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Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Incentives Not To Work

"The second way government assistance programs contribute to long-term unemployment is by providing an incentive, and the means, not to work. Each unemployed person has a 'reservation wage'—the minimum wage he or she insists on getting before accepting a job. Unemployment insurance and other social assistance programs increase [the] reservation wage, causing an unemployed person to remain unemployed longer."

Any guess who wrote that? Milton Friedman, perhaps. Simon Legree? Sorry.

Full credit goes to Lawrence H. Summers, the current White House economic adviser, who wrote those sensible words in his chapter on "Unemployment" in the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics, first published in 1999.

Mr. Summers should give a tutorial to the U.S. Senate, which is debating whether to extend unemployment benefits for the fourth time since the recession began in early 2008. The bill pushed by Democrats would extend jobless payments to 99 weeks, or nearly two full years, at a cost of between $7 billion and $10 billion. As Mr. Summers suggests, rarely has there been a clearer case of false policy compassion.

Mr. Summers is merely reflecting what numerous economic studies have shown. The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee put it this way in its January minutes: "The several extensions of emergency unemployment insurance benefits appeared to have raised the measured unemployment rate, relative to levels recorded in past downturns."

It continued: "Some estimates suggested it could account for 1 percentage point or more of the increase in the unemployment rate during the recession." That's more than one million jobless workers.

Alan Reynolds of the Cato Institute has found that the average unemployment episode rose from 10 weeks before the recession to 19 weeks after Congress twice previously extended jobless benefits—to 79 from 26 weeks.

Even as initial unemployment claims have fallen in recent months, the length of unemployment has risen. Mr. Reynolds estimates that the extensions of unemployment insurance and other federal policies have raised the official jobless rate by nearly two percentage points.

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3 comments:

Unknown said...

Let them eat cake. If they do not have cake, let them starve.
-Marie Antoinette

Anonymous said...

There do not seem to be ANY incentives for these people to go back to work somewhere.
They keep extending the benefits over and over again.
Therefore, the lazy people sitting back collecting UE will continue to do so until the government finally says, Ok, you've had enough of Jane Doe's tax dollars, now get out and find a job, no matter what it pays you because we're not paying you anymore!
I'm not against someone getting UE, but this system is broken and is being abused more than it ever has been.

Anonymous said...

So with unemployment still over 9%, you actually want to categorize people recieving UE benefits as lazy?