The Inside Job

Congress Talks Unemployment Extensions and Hiring Tax Credit

By Liz Wolgemuth

Posted: October 7, 2009

As early as tomorrow, the Senate is expected to begin debating a measure that would provide an extension of unemployment benefits to all states. The House recently passed an extension, but it provided for aid only to the jobless in states with high unemployment rates. The Senate bill was introduced by Sen. Max Baucus of Montana, where the unemployment rate is just 6.6 percent, compared to 9.8 percent nationwide. If Montana looks good, however—with just a little over 33,000 unemployed workers in September—keep in mind that the number of unemployed has jumped by 75 percent since the start of the recession.

[See one piece of good news about jobs.]

Baucus would pay for the benefits extension with a tax extension—pushing the federal unemployment tax through the end of 2011. While many Republicans would likely be resistant to a tax extension, no one in Congress would argue with the need to prevent a greater threat to the economy—that of 1.5 million Americans exhausting their benefits by the end of the year, as the National Employment Law Project estimates. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has even come out in support of the benefit extension.

There may also be bipartisan support for giving a tax credit to employers who make new hires. The NYT reported House Minority Whip Rep. Eric Cantor said there was "a lot of traction for this kind of idea," and that Congress would welcome White House efforts in that regard. However, Cantor's office today told The Hill that his statement was mischaracterized. Cantor was instead speaking generally about small-business job creation, not the specific tax credit which is "'inefficient and cumbersome," a spokesman says.

[See why the September jobs report was so brutal.]

One issue with a hiring tax credit, last used in the 1970s, is fraud. Back in January, the Wall Street Journal reported the same proposal had little support from Congress:

During the campaign in October, Mr. Obama had proposed a tax credit of $3,000 for each new hire made by businesses, in response to mounting job losses. Transition aides were determined to keep that promise in his economic-recovery package, but the proposal has come under strong criticism on Capitol Hill, with many members of Mr. Obama's own party raising concerns about its effectiveness.

Economists of all political stripes have said businesses would likely claim the credit for hires they would have made anyway, or worse, lay off workers simply to rehire them and claim the tax break. "That's one that gets a lot of opposition," said Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat.

Laid off in ohio

I also got laid off in October 2008 and ran out of unemployment. I am a skilled tradesman (millwright) and can't even get a half descent paying job. Most places want to pay minimum wage and want highly skilled people to fill these jobs. I left Delphi thinking it was going to close. Now I wish I would have stayed. Thanks to globalization here also. If a good paying job opens up there's hundreds of workers after one or several jobs. WE need are jobs returned back to US. The Hell with China. Lets pay them off and tell them to keep the junk that they make. NO MORE TAX Breaks for company s taking their factories over seas. Keep them here. Also we (This country) need to start making foreigners who come over here and buy up store and businesses and don't pay taxes for what 7 years.They need to paying taxes right away. I and the rest of us U.S.A. citizens pay taxes as soon as we start working. IT"S NOT FAR TO US U.S.A. citizens.

Bill of Brookfield OH of OH @ Mar 01, 2010 18:22:55 PM

Ridiculous

WTF........I want to work and no one wants to hire. I say F@$% globalization and outsourcing jobs to cheap foriegn labor. BUY AMERICAN!!!!!!! and kick out all the illegals and jail employers who hire them WTF......it is a really simple concept. Thank you greedy bastards.

king of NJ @ Feb 24, 2010 18:02:52 PM

Laid off in michigan

Im a union laborer for Local 1076 for 18 years. I cant remember ever being off for more than a month or 2 at the worst. I've been off for a year and a half! I got laid off in october of 2008. We were on a huge commercial job in West Bloomfield and we were getting ready to go to 6 days a week.Two days later the general contractor came around to all the trades and told us they were folding the job and we have 2 days to get all our equipment off the job.They couldn't get a loan for 360,000,000.00. Needles to say their is no commercial work in michigan. I've called every company in michigan and I get the same line that "Were not doing anything". So let me tell anyone who thinks that were all just setting here just relaxing and living off our unemployment.You try living off 762. every other week.

Kevin Jones of MI @ Feb 18, 2010 15:29:45 PM

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The Inside Job

You're taking a break from your job-hunting and job-hopping ways and have decided to stay put in your current position. Liz Wolgemuth’s careers blog will show you how to make the very best of your job, each day.

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