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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) [1] Michelle Bazie
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WASHINGTON - November 7 - The weakness in the economy showed up with a vengeance in today's employment report. As unemployment continues to rise, the percentage of Americans with a job is at its lowest level since 1993 and more than one in five of the unemployed has been looking for work for at least 27 weeks.
Things will not likely get better for job-seekers in coming months. The economy shrank in the third quarter (July-August-September), and economists are forecasting an even larger contraction in the fourth quarter. In the most recent round of bad news, the Institute for Supply Management index of the strength of manufacturing activity has fallen to a level below that in the depths of the previous two recessions, auto sales have plunged, and claims for unemployment insurance are approaching 500,000, their highest levels since late 2003.
In such a weak labor market, unemployed workers are much more likely to exhaust their unemployment insurance (UI) benefits before they can find a job. At the end of June, policymakers enacted an additional 13 weeks of UI benefits for workers exhausting their regular benefits, but those extra weeks of benefits have run out for people who started receiving them in July. The House of Representatives in September overwhelmingly passed and sent to the Senate legislation that would add additional weeks to this temporary extended benefits program (as well as passing a broader stimulus package that included these extended UI benefits).
The Senate has the opportunity to help unemployed job-seekers and put a down payment on the economic stimulus package that will ultimately be needed to counteract the ongoing weakening of the economy by quickly passing this legislation when it comes back later this month.
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Article printed from www.CommonDreams.org