Extra unemployment benefits may be coming

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President Joe Biden speaks as he meets with Senators from both parties in the White House on Feb. 11, 2021.

Doug Mills-Pool/Getty Images

More unemployment benefits may be on the way as Democrats and the Biden administration pursue a $1.9 trillion pandemic aid package.

The legislation would increase the amount of jobless benefits workers receive per week and extend them for several months.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., expects a bill to be signed into law by mid-March. Democrats aim to pass legislation using a budget measure that wouldn’t require Republican backing.

The precise amount and duration of benefits are somewhat uncertain.

It seems likely, based on various proposals, that Democrats would increase benefits by at least $400 a week and extend them at a minimum through August, according to labor experts.

Extra benefits offered by the $900 billion relief package signed by former President Donald Trump in late December are currently scheduled to end after mid-March for some workers and after April 11 for others. Absent more relief, 11 million jobless workers would lose income support.

Biden and Democrat proposals

President Joe Biden proposed upping jobless aid by $400 a week — bringing the total payment to about $739 a week for the average worker, per Labor Department data. He’d also extend benefits through September.

A draft proposal issued by the House Ways and Means Committee this week broadly mirrors Biden’s plan. However, benefits would end on Aug. 29.

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The $400 weekly subsidy would start after March 14, according to the House proposal. It would essentially pick up when the current $300 weekly supplement ends, meaning there wouldn’t be retroactive payments to earlier in the year.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., chair of the Senate Finance Committee, is pushing for a larger subsidy of $600 a week, however.

“I am going to fight like hell to get six,” Wyden said this week.

$400 or $600?

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., wants to increase unemployment benefits by $600 a week.

Andrew Harnik-Pool/Getty Images

The economy has improved since then, meaning enhanced benefits may create a larger disincentive for workers not to return to work, according to some economists.

“I think there’s good reason to think the disincentive effect will be larger in 2021 than in 2020,” said Peter Ganong, an economist and assistant professor at the University of Chicago.

“But I absolutely think there should be [another unemployment supplement] in 2021,” he added, due to ongoing distress in the labor market. Benefits should phase out as more Americans get vaccinated, he said.

Republican votes

“For the Senate to swallow that, I think, is a little more of a problem,” Wayne Vroman, a labor economist at the Urban Institute, a left-leaning think tank.

Congress should err on the side of extending benefits for a longer than shorter period, he said, to push off the need for another potential extension.

“Whatever the ending point is, trying to get conservative Democrats to go along with yet more stimulus will, I think, be quite a bit harder than it appears to be this time around,” Vroman said.

Do you have an unemployment story you’d like to share with CNBC? Please send an e-mail to gregory.iacurci@nbcuni.com.



Source : CNBC