Figure

If the $600 weekly unemployment insurance increase is allowed to expire, how many jobs will it cost over the next year?: Jobs cost as a level and as a share of employment

State Jobs cost Jobs cost, as a share of employment
Alabama 43,261 2.1%
Alaska 12,458 3.8%
Arizona 55,566 1.9%
Arkansas 29,984 2.3%
California 836,142 4.7%
Colorado 66,898 2.4%
Connecticut 74,689 4.4%
Delaware 14,621 3.1%
Washington D.C. 19,611 2.4%
Florida 244,921 2.7%
Georgia 186,605 4.0%
Hawaii 32,751 5.0%
Idaho 10,049 1.3%
Illinois 195,149 3.2%
Indiana 59,443 1.9%
Iowa 42,580 2.7%
Kansas 26,089 1.8%
Kentucky 49,751 2.6%
Louisiana 81,945 4.1%
Maine 18,025 2.8%
Maryland 67,486 2.4%
Massachusetts 157,162 4.2%
Michigan 194,520 4.4%
Minnesota 107,633 3.6%
Mississippi 42,744 3.7%
Missouri 59,410 2.0%
Montana 11,800 2.4%
Nebraska 15,422 1.5%
Nevada 84,166 5.9%
New Hampshire 26,941 3.9%
New Jersey 147,911 3.5%
New Mexico 29,012 3.3%
New York 463,968 4.7%
North Carolina 142,496 3.1%
North Dakota 9,293 2.1%
Ohio 129,599 2.3%
Oklahoma 46,018 2.7%
Oregon 115,599 5.9%
Pennsylvania 252,642 4.1%
Rhode Island 20,228 4.0%
South Carolina 54,484 2.5%
South Dakota 5,107 1.1%
Tennessee 80,269 2.5%
Texas 364,576 2.8%
Utah 20,728 1.3%
Vermont 11,831 3.8%
Virginia 106,549 2.6%
Washington 122,224 3.5%
West Virginia 22,606 3.2%
Wisconsin 65,635 2.2%
Wyoming 4,597 1.6%

Notes: We take the relationship between the unemployment rate and the boost to personal income from the extra $600 payment that held in May of 2020 and assume it continues going forward as benefits are extended past July. We apply a multiplier of 1.5 to the personal income boost provided by enhanced UI. We then divide this boost by overall GDP, and apply the resulting percentage change to the average level of employment in the first quarter of 2020 to get an implied employment boost. The numbers in the chart are the average boost to personal income, GDP, and employment between the third quarter of 2020 and the second quarter of 2021. Some quarters would see even larger effects.

Source: Author’s analysis based on data from the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), projections from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), data on continuing unemployment insurance claims from the Department of Labor (DOL), and total nonfarm employment from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Current Employment Statistics (CES).

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