October 13, 2004

NUMBER OF UNEMPLOYED WHO HAVE GONE WITHOUT FEDERAL BENEFITS HITS RECORD 3 MILLION
by Isaac Shapiro

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Since late December, when the federal Temporary Extended Unemployment Compensation program stopped providing additional aid to individuals exhausting their regular unemployment benefits, a record number of jobless workers have exhausted their regular benefits, gone without federal aid, and received neither a paycheck nor an unemployment check.  Based on actual figures through August and the author’s estimates through mid-October:

 

State-by-State Data

The Temporary Extended Unemployment Compensation (TEUC) program was created in March 2002 to provide additional weeks of federally funded unemployment benefits to jobless workers who have run out of regular, state-funded unemployment benefits but have not found a job.  TEUC provided up to 13 weeks of benefits to most workers who participated in it.  The program phased out when Congress declined to extend the program beyond the close of December 2003.  President Bush did not ask Congress for an extension.   Individuals who have exhausted their regular unemployment benefits since December 20, 2003 have not been eligible for TEUC aid.

Table 1 shows state-by-state estimates of the number of exhaustees from late December through mid-October.  While some state labor markets are stronger than others, the state-by-state estimates demonstrate that across the country, an exceptionally large number of unemployed workers have exhausted their regular benefits without finding work and have gone without a paycheck or unemployment benefits.  As the table indicates:

 

Labor Market Health and the Termination of Federal Benefits

These figures reflect the far-from-robust labor market that has marked the past year and the enduring severity of long-term unemployment.  This severity also is documented by other labor market indicators.  For instance, according to the labor market report that the Department of Labor released Friday, October 8:

Also of note, the temporary federal unemployment benefits programs in place in both the early 1980s and early 1990s were not terminated until the number of jobs returned to or surpassed its level than there had been at the start of those downturns.  By contrast, today there are still 940,000 fewer jobs than there were at the start of the latest downturn.

If the labor market begins to generate jobs at a healthy clip and long-term unemployment drops significantly, the absence of a temporary federal benefits program will be appropriate.  But the central finding here — that a record three million individuals have already been denied aid due to the demise of the TEUC program — suggests that the program ended far too soon.

Table 1.  Estimated exhaustions from late December 2003 through mid-October 2004

State

Number of unemployed exhausting their regular benefits

Number then qualifying for federal/state "extended benefits" Number of regular program exhaustees not qualifying for additional federal aid
Alabama 30,600   0   30,600  
Alaska 18,200   12,300   5,900  
Arizona 38,700   0   38,700  
Arkansas 28,700   0   28,700  
California 484,400   0   484,400  
Colorado 40,100   0   40,100  
Connecticut 41,900   0   41,900  
DC 9,100   0   9,100  
Delaware 8,000   0   8,000  
Florida 124,700   0   124,700  
Georgia 81,100   0   81,100  
Hawaii 6,500   0   6,500  
Idaho 16,000   0   16,000  
Illinois 149,300   0   149,300  
Indiana 66,800   0   66,800  
Iowa 22,900   0   22,900  
Kansas 27,600   0   27,600  
Kentucky 26,700   0   26,700  
Louisiana 33,200   0   33,200  
Maine 10,100   0   10,100  
Maryland 35,000   0   35,000  
Massachusetts 83,300   0   83,300  
Michigan 140,900   12,700   128,200  
Minnesota 47,400   0   47,400  
Mississippi 18,400   0   18,400  
Missouri 58,800   0   58,800  
Montana 8,200   0   8,200  
Nebraska 15,900   0   15,900  
Nevada 22,800   0   22,800  
New Hampshire 4,800   0   4,800  
New Jersey 146,000   0   146,000  
New Mexico 13,000   0   13,000  
New York 230,000   0   230,000  
North Carolina 99,700   0   99,700  
North Dakota 4,200   0   4,200  
Ohio 91,600   0   91,600  
Oklahoma 26,100   0   26,100  
Oregon 55,100   4,300   50,800  
Pennsylvania 140,600   0   140,600  
Puerto Rico 42,200   0   42,200  
Rhode Island 13,800   0   13,800  
South Carolina 43,100   0   43,100  
South Dakota 1,400   0   1,400  
Tennessee 54,000   0   54,000  
Texas 188,500   0   188,500  
Utah 15,400   0   15,400  
Vermont 4,400   0   4,400  
Virgin Islands 800   0   800  
Virginia 42,000   0   42,000  
Washington 60,800   4,700   56,100  
West Virginia 10,500   0   10,500  
Wisconsin 66,100   0   66,100  
Wyoming 3,900   0   3,900  
United States 3,053,300   34,000   3,019,300  

Source:  U.S. Department of Labor.  Actual through August, author estimate through mid-October.


End Notes:

[1] This historical comparison examines the estimated number of individuals exhausting their regular benefits and going without further federal aid over the first 10 months of 2004 and compares the estimate to the number of exhaustees in every other 10-month period going back to the early 1970s.  Data prior to the early 1970s are not available.  The comparison adjusts for the growth in the labor force over time; that is, the record figure is not a reflection of the growth in the labor force but of the current severity of long-term unemployment.

[2] Jared Bernstein, “Jobs Picture,” Economic Policy Institute, October 8, 2004.