AP/ November 5, 2011, 8:43 PM

Most U.S. unemployed no longer receive benefits

Job seekers wait in line to enter the San Francisco Hirevent job fair at the Hotel Whitmore on July 12, 2011 in San Francisco, California.

Job seekers wait in line to enter the San Francisco Hirevent job fair at the Hotel Whitmore on July 12, 2011 in San Francisco, California. / Getty Images/Justin Sullivan

WASHINGTON - The jobs crisis has left so many people out of work for so long that most of America's unemployed are no longer receiving unemployment benefits.

Early last year, 75 percent were receiving checks. The figure is now 48 percent — a shift that points to a growing crisis of long-term unemployment. Nearly one-third of America's 14 million unemployed have had no job for a year or more.

Congress is expected to decide by year's end whether to continue providing emergency unemployment benefits for up to 99 weeks in the hardest-hit states. If the emergency benefits expire, the proportion of the unemployed receiving aid would fall further.

The ranks of the poor would also rise. The Census Bureau says unemployment benefits kept 3.2 million people from slipping into poverty last year. It defines poverty as annual income below $22,314 for a family of four.

Yet for a growing share of the unemployed, a vote in Congress to extend the benefits to 99 weeks is irrelevant. They've had no job for more than 99 weeks. They're no longer eligible for benefits.

Their options include food stamps or other social programs. Nearly 46 million people received food stamps in August, a record total. That figure could grow as more people lose unemployment benefits.

So could the government's disability rolls. Applications for the disability insurance program have jumped about 50 percent since 2007.

"There's going to be increased hardship," said Wayne Vroman, an economist at the Urban Institute.

The number of unemployed has been roughly stable this year. Yet the number receiving benefits has plunged 30 percent.

Government unemployment benefits weren't designed to sustain people for long stretches without work. They usually don't have to. In the recoveries from the previous three recessions, the longest average duration of unemployment was 21 weeks, in July 1983.

By contrast, in the wake of the Great Recession, the figure reached 41 weeks in September. That's the longest on records dating to 1948. The figure is now 39 weeks.

"It was a good safety net for a shorter recession," said Carl Van Horn, an economist at Rutgers University. It assumes "the economy will experience short interruptions and then go back to normal."

Weekly unemployment checks average about $300 nationwide. If the extended benefits aren't renewed, growth could slow by up to a half-percentage point next year, economists say.

The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that each $1 spent on unemployment benefits generates up to $1.90 in economic growth. The CBO has found that the program is the most effective government policy for increasing growth among 11 options it's analyzed.

Jon Polis lives in East Greenwich, Rhode Island, one of the 20 states where 99 weeks of benefits are available. He used them all up after losing his job as a warehouse worker in 2008. His benefits paid for groceries, car maintenance and health insurance.

Now, Polis, 55, receives disability insurance payments, food stamps and lives in government-subsidized housing. He's been unable to find work because employers in his field want computer skills he doesn't have.

"Employers are crying that they can't find qualified help," he said. But the ones he interviewed with "weren't willing to train anybody."

From late 2007, when the recession began, to early 2010, the number of people receiving unemployment benefits rose more than four-fold, to 11.5 million.

But the economy has remained so weak that an analysis of long-term unemployment data suggests that about 2 million people have used up 99 weeks of checks and still can't find work.

Contributing to the smaller share of the unemployed who are receiving benefits: Some of them are college graduates or others seeking jobs for the first time. They aren't eligible. Only those who have lost a job through no fault of their own qualify.

The proportion of the unemployed receiving benefits usually falls below 50 percent during an economic recovery. Many have either quit jobs or are new to the job market and don't qualify.

Today, the proportion is falling for a very different reason: Jobs remain scarce. So more of the unemployed are exhausting their benefits.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has noted that the long-term unemployed increasingly find it hard to find work as their skills and professional networks erode. In a speech last month, Bernanke called long-term unemployment a "national crisis" that should be a top priority for Congress.

Lawmakers will have to decide whether to continue the extended benefits by the end of this year. If the program ends, nearly 2.2 million people will be cut off by February.

