Researchers say there is only one plausible explanation for this persistent disparity. “It’s racial discrimination,” said Valerie Wilson, director of the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity and the Economy. “We see [the disparity] at different age cohorts, we see it all across the country, we see it at every level of education.”
ProPublica
July 20, 2020
According to an analysis done by researchers from the Economic Policy Institute using federal Department of Labor data, about 9 percent of North Carolina’s labor force were receiving unemployment insurance by the end of June, about 432,351 individuals. More than a quarter million (253,496) had also applied for or received pandemic unemployment assistance of $600/ month from the federal government.
North Carolina Health News
July 20, 2020
State and local governments have shed more than 1.5 million jobs since February, and the Economic Policy Institute projects those numbers could rise steeply without more federal aid, taking a toll on women and Black public sector workers. Many states have announced planned cuts to education, health care, public safety, and other programs as they grapple with balancing their budgets and hundreds of cities have halted infrastructure projects.
Sinclair Broadcast Group
July 20, 2020
“2.4 million workers applied for the unemployment insurance benefits nationwide last week, and here’s the thing, that is the 17th week in a row that unemployment claims have been more than twice the wrost week of the great recession,” said Heidi Sheirholz of the Economic Policy Institute.
WNEM-TV (Michigan)
July 20, 2020
According to the Economic Policy Institute, rising rates of unemployment during the pandemic have hurt Black Americans more than any other group. This is a health equity problem because, as the Kaiser Family Foundation reports, 49% of people receive health insurance through their work. Unemployment means a loss of health insurance coverage, which is now the case for 18% of Americans.
Chicago Sun Times
July 20, 2020
In a post on the Economic Policy Institute’s website, EPI Research Director Josh Bivens explained that the incentive effect of the extra unemployment payment is “truly trivial” because the economy is constrained by a lack of demand and “new job openings are all but guaranteed to be fewer than jobless potential workers” over the next few months.
Media Matters for America
July 20, 2020
Heidi Shierholz, a senior economist and director of policy at the Economic Policy Institute, said in an interview that the added unemployment payments have helped stave off even worse economic impacts of the coronavirus, which has already led to tens of millions of Americans losing their jobs. Ending it now would not only cause “massive human suffering” for the workers who will have that vital source of income shut off, Shierholz noted, but could also have the added consequence of causing 5.1 million more jobs to be lost.
The American Independent
July 20, 2020
“The millions who will remain jobless after the extra $600 is cut off will have no choice but to drastically cut their spending, causing a sharp decline in their living standards,” Heidi Shierholz, senior economist at the progressive-leaning Economic Policy Institute think-tank wrote in a blog post on Thursday.
Al Jazeera
July 20, 2020
The J-1 program, supposedly a cultural exchange experience for students, is similarly exploitative, according to a report last year from the Economic Policy Institute. The skilled workers of the H-1B program are paid more than H-2A, H-2B and J-1 workers, but they still get less than the local median wage for their occupations.
Truthout
July 20, 2020
Minority workers make up more than half of the “essential workers” who supply their fellow Americans with goods and services essential to their well-being. They are 53% of the people working in industrial, commercial, residential facilities and services, according to the Economic Policy Institute, and 50% of workers in food and agriculture.
Arizona Republic
July 20, 2020