Plus, another round of stimulus checks?Â
By Michael Rainey
The Unemployment System Groans Under Pressure
Millions of people who have lost their jobs due to the coronavirus are having trouble getting the unemployment benefits they are entitled to receive, according to new erpotrs out this week.
About 26 million people have applied for unemployment since the beginning of the outbreak, but many others have been unable to do so as the result of outdated technology and overwhelmed reporting systems at the state level. And some workers who have managed to make claims are still waiting to receive their benefits as states struggle with the unprecedented volume of people seeking assistance.
Some people canât get through: According to survey data released Tuesday by the Economic Policy Institute, for every 10 people who filed for unemployment benefits from mid-March to mid-April, three to four were unable to get through to their state systems, and another two didnât try because they thought it was too difficult to do so. The survey results suggest that in addition to the 21.5 million people who filed for benefits during the four-week period from March 22 to April 18, another 7.8 to 12.2 million people would have applied had they been able to do so.
âThese findings imply the official count of unemployment insurance claims likely drastically understates the extent of employment reductions and the need for economic relief during the coronavirus crisis,â the studyâs authors wrote.
State systems are breaking down: Some states canât handle to sheer number of benefit applications they are receiving, as old technology, understaffing and years of insufficient investment in safety net programs take their toll. One result is that applicants are kept waiting for states to determine their eligibility to receive benefits. According to an [analysis by CQ Roll Call]( based on four weeks of applications through April 11, the hard-hit states of Florida, Ohio, Georgia and New Jersey have failed to process hundreds of thousands of applications (see the chart below).
The reasons for the failures are complex and include a confusing gap between state-level rules and new federal guidelines that enable a wider range of workers to receive benefits â a distinction that requires some applicants to reapply for the federal program after being rejected for the state one.
âThe feds ... put guidance out that said you have to apply for unemployment insurance, get rejected, and then apply for pandemic unemployment insurance, which was a complete disaster,â Melissa DeRosa, a top aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, said last week.
Lots of frustration: The crisis is moving so fast that it can be hard to nail down solid numbers, but stories about frustrated people struggling with the unemployment system are not hard to come by. Jim Hewes, who lost his job in Orlando in March, [told Reuters]( that he tried for more than two weeks to file a benefits claim online and he is still waiting to hear about the paper form he mailed in April. âItâs a shame how you work for so many years and then when you need it, you canât get it,â Hewes said. âItâs almost set up to fail.â
Another Round of Relief Payments?
Top House Democrats want to see more aid for individual taxpayers in the next coronavirus stimulus bill, and on Tuesday the White House indicated that it is looking into making additional direct payments to households, Roll Callâs Jennifer Shutt [reported](.
âThatâs something that weâre studying very carefully, and I know that people in the House are as well,â White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett told reporters.
The IRS said this week that under the terms of the first stimulus package â which provided stimulus checks of as much as $1,200 per adult and $500 per child â it had made more than 89 million payments totaling about $160 billion as of April 17. Overall, the agency expects to send out about 150 million payments worth nearly $300 billion.
Although there are concerns that the next stimulus package could take weeks or longer to negotiate as partisan differences resurface, Hassett expressed confidence it will get done. âI expect that itâs very likely there will be a ⦠deal,â he said. âSo I think the odds of there not being another round, at least one more round, of legislation are pretty low.â
Quote of the Day
âIn the next year or two, the more they do in terms of fiscal stimulus, the quicker the economy will recover. This is a very big hole the economy has to dig out of. There is going to have to be more aid for states.
âOne caveat to all this would be if markets get spooked by deficits and interest rates rise. But we just arenât seeing any of that at this point. Iâm not saying something like that couldnât happen in 10 yearsâ time, but right now, itâs pretty clear the U.S. needs more fiscal help.â
-- Jim OâSullivan, chief U.S. macro strategist at TD Securities, in a [piece by Politico's Ben White]( on the risk that the economy could fall off a "coronavirus cliff."
The Navy Blue Angels and Air Force Thunderbirds buzzed New York City today in a tribute to health care workers battling the coronavirus. Here's [a look]( as they flew over the Brooklyn Bridge.
Send your tips and feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. Follow us on Twitter: [@yuvalrosenberg]( [@mdrainey]( and [@TheFiscalTimes](. And please tell your friends they can [sign up here]( for their own copy of this newsletter.
News
- [U.S. Coronavirus Cases Top 1 Million as Projected Death Toll Rises]( â Reuters
- [House Wonât Return to Session Next Week, a Top Democrat Says in Reversal]( â Bloomberg
- [Trump Tells Governors to 'Seriously Consider and Maybe Get Going' on Opening Schools]( â CNN
- [U.S. Chamber Pushes Back on New Business Rules in Reopening]( â Bloomberg
- [Trump to Sign Order Keeping Meat Processing Plants Open]( â Associated Press
- [Mnuchin Says No Bailout for States With Badly Managed Budgets]( â Bloomberg
- [Schumer Calls for Hearings on Trump's 'Abject Failure at Implementing' Coronavirus Relief]( â The Hill
- [Some Businesses Wonât Return Funds Despite Pressure From Trump Administration]( â Washington Post
- [Small Business Loans Above $2 Million Will Get Full Audit to Make Sure Theyâre Valid, Mnuchin Says]( â CNBC
- [Conservative Republicans Say COVID Spending Must Consider Growing Debt]( â The Hill
- [Coronavirus Relief Often Pays Workers More Than Work]( â Wall Street Journal (paywall)
- [Amid Coronavirus Distress, Wealthy Hospitals Hoard Millions]( â Kaiser Health News
- [The US Will Need to Spend Trillions More as Economy Takes Until 2022 to Fully Recover: CNBC Survey]( â CNBC
- [Lawmakers Are Furious Over the Pentagonâs Lackluster, Disjointed COVID-19 Response]( â Task & Purpose
- [Pentagon Shifts Money From Overseas Projects to Fill Hole Caused by Border Wall Funding]( â The Hill
Views and Analysis
- [The Coming Greater Depression of the 2020s]( â Nouriel Roubini, Project Syndicate
- [The âGreat Repressionâ Is Here and It Will Make Past Downturns Look Tame, Economist Says]( â MarketWatch
- [The Next Coronavirus Relief Package Should Provide Aid to State and Local Governments, Protect Employed and Unemployed Workers, and Invest in Our Democracy]( â Celine McNicholas, Josh Bivens, and Heidi Shierholz, Economic Policy Institute
- [Hereâs How to Cover Uninsured Americans During the Pandemic]( â Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Politico
- [States That Snubbed Obamacare May Regret It]( â Matthew A. Winkler, Bloomberg
- [Republicans, Who Do You Think Is Bailing Out Your State?]( â New York Times Editorial Board
- [The Debate About Whether Expanded Unemployment Insurance Is Too Generous, Explained]( â Emily Stewart, Vox
- [Americans Need More Than a $1,200 Check. A Guaranteed Basic Income Is the Stimulus We Deserve]( â Michael D. Tubbs, MarketWatch
- [The Geographic Inequity of Small Business Coronavirus Aid](
- â Courtenay Brown, Axios
- [The Federal Government's Coronavirus Response Risks Spiking Inflation]( âDion Rabouin, Axios
- [The IRS Could Speed Up Coronavirus Rebates By Opening Secure Phone Lines]( â Elaine Maag, Tax Policy Center
[Like Us on Facebook]( [Like Us on Facebook](
[Read Us On the Web]( [Read Us On the Web](
Copyright © 2020 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed at our website, thefiscaltimes.com, or through Facebook.
Our mailing address is:
The Fiscal Times
399 Park AvenueNew York, NY 10022
[Add us to your address book](
Want to change how you receive these emails? [Update your preferences]( or [unsubscribe](.