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Antipoverty Effects of Unemployment Insurance (Paperback)
Loot Price: R423
Discovery Miles 4 230
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Antipoverty Effects of Unemployment Insurance (Paperback)
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Loot Price R423
Discovery Miles 4 230
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This report examines the antipoverty effects of unemployment
insurance benefits during the past recession and the economic
recovery. The analysis highlights the impact of the additional and
expanded unemployment insurance (UI) benefits available to
unemployed workers through the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act (ARRA; P.L. 111-5) and the Emergency Unemployment Compensation
(EUC08) program (Title IV of P.L. 110-252). In 2011, approximately
56% of all unemployed individuals were receiving UI benefits (down
from a high of 66% in 2010) and thus were directly affected by
legislative changes to the UI system. UI benefits appear to have a
large poverty-reducing effect among unemployed workers who receive
them. Given the extended length of unemployment among jobless
workers, the additional weeks of UI benefits beyond the regular
program's 26-week limit appear to have had an especially important
effect in poverty reduction. Estimates presented in this report are
based on Congressional Research Service (CRS) analysis of 25 years
of data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Annual Social and Economic
Supplement to the Current Population Survey (CPS/ASEC),
administered from 1988 to 2012. The period examined includes the
three most recent economic recessions. This report contributes to
recent research on the antipoverty effects of unemployment
insurance in several ways. Its period of analysis allows
comparisons across the three most recent recessions. The report
includes estimates of the effects on the poverty rate for the
unemployed, for those receiving UI, and for families that report at
least one family member receiving UI. It also estimates how much of
reported UI benefits went directly to decreasing family poverty
levels. This report's analysis shows that UI benefits appear to
reduce the prevalance of poverty significantly among the population
that receives them. The UI benefits' poverty reduction effects
appear to be especially important during and immediately after
recessions. The analysis also finds that there was a markedly
higher impact on poverty in the most recent recession than in the
previous two recessionary periods. The estimated antipoverty
effects of UI benefits in 2011 were about 50% higher than that of
two previous peak years of unemployment-1993 and 2003. In 2011,
over one quarter (26.5%) of unemployed people who received UI
benefits would have been considered poor prior to taking UI
benefits into account; after counting UI benefits, their poverty
rate decreased by just under half, to 13.8%. UI receipt affects not
only the poverty status of the person receiving the benefit, but
the poverty status of all related family members, as well. In 2011,
while an estimated 10.2 million people reported UI receipt during
the year, an additional 15.8 million family members lived with the
10.2 million receiving the benefit. Consequently, UI receipt in
2011 affected the income status of some 26.0 million persons. In
2011, the poverty rate for persons in families who had received
unemployment benefits was almost 40% less than it otherwise would
have been. In 2011, UI benefits lifted an estimated 2.3 million
people out of poverty, of which well over one quarter (26.8%;
620,000) were children living with a family member who received UI
benefits.
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