Congress has extended the program nine times. But it might balk at the $45 billion cost. It will be the first time the Republican-led House of Representatives will vote on the issue.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
51 Comments Add a Comment
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rp1211 says:
It's laughable that anyone thinks that unemployment "creates a welfare lifestyle". I was unemployed for 2 yrs and when it ran out, I did apply for those minimum wage jobs and was soundly rejected all around. I am very very lucky that I was just hired near my old salary- with benefits! However, living on a bare fraction of former pay drained all remaining resources and was a strain on my health. Anyone who "enjoys" unemployment obviously isn't paying rent. I doubt that most people want to abuse the system.
300 a week isn't paradise.
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ayantheworld says:
Thank you, President Yomama!
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ffoulkes-2009 says:
It has been a while since I logged onto this comments page. I thought that, perhaps some of those that were extremists would have calmed down by now. That, obviously has not happened...At least a few on here seemed interested in real debate. For those few of you, it has been a pleasure...for those Trolls who have been trolling for at least 5 years on here...Please, find a life...
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expatriate2 says:
Many years ago, friends asked me why I would sell everything I had and move to Mexico. Today no one asks. I live in a small village where the violence of the nation has not touched. I bought a large piece of land for $7,000 USD and constructed a 3,400 sq ft home for $21,000 USD. My combined utilities are less than $150 USD per month. A woman cleans my house for $8 per day. I do not have a pension so I started a couple small businesses that give me a good income. Now everything is reversed and I ask friends why they continue to suffer under the economic conditions of the U.S. when the good life can be found in so many other places.
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ffoulkes-2009 replies:
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Perhaps your American friends are truly Americans and not people that just take from our country and run off to spend it elsewhere. You know, spending money you made in the USA in Mexico is just as bad as sending a job in the USA to Mexico, or hiring an illegal here in the States so they can send the money back to Mexico...Either way, it is a hemorrhage of our cash out of the nation. It is quite possible you have more honorable US citizens as friends than you, yourself are or were...
expatriate2 replies:
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I find it strange that those who are first to thump their chest as "true Americans" are also those who demean those who use a Constitutional right to travel or live where they choose. I sold what I worked for and paid for with my sweat. I served with the 3rd Marines in Nam and walk with a cane to this day to prove it. So don't talk to me about your phony honor that condemns provisions of a document that guarantees each citizen the right to do what I have done. Incidentally, as an expatriate I still pay taxes so that you and those like you can benefit from it while I gain none. I was honorable enough to not apply for any pension so that I would not be part of your imagined "hemmorage" of funds leaving the U.S. I take care of myself just as I have alwasy done and if you want to know one of the reasons I chose to leave the U.S. just read your post again.
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rightbehind says:
We have to get past the republican economic terrorism. As a taxpayer I think the unemployment benefits need to be extended. The economy is doing great in my area. Lots of companies are hiring. If the trend continues they will be soon be having trouble finding enough workers despite republican economic terrorism efforts to tank this country.
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ffoulkes-2009 replies:
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As a taxpayer, I think the longer the unemployment benefits are paid, the less likely anyone on unemployment will take a job for 8 bucks an hour....or two, and get ahead of where they are now ON unemployment. Government welfare taken to this extreme has caused people to become dependent on it. It has to end some time, and there are tons of jobs for 8, 9, 10 bucks an hour needing done and not getting done because it is easier to sit on your couch and type on message boards and play games while smoking pot and drinking beer off the government check you are getting in the mail.
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cozzicon says:
Well, I've been unemployed since January 2010. I was an IT executive.

It kinda stinks finding that with 18 years of IT experience I cannot get hired. But this is how the world is right now.

I'm not homeless or starving. And I refused taking unemployment. But I have great sympathy for those who are far worse off than me.

People who do not have that sympathy- are simply inhumane.
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involved_indi says:
I know many,many people who simply refused to look for a job while they have that government check coming in. My company actually offered a very well paying job to an applicant only to be asked "Can you call me back in a year, I still can draw unemployment for that long". The unemployment benefit is a safety net, not a way of life.
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ffoulkes-2009 replies:
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Dot, enough people ARE like the one he described to make this whole extending of unemployment a baaad idea. People get used to not working. They like it. All these extensions are creating a whole new welfare class in this country. It isn't just unemployment...many are trying for SSI for their 'disabilities' that they just CAN'T work past...Sheesh. I know so many on that crap that play basketball and baseball with their families, and climb on the roof to patch it up...but they are too unhealthy to work? I got type I diabetes (from birth) Rheumatoid Arthritis (from birth) neuropathy from the diabetes that wasn't diagnosed till I had it over thirty years. I worked hard labor jobs. It hurt like heck, but I did it. I see these healthy young people applying for disability because their unemployment ran out,and they are too above working for 8 bucks an hour, that they would rather lie to the government and say they are 100% disabled and permanently unable to work...Give me a break. That is the kind of mentality that all this entitlement society is creating. We have a generation that is afraid to work. Afraid they might not make as much as their best paid friend...well, that friend probably worked his way up to that pay scale.

It makes me sad to see the state of America today. We used to be the most independent people in the world, and now we are turning into a society that can't take care of themselves without someone handing them a living for no effort.
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gep1955 says:
Thanks to Obama and the democrats who had complete control of DC for 2 years, this is the result. This is their idea of focus like a laser beam on jobs? Why doesn't the press hound Obama on jobs, which matters to people, like they hound Cain on harrassment, which doesn't.
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ffoulkes-2009 replies:
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...complete control of DC for 2 years, both houses for longer yet...Oh, btw...It took about a year of the Dems having both houses before all heck broke loose, didn't it?
retm-w replies:
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Those bush taxbreaks are really working, you know the ones that were supposed to create jobs.
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tsigili says:
The government must find a new way to report those numbers, because new claims will NO LONGER give us the correct numbers, at all.

Now, we are looking at people being unemployed for years, not months, and that is likely to become the norm.
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skeezix06 replies:
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I think they're afraid to report the actual numbers of the unemployed. And, of course, rigging the statistics to say what they want them to say makes them look better or not quite as bad.
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spj3k54 says:
Hey, Christmas is coming. Don't buy foreign made gifts. Use your imagination. Buy hand made toys from local craftsmen. Give your friends gift certificates for haircuts, manicures, lawn service, home cleaning services, baked goods, restaurants, anything that generates income in your area. And carry on this practice throughout the year. We are in a mess created by ourselves and those we elected and those we do business with. Support those that support America! May sound kind of lame to some, but starting out at the grassroots level and making small changes to each person and household. Will hopefully begin a process that big government and big business are not willing or capable of doing.

Happy Thanksgiving and A Very Merry Christmas to all!
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rightbehind replies:
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Very good words. Look at the labels before you buy.
retm-w replies:
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rightbehind

The problem is, the majority of americans only look at the price tag, and could care less about the labels where it was made.
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