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US: unemployment benefits running out
Record Number to Run Out of Unemployment Benefits
By Kirstin Downey
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, January 30, 2004; Page A05
A record-high 375,000 jobless workers will exhaust their unemployment
insurance this month and an estimated 2 million workers will find
themselves in the same predicament during the first half of the year,
according to an analysis of Labor Department statistics by the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities.
The report from the center, a liberal research and policy group, found
that in the first six months of the year, about 5,800 jobless workers in
the District of Columbia, 20,200 in Maryland and 29,600 in Virginia will
run out of unemployment benefits unless they find new jobs or get
additional government help.
The jobless recovery has become an issue in this presidential election
year, and the report shows the jobless benefits will run out for large
numbers of workers in several key states, including Michigan,
Pennsylvania, Indiana, North Carolina and South Carolina.
While the unemployment rate dropped to 5.7 percent in December, down from
6.3 percent in June, businesses added only 1,000 jobs that month. The
country has lost more than 2.8 million manufacturing jobs in a steady
erosion over the past 41 months.
Congress voted in 2002 to give unemployed workers an additional 13 weeks
of benefits and extended the program twice. But it expired just before
Christmas. Congressional Republicans said another extension wasn't
necessary because the economy was gaining strength and job growth was near
at hand.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.), who has proposed extending the
benefits again, told reporters yesterday that such action is needed
because "we are living in an economy that is not creating jobs."
"Republicans lead the opposition on an unemployment insurance extension
because they believe they have solved America's economic problems,"
Clinton said. "People are desperate but they are being ignored by the Bush
administration."
Labor Department officials noted that President Bush approved extensions
of jobless benefits since he took office.
"New jobs have been created five months in a row, while the nation's
unemployment rate and new [insurance] claims have fallen significantly,"
Ed Frank, a department spokesman, said in a statement. "Still, the
president has said many times that he's not going to rest until every
person who wants a job can find one."
"We're in a deficit situation, and we need to be very careful about
government expenditures," said Jack Finn, a spokesman for Sen. John Ensign
(R-Nev.), who opposed a recent effort by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.)
to seek unanimous consent for a vote on extending unemployment insurance
benefits again.
"We can't get into the position where benefits are extended indefinitely,"
Finn said. "There needs to be a point where we draw the line."
The center's report said the 375,000 workers who will draw their last
jobless check this month is the highest number for January in the three
decades that the statistics have been tracked.
====================================
To this day, no one has come up with a set of rules for
originality. There aren't any. [Les Paul]
- Thread context:
- Re: Iowa subborned, (continued)
- clinton and clinton,
Dan Scanlan Fri 30 Jan 2004, 20:01 GMT
- US: unemployment benefits running out,
Eubulides Fri 30 Jan 2004, 19:41 GMT
- Kerry's falsehoods,
Louis Proyect Fri 30 Jan 2004, 18:13 GMT
- Was that health care or wealth care?,
Diane Monaco Fri 30 Jan 2004, 17:55 GMT
- Higher Price Tag for Drug Benefit,
Diane Monaco Fri 30 Jan 2004, 17:55 GMT
- Correction/addition,
Jurriaan Bendien Fri 30 Jan 2004, 17:32 GMT
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