two series follow a similar cyclical
pattern, peaking after the end of each recession (recessions are
shaded in the plot), and second, long term unemployment also
follows a generally upward trend and is currently much higher
relative to the unemployment rate than in the past. The fact
that a much higher portion of the unemployed have been unemployed
long-term shows that the unemployment rate alone is insufficient in
capturing how difficult it is in today’s labor market for many
people to find a job.
Historically, when the unemployment rate was near where it is
now, long term unemployment averaged 10.5%. During the
current business cycle, however, when the unemployment rate was
near current levels, long term unemployment averaged
18.5%.1 Figure 2 shows the
dramatic difference in long term unemployment in the current labor
market compared to the historic average. Taken together,
figures 1 and 2 show that a great many more workers are stuck in
long-term joblessness than would be expected given the relatively
low unemployment rate.
How Many More Long-Term Unemployed Can We Expect During the Current Economic Slowdown?
As mentioned above, unemployment rates are lagged indicators of
an economic slowdown. With the March employment report
showing job losses for the third straight month, we believe we have
entered into a potentially severe economic downturn, and an
important question to consider is how many workers are expected to
experience long-term unemployment before the economy turns up
again. To address this question, we used unemployment
projections from Goldman Sachs, labor force projections from the
Congressional Budget Office, and a simple statistical model to
project long-term unemployment through the end of 2009.2
Figure 3 presents the projections.
We project that by the end of 2009, 20.8% of the unemployed will be
unemployed long-term. The number of long-term unemployed
would be 1.4% of the total workforce, or 2.1 million workers—up 64%
from the 1.3 million long-term unemployed today.
Highly Educated and Experienced Workers are Disproportionately Hard-Hit by Long-Term Unemployment
With so many workers either in or headed for long-term
unemployment, the question arises—who are these workers? An
analysis of microdata from the Current Population Survey, the same
data used to calculate the official unemployment numbers,
illustrates the characteristics of these workers.
Table 1 presents shares of the total
unemployed (column 1) and the long-term unemployed (column 2) by
subgroup for January 2008, the latest date these data are
available. Comparing these two columns shows which subgroups
of jobless workers are over- and under-represented among the
long-term unemployed. For example, while workers aged 45 and
over make up 28.4% of the unemployed, they make up 36.7% of the
long-term unemployed. In other words, these experienced
workers are overrepresented among the long-term unemployed; if
unemployed, workers aged 45 and over are unusually likely to be
unemployed long-term. On the other hand, while workers aged
16-24 make up 32.0% of the unemployed, they make up only 24.8% of
the long-term unemployed, meaning that young workers are
underrepresented among the long-term unemployed. Education
subgroups paint a similar picture: while only 13.5% of workers with
a bachelor’s degree or more are unemployed, 16.3% are long-term
unemployed, meaning that the most educated workers are
overrepresented among the long-term unemployed. The reverse
is true for less-educated workers, who are underrepresented among
the long-term unemployed. When looking at the
breakdowns by occupation, we find a similar story; white collar
workers are overrepresented among the long-term unemployed, and
blue collar workers are underrepresented. This table shows
that even the most educated and experienced workers are not
sheltered from the effects of the slowing economy on the labor
market.
How Healthy is the Current Economy Compared to When Unemployment Insurance was First Extended During the Last Recession?
March 2002 was the first time unemployment insurance benefits
were extended during the last recession. We end this
testimony with a brief look at various economic indicators
available when that decision was made (February 2002) compared to
the same indicators today. These figures are presented in
Table 2. What we find is that
according to a host of key economic indicators, the economy is
currently at least as bad off as it was in February 2002.
Both GDP and median real wages are now growing at a much slower
rate than they were then—in fact median real wages declined 1.2%
over the last year. Also, the Exhaustion Rate—the proportion
of claimants who have exhausted all of their unemployment insurance
entitlement—is the same now as it was then. Furthermore, a
higher percent of the population was employed in February 2002 than
now, a higher percent of the population was participating in the
labor force, and a lower percent of the unemployed had been
unemployed long-term. And crucially, the percent of the
labor force that is long-term unemployed is the same today as it
was when Congress extended unemployment insurance benefits during
the last recession. These figures tell us that, despite
the currently low unemployment rate relative to when extensions
were first enacted during the last recession: 1) the economy is in
at least as precarious a position as it was at that time, and 2) an
immediate policy response is now warranted.
Conclusion
Despite the current relatively low unemployment rate, long term
unemployment is already a problem that merits prompt action and it
is only expected to get worse as the economic downturn
deepens. For individuals seeking work in this economy, the
search is likely to be long, putting an enormous strain on the
families of the over two million workers projected to be long-term
unemployed in the next 15 months. We strongly urge Congress
to extend unemployment benefits immediately.
It is important to note that extending UI benefits would be
effective on two fronts. First, it would support the families
who have lost the most in the current economic slowdown, and
second, it would provide an important and effective economic
stimulus. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that
once up and running, a national UI extension would put more than
one billion dollars per month in the hands of jobless workers and
their families. Furthermore, Mark Zandi of Economy.com
estimates that every dollar spent on unemployment insurance boosts
the economy by $1.73.4 The effectiveness of the UI stimulus is
due to the fact that the long-term unemployed, who are likely to
have depleted their savings, tend to quickly spend essentially
every dollar they receive on necessities found in their local
economy. Thus, extending UI benefits would give the
economy a more than 1.7 billion dollar boost per month at a time
when it needs it the most. Immediately extending unemployment
benefits is not only the right thing to do for the families of the
long-term jobless in this demonstrably slow and slowing labor
market, it is also very smart economic policy.
Thank you and I am more than happy to answer any questions you may
have.
Footnotes
[1] The historic average includes data from 1948 up to (but not
including) the current business cycle. An employment
rate “near” where it is now means within a quarter of a
percent.
[2] We regressed the long term unemployment rate on the
unemployment rate and the unemployment rate lagged one
quarter. All variables in the model were first-differenced.
This produced an adequate model with white noise residuals and a
good fit (DW: 1.62, R-sq: 0.64). We then forecasted the long
term unemployment rate through 2009 using unemployment rate
projections from Goldman Sachs. Finally, using the Goldman
Sachs forecasts of the unemployment rate, our forecasts of the long
term unemployment rate, and CBO forecasts of the labor force, we
backed out long term unemployment both in levels and as a percent
of the unemployed.
[3] White collar occupations are management, business, financial,
professional, sales, office, administrative support, and related
occupations. Blue collar occupations are farming, fishing,
forestry, construction, extraction, installation, maintenance,
repair, production, transportation, and material moving
occupations.
[4] Congressional Budget Office, “Options for Responding to
Short-Term Economic Weakness”, January 2008, and M. Zandi,
"Assessing President Bush's Fiscal Policies," Economy.com, July
2004.
Heidi Shierholz is an economist at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.
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