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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) Unemployment On The Rise
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- February 8, 1982
- ECONOMY & BUSINESS
- Unemployment On the Rise
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fewer benefits mean harder times for the jobless
- </p>
- <p> It is one of the most watched, and most politically potent, of
- the monthly economic figures issued by Washington, and it keeps
- creeping upward. The unemployment rate in the U.S. last December
- reached 8.9%, in contrast to 8.4% the previous month and 8% in
- October. In human terms, the number meant that 9.5 million
- American workers had no jobs in December. This week the Bureau
- of Labor Statistics will announce the unemployment rate for
- January and it will almost certainly be up again, perhaps
- surpassing the previous postwar record of 9% reached in May
- 1975.
- </p>
- <p> The growing jobless rate comes at a crucial time for the nation,
- since the Reagan Administration's economic program of budget and
- tax cuts is only now beginning to take effect. As the President
- pointed out in his State of the Union message, a 1% jump in the
- unemployment rate raises the federal deficit by $25 billion
- because of lost taxes and additional unemployment benefits. For
- the first time in years, polls show that more Americans are
- worried about unemployment than inflation. The jobless rate, if
- it keeps climbing, could well become the primary focus of the
- political debate right up to the November elections. At stake
- are not just Republican fortunes in the House and Senate, but
- Reagan's effectiveness as President in wooing Congress to do his
- bidding. Says one White House official: "You don't lose
- elections because of inflation. You do lose elections because
- of high unemployment. If unemployment breaks 10%, we're in big
- trouble. And if it's now down to 8.5% by the election, it's
- going to have serious consequences."
- </p>
- <p> It is doubly troublesome that the ranks of the jobless are
- growing at a time when many of the cushions softening the pain
- of unemployment have been deflated. Reaganomics has whittled
- away at unemployment compensation and has tightened eligibility
- rules. At the height of the 1973-75 recession, for example, more
- than 75% of the 8.4 million jobless Americans received benefits;
- last December only 37% of those out of work got unemployment
- compensation. By eliminating 300,000 public service jobs
- provided by the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act
- (CETA), the Reagan Administration shut off a source of work that
- has been both praised as a safety net for minorities and damned
- as a boondoggle. Finally, there have been major cuts in public
- employment services, which placed 3.7 million people in jobs
- last year, including 583,000 who had been drawing unemployment
- benefits.
- </p>
- <p> Traditionally, Congress has tried to bring down unemployment
- with public works projects and public service jobs. But those
- familiar panaceas have been largely discredited, and even many
- Democrats are skeptical that old methods should be tried again.
- Says Massachusetts Senator Paul Tsongas: "We've been down that
- road before. It doesn't produce anything." The legislation
- being offered now to fight unemployment would stress job
- training for the private sector, not creating public jobs.
- Democrat Ted Kennedy, who last week called unemployment "the No.
- 1 issue now nationwide," has joined forces in the Senate with
- Republican Dan Quayle of Indiana to sponsor a $4 billion
- job-training program. In the House, California Democrat Gus
- Hawkins has proposed a $5 billion training program that would
- allow local officials to use some of the funds to create public
- service jobs. House Speaker Tip O'Neill has criticized Reagan
- for the growing unemployment lines, but so far has not suggested
- a plan of his own. An aide to the Speaker may inadvertently have
- been summed up the Democrats' plight. "Our alternative is that
- the President should advocate an alternative," said the
- spokesman. "That's our alternative."
- </p>
- <p> Unemployment has historically been a good issue for Democrats,
- as inflation has been a good one for Republicans. Yet for all
- the White House worries about G.O.P. fortunes in the fall, it
- is not clear that Reagan will suffer much politically.
- Interviewing the jobless across the nation last week, TIME
- correspondents found relatively few who blamed the President for
- their plight. Rudy Barker, 62, was laid off in 1980 from his job
- at a lumber mill in Willamina, Ore., and he has not worked since
- then. "All this started before Reagan," he says. "It's been
- coming on for the last two or three Presidents." Says Samuel
- Ehrenhalt, Middle Atlantic regional commissioner for the Bureau
- of Labor Statistics: "A lot of people are just not ready to
- call it quits with the President."
