Author Topic: Study: 60 percent of 2014 job growth caused by expiration of unemployment benefits  (Read 347 times)

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Offline Free Vulcan

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http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/article/2559267?utm_content=buffer76d68&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Sixty percent of job creation in 2014 was caused by the expiration of unemployment benefits, according to a new working paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

In late 2013, a standoff between Republicans and Democrats led to the abrupt expiration of long-term unemployment benefits. Democrats warned that the expiration would have disastrous ramifications, but Republicans had long argued that allowing Americans to collect unemployment benefits for an indefinite period of time provided a disincentive for them to work.

The new new working paper found that the expiration of benefits was responsible for the creation of over 1.8 million jobs. Nearly 1 million of those jobs were created by workers who would have otherwise stayed out of the labor force if unemployment benefits had been extended. Overall, almost 3 million jobs were created in 2014.

“The negative effects of unemployment benefit extensions on employment far outweighs the potential stimulative effects often ascribed to this policy,” the study said

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Well su-prise, su-prise.




The Republic is lost.

Online jmyrlefuller

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How does an unemployed worker create his own job? The employer will have that opening regardless of who is there to fill it, and given the huge slack in the job market the past several years I doubt there has been a shortage of workers, except among those employers with unrealistic expectations.
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