Every few months Congress goes back-and-forth about extended long term unemployment benefits. Clearly getting a job is not easy in this economy, and some people are for whatever reason stuck in areas that have very few opportunities. There are also a lot of families dependent on these benefits. There could be economic fall-out if their benefits are cut off. Myself and many people I know have at times struggled to find work in the past few years. Some people need help for longer periods of time, but where do we draw the line?At what point does long term unemployment benefits become just straight-up welfare? If some people aren't forced to find work, they won't. So should we start cutting off benefits to those people who have been collecting for years now? And if so, how do we do it in such a way that wouldn't cause serious but unintended negative economic consequences?
11/18/2010 3:59:51 PM
I doubt if an extension could survive a filibuster at this point in the lame-duck session, but with the new congress coming in, there is no need to worry about more unemployment benefits after they get seated.I think the lame-duck will be more focused on things like trying to get a vote on the New START treaty, and figuring out which of these tax cut plans to go with:
11/18/2010 4:08:51 PM
You make it sound like the Republicans will quickly and easily cut unemployment benefits during the new congressional term. I don't know about that. Some in congress would consider that political suicide. It's much easier to vote against cutting unemployment benefits when you know it will pass anyway.Tax cut specific discussion belongs in a different thread. [Edited on November 18, 2010 at 4:20 PM. Reason : .]
11/18/2010 4:16:53 PM
11/18/2010 9:02:04 PM
Of course, the tea baggers want us to go back 100 years, there were no unemployment benefits back then......if we could do without back then, we can do without now!!!!!!!!! TEABAGGER '12[Edited on November 18, 2010 at 9:20 PM. Reason : w]
11/18/2010 9:19:53 PM
Yes, long term benefits need to expire to force people into employment. Long term benefits should never have existed in the first place.
11/18/2010 10:08:06 PM
Quick question.So when they talk about extending the "temporary extended unemployment compensation" thing, what do they mean exactly?Currently, a lot of people can get up to 99 weeks of unemployment. Are they trying to extend this beyond 99 weeks--like an extra three months or something?ORAre they trying to extend the current arrangement so the newly unemployed can continue to get up to 99 weeks?
11/18/2010 11:15:11 PM
11/19/2010 1:21:22 PM
11/19/2010 1:38:47 PM
11/19/2010 4:06:53 PM
short term beneifts should exist to quickly help people trying to find a new joblong term benefits and welfare should be merged and the goal should be switched from maintenance to re-education.
11/19/2010 4:20:05 PM
11/19/2010 4:40:11 PM
11/19/2010 5:00:48 PM
Opportunity is dead in this country. Meanwhile, bankers are skimming trillions off the top and Obama is appointing them to high level positions in his administration. I don't think anyone really comprehends how much the standard of living has already dropped, or how far it has to go. People with experience, certifications, and degrees can't find jobs after a year or more looking. The people graduating from universities now are beyond fucked, barely scraping by performing trivial tasks in any job they can get. Want to live like people lived in the 90s? It'll have to be in another country, or you'll have to be one of the elite few that has connections.
11/19/2010 5:03:32 PM
11/19/2010 5:23:04 PM
^^ Dude, what do you read that you are so doom and gloomy? Fortunately, we produce enough wealth in this nation that at the present rate of skimming by the elites, the rest of us still have it pretty good. We're currently still able to, despite the rates rising, to feed people via food stamps and other support programs.Things aren't great, but they likely won't end in fire and ashes like most of your posts would lead someone to believe.
11/19/2010 5:25:51 PM
11/19/2010 5:53:34 PM
^^^Both good points. Four year degrees are basically the new high school degree. You need the right kind of training and specialization to get a decent paying job, and even then you're working against a saturated job market. Perhaps the wealthy lifestyles that became common place in the past few decades was a result of a false boom, but there's no reason to believe we'll be going back to that.^^Are you seeing a light at the end of the tunnel that I'm not? Are we going to return to robust economic growth? What am I missing?I don't know how bad things will get. A lot of people have lost their jobs, and there are no jobs that pay comparative salaries. They're falling behind on mortgages, then bills. The cost of food is going up, the cost of oil is going up. For the middle class, an increasingly higher percentage of income is going towards basic survival needs. I'll ask again, what is going to change?^Engineering jobs are generally reserved for the affluent. What about everyone else? Keep on trucking in your low paying service sector job and pray that you survive the next round of lay offs?[Edited on November 19, 2010 at 6:03 PM. Reason : ]
11/19/2010 5:57:24 PM
Important things to get a job in order of importance#1 who you know#2 dont be a jackass#3 what you know
11/19/2010 6:00:39 PM
11/19/2010 6:14:06 PM
2 yrs is enough. imo
11/19/2010 6:20:17 PM
11/19/2010 6:38:16 PM
11/20/2010 1:53:08 AM
11/20/2010 9:22:53 AM
11/22/2010 9:54:35 PM
11/22/2010 10:20:53 PM
11/22/2010 10:40:55 PM
I don't know anyone like that. I have known people that might have been kinda looking for work on occasion, but they didn't really have anyone lighting a fire under their ass to do it. The natural disincentive for that kind of attitude is, "shit, I'm going to die if I don't find work." Survival is the strongest instinct we have. Is it better to engineer a system where we remove that constraint? I can't see how.
11/22/2010 11:03:15 PM
11/23/2010 5:12:03 PM
11/23/2010 5:33:06 PM
I'd imagine it's pretty tough to support a family or pay a mortgage on unemployment, much less do both, so realistically I'd imagine the number is fairly low.
11/23/2010 7:25:45 PM
11/23/2010 10:17:54 PM
I live in a low-income apt complex. The only person I know of who collects unemployment is a wheel-chair bound mother two buildings down. She is actively job-seeking.That said, I don't support another extension of jobless benefits. I think 46 weeks is enough time to find some sort of job.
11/24/2010 10:24:56 AM
You got to factor in the associated costs with NOT extending the benefits....they will be a drain on society and money no mater what happens....
11/24/2010 2:22:42 PM
^ And how would that be?
11/24/2010 3:33:55 PM
I'm still confused about engineering jobs being reserved for the affluent. Can you provide an explanation for this accusation?
11/24/2010 8:14:16 PM
I suspect it works the other way. Affluence is reserved for those with engineering jobs.
11/24/2010 8:32:09 PM
11/24/2010 10:46:28 PM
11/24/2010 10:53:30 PM
Yeah, I should have gone with "tends not" rather than "isn't going" There will always be certain individuals that excel, even in a poor environment.[Edited on November 24, 2010 at 11:34 PM. Reason : ]
11/24/2010 11:22:43 PM
11/25/2010 12:17:37 AM