- </p>
- <p> In pushing its revolutionary program of budget and tax cuts to
- cure the nation of nagging economic ills, the Administration
- realized that some suffering was inevitable. Indeed, the White
- House anticipated a rise in unemployment during the early stages
- of the program; it was felt that a hike in joblessness was
- necessary to dampen wage demands and cool inflation, which
- Reagan regarded as the nation's chief economic problem. But
- Administration officials never expected that the rate would
- surge so high or inflict so much hardship.
- </p>
- <p> When Reagan took office last January, the unemployment rate
- stood at 7.4% and the President's Council of Economic Advisers,
- headed by Murray Weidenbaum, predicted that the average annual
- rate for 1981 would be 7.8% and that it would rise to 8% for at
- least part of the year. Instead, the rate dipped to 7% in July,
- but then began climbing again as the economy started to buckle,
- partly because of high interest rates. The exorbitant cost of
- borrowing especially plagued the automobile and construction
- industries, which in turn affected their suppliers, such as
- steel, rubber and timber firms. With orders down, layoffs of
- workers spread.
- </p>
- <p> The surging interest rates were caused in part by the Federal
- Reserve Board's tight grip on the money supply, a policy
- designed to bring down inflation. But there is little agreement
- about other causes. Officials of the Fed blame ballooning budget
- deficits for kindling more fears about inflation and thus
- keeping interest rates high. Administration officials complain
- that the Fed's erratic control of growth in the money supply
- scared lenders into keeping interest rates high. Whatever the
- cause, most economists now agree that the unemployment rate will
- gradually rise into the summer, perhaps hitting 10%, before
- beginning to dip again. White House officials fervently hope
- that by fall the rate, no matter how high, is headed in the
- right direction--down.
- </p>
- <p> High unemployment is not unique to the U.S. It is afflicting
- other Western industrial democracies as well. (Although
- Communist bloc nations profess to have no unemployment
- whatsoever, the severe troubles afflicting their economies belie
- that ideological stance.) In Canada the jobless rate is 8.6%,
- up from 7.4% the year before. In the ten nations of the European
- community, the unemployment rate stands at a postwar high of 9%,
- leaving more than 10 million unemployed. In France the rate is
- 8.7% (up from 7.5% in December 1980), in Italy 9.1% (up from
- 8.3%). In West Germany the figure is 7.3%, the highest since
- 1956. After the announcement last week that the unemployment
- rate for Britain and Northern Ireland had reached 12.7%--which
- meant a record 3 million out of work--Prime Minister Margaret
- Thatcher was greeted in the House of Commons with opposition
- cries of "Resign! Resign!"
- </p>
- <p> Joblessness in the U.S. takes on many faces and breaks into
- many patterns, and some of the trends displayed in December's
- statistics are especially disturbing. Unemployment among blacks
- is a record 17.4%. The rate for teenagers was 21.75% (for
- nonwhite teenagers the figure is a shocking 39.6%). "Discouraged
- workers," who have not looked for work in the previous four
- weeks and thus are not included in the monthly unemployment
- totals, reached a post-war high of 1.2 million during the last
- three months of 1981, up from 1.05 million the year before. And
- the number of people working part time, because their hours were
- cut below 35 a week or because they were unable to find
- full-time work, grew to a record 5.4 million, up 360,000 in a
- single month.
- </p>
- <p> The unemployment rate for adult men jumped to 8%, a post-World
- War II high, from November's 7.2%. Economists consider this
- figure quite significant, since it indicates a growing number
- of layoffs among the traditional family breadwinners. The
- unemployment rate for adult women was lower than for men (7.5%),
- but the rate of joblessness among women with families to support
- was also a postwar record 10.75% during the last three months
- of 1981. And while the burden of joblessness still falls most
- heavily on blue-collar workers, it is spreading into the ranks
- of white-collar employees: from December 1980 to December
- 1981, white-collar unemployment rose from 4% to 4.6%.
- </p>
- <p> Other trends among the work force cloud the statistics. More
- women and teenagers now seek jobs than ever before, pushing up
- the number of people in the labor market--and thus the number
- of unemployed. In 1955, for example, women accounted for 30.2%
- and teenagers 6.6% of a labor force that totaled 68 million.
- In 1980 the comparable figures were 42% and 9% in a labor force
- that was 57% larger. Both women and teenagers also change jobs
- more often than adult men, and this tends to raise unemployment
- rates. Some experts contend that these tendencies may have
- inflated the rate by as much as 2.5% over the past two decades.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, critics argue that the Labor Department
- survey, which is conducted monthly among 60,000 households,
- underestimates the jobless because "discouraged workers" are not
- included in the figures. Had they been counted in December, for
- example, the unemployment rate would have reached 9.9%. It is
- also argued that part-time workers seeking full-time employment
- should be somehow included in the unemployment figures. If half
- of the part-time workers were included in the December figures,
- the rate would have been 11.5%.
