700,000
Are About To Lose Their Extended Jobless Claims Benefits
20
April, 2012
While
virtually everyone has opined on the topic of the massive fiscal
"cliff" set to take place on January 1, 2013, which could
crush US GDP unless American politicians manage to find a way to end
their acrimonious ways, most forget that a far more tangible cliff is
set to take place much sooner, specifically over the next several
months, as those currently collecting handouts from the government in
the form of extended unemployment benefits (i.e., those who have been
out of a job for a year) are about to get as angry as Germants
pre-funding TARGET3, once the free money stops. Goldman explains why:
"First, more than 150,000 workers per month exhaust their
allowed benefits. Second, recently legislated thresholds will reduce
benefit eligibility in many states with below-average unemployment
rates beginning in June. Third, apart from legislative changes, labor
market improvement in some states has taken the state-level
unemployment rate below eligibility thresholds, with many states
looking at likely expiration of one or more tiers of benefits around
mid-year." In other words, unlike the bulk of other transfer
payment programs (read government subsides) which could be extended
with the flick of a switch at the end of the year following the now
traditional 1+ month congressional theatrical impasse, extended
claims can not. The net result: by June some 700,000 people who are
currently collecting benefits will lose everything. It seems that the
old faithful EBT card is about to be denied- and while one can assume
that extended benefits are not a core source of marginal aspirational
product (read AAPL) sales, we all know the truth. Is the time finally
coming to short the one company that is and has always been the
primary beneficiary of government transfer payment largesse? Because
if AAPL's recent shakiness has been, by some, attributed to the
expiration of EBTs, what will happen when Americans are again forced
to pay their mortgages?
Today's
scary chart du jour: Legislated benefit cutoffs have started to take
effect.
Goldman
explains the reasons for this dramatic cliff:
Over
the next several months, eligibility for federally funded jobless
benefits will decline. This is due in part to legislative changes
over the last few months, and in part to broader economic factors. In
particular, there are three factors likely to contribute to reduced
benefit eligibility and increased exhaustion of benefits over the
coming year:
"Natural"
exhaustion of emergency and extended benefits. The rate of benefit
exhaustion has declined somewhat over the last year, but remains
between 150,000 and 200,000 individuals per month on a three-month
average basis, as shown in the first chart below. To estimate this,
we consider "final payments" reported each month by the
Department of Labor in the final two tiers of the Emergency
Unemployment Compensation (EUC) program and in the Extended Benefits
(EB) program, net of first payments in other benefit tiers that might
feed into those programs (for instance, a worker who exhausts Tier 3
will receive a final payment from Tier 3 and a first payment from
Tier 4).
The
most recent legislative extension will soon phase out emergency
benefits in states with lower unemployment rates. When Congress
extended emergency benefits in February, the thresholds for states to
qualify for more generous "tiers" of benefits were made
more restrictive, as shown in the table below. Those changes begin to
take effect in June.
EB
and EUC have started to expire in some states, and will expire soon
in most others. Federally funded extended benefits (EB) provide up to
20 weeks of benefits, generally after EUC has been exhausted. A state
generally becomes eligible for these benefits when its unemployment
rate is at least 6.5 percent and the three-month average unemployment
rate is at least 10 percent greater than it was during the same
three-month period in any of the previous two years. In late 2010,
Congress extended this two year "look-back" period to three
years, in order to avoid cutting off benefits in 2011. However, in
the most recent extension passed by Congress in February, Congress
did not extend the look-back period any further. With the national
unemployment rate roughly equal to the rate in Q1 2009, few if any
states will have unemployment rates at least 10 percent higher than
in the comparable period in any of the last three years, and extended
benefits will end in nearly every state. Some states have also lost
eligibility for the third and fourth tier of EUC due to declining
unemployment rates that have now fallen below the thresholds even
before taking account of the recently legislated changes. In Q1, Tier
4 eligibility ended in four states, and it ends in an additional five
states this month. Assuming that state unemployment rates hold
roughly steady, it appears that this final tier of benefits will be
available in only 11 states by Q4. We estimate Tier 3 benefits will
be available in just over half the states in Q4.
The
upshot is that by around August roughly 700,000 jobless workers will
no longer qualify for benefits who would have otherwise qualified.
The chart above shows the difference between the number of
individuals who would receive benefits each month based on current
policy compared with our projection of eligibility based on
state-level unemployment rates.
And
the consequences:
Reduction
in income. Based on the cumulative reduction in benefit eligibility
shown in the chart above, we estimate weekly benefits would be cut by
a cumulative $6 billion over the course of the year.
Possible
effect on initial claims. The possibility has been raised that
expiration of benefit tiers has led to increased filings of initial
claims, either in response to expiration or in a mistaken attempt to
establish eligibility ahead of expiration (expansion of benefits in
2001 increased claims, for instance, though there have been no clear
signs of this in the data over the last few years). To investigate
this, we estimate a panel regression using the percentage change in
each state's weekly claims rate from its four week average change and
dummy variables for changes in each state's eligibility for Tier 3,
Tier 4, and EB. The difficulty with the analysis is that before the
last few weeks, very few states had lost eligibility for these
programs. That said, we find that a state's loss of EB eligibility
increases claims by 7% in the week following expiration. This implies
a very small effect--less than 1,000 claims--on the claims data for
the week ending April 14 (nine states went off of EB eligibility at
the end of the prior week). If correct, it implies that upcoming
expirations could have a slightly more important effect; another six
states will come off EB benefits the week ending April 28, which
could add a few thousand claims to that week's report. Since these
should be short-lived effects, we do not see benefit expirations as a
reason to expect high levels of claims, but it seems possible that
expirations could add even more noise to weekly claims data.
Slight
reduction in labor participation rate. Emergency and extended benefit
programs paid benefits to 3.2 million unemployed workers at the end
of March. As noted above, labor market improvement combined with
recently legislated changes should result in a cumulative reduction
of 700,000 workers collecting benefits through 2012. As Andrew Tilton
noted a few months ago, extended benefits tend to increase the
measured unemployment rate, through a combination of increased
reported labor force participation and lower intensity of job search
(see "The November Employment Report, and the Impact of Extended
Jobless Benefits on the Unemployment Rate," US Daily, December
2, 2011). Averaging the effects of extended benefits on the
unemployment rate reported in other studies implies that emergency
benefits might add about 0.4 percentage point to the unemployment
rate, mostly due to increased labor force participation. Since these
exhaustions would reduce the number of individuals claiming benefits
by around 20%, the effect would probably be worth only about 0.1
percentage point on the unemployment rate.
In
other words: lower spending, more claims, but at least Obama's dream
of showing a lower, or even negative (yes, it is absolutely possible
if the participation rate drops below 58%) unemployment rate will
come true. Too bad 700,000 more people will be living in a cave to
see the inauguration.
Finally,
from the conclusion:
At
the end of 2012, benefits are scheduled under current law to expire
altogether. Unlike previous scheduled expiration, where individuals
would lose eligibility for benefits only after they exhausted their
current "tier," the current policy would cease paying
benefits at the end of the year with no phase-down). Our current
assumption is that benefits will expire altogether at that point;
this could occur because of an agreement between the parties to allow
them to expire, but like other policies set to expire (the so-called
"fiscal cliff"), benefits could also cease because Congress
fails to agree on any of the fiscal choices it faces at the end of
the year. An additional phase-down of benefits rather than outright
extension is certainly possible as an alternative scenario.
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