- </p>
- <p> The unemployment rate is devastating in two industries,
- automobiles and construction, that have been wounded by high
- interest rates. In December, 18.1% of construction workers were
- unemployed, and joblessness among auto-workers was 21.7%. That
- is a drop from 28.6% in May 1980, but auto industry figures are
- misleading. Many unemployed car workers have given up hope of
- returning to the assembly line and have sought different careers
- entirely. The downturn keeps spreading to industries that supply
- materials to automakers and house builders and is ripping
- through nearly all manufacturing firms. In past recessions,
- Government employment rolls tended to rise, but the
- Administration's efforts to reduce Government spending have
- stopped that trend. During the past year, 269,000 state and
- federal employees have lost their jobs.
- </p>
- <p> One notable exception to the distress is in the so-called
- service-producing sector, which includes transportation, real
- estate and health care. The service fields employ 66 million
- people--three times as many as manufacturing firms--and have
- added 737,000 jobs over the past year. But even this market is
- softening: the rate of increase in these jobs last year (1%)
- was down from 1980's increase (2%).
- </p>
- <p> The unemployment lines snake haphazardly across the country,
- with the Midwest, the Pacific Northwest and parts of the South
- suffering the highest rates of joblessness. Michigan, with its
- crippled auto industry, is at the top of the charts at 14.4%,
- with 627,000 unemployed. Oklahoma boasts the enviable rate of
- 3.9%, thanks to its thriving oil industry. A survey of the
- national unemployment scene:
- </p>
- <p>THE NORTHEAST. For the most part, the state from Maine to
- Maryland have not been hit heavily by the recession. In
- November, the average unadjusted unemployment rate for the six
- New England states was 6.2%. The New England Economic Project,
- a consortium of public and private interests, forecasts the rate
- for the region will peak at 7.4% in the second half of 1982.
- Pennsylvania has troubles: the sagging steel industry helped
- push the state's unemployment rate up to 9.3%. One laid-off
- Pittsburgh steelworkers recalled Reagan's comment two weeks ago
- that the newspapers were bulging with help-wanted ads: "I read
- the want ads too," he grumbled. "But I'm not a nurse."
- </p>
- <p> Joseph Fetchik, 44, has been out of work since he was laid off
- from the Ford plant in Mahwah, N.J., 18 months ago. He signed
- up for benefits under the Trade Adjustment Assistance program,
- but the checks will stop coming this spring, and Fetchik cannot
- find a job. His wife Thelma earns $6,800 a year driving a school
- bus, but her salary will not nearly support her husband and two
- children. "I'm in big trouble, and my whole family is going to
- be in big trouble," says Fetchik.
- </p>
- <p> Deryl Watson, 31, was fired from her $180-a-week job as a
- security guard at Newark public schools last September. An unwed
- mother with two children, she receives $168 every two weeks in
- unemployment benefits and $99 per month for food stamps. "We
- used to eat spaghetti and meatballs, but now we just have it
- with tomato sauce," she says. Watson has no intention of
- applying for welfare because "I want to work. I want to have my
- own money. Besides, they don't treat you right on welfare.
- There's no respect at all."
- </p>
- <p>THE MIDWEST. Michigan's woes have spread to nearby states,
- forcing thousands of layoffs in plants that supply the auto
- industry. Both Ohio, with a rate of 11.8%, and Indiana, at
- 12.4%, were among the most ravaged states in the nation. Cities
- were particularly hard hit. There were 38 metropolitan areas in
- the U.S. where the unemployment rate exceeded 10% in November,
- and 14 of them were in the Midwest.
- </p>
- <p> The pain and frustration of unemployment shows up in small yet
- telling ways. The Detroit Free Press offered to let any and all
- unemployed job seekers run a free classified ad touting their
- skills; nearly 5,000 people took the paper up on its offer. At
- a blood plasma donation center in St. Louis, Director Ron Wilson
- says business is up 10% partly because more housewives and
- part-time workers are coming in to collect the $8 paid for every
- pint of plasma. In Louisville, the number of people calling the
- city's crisis hot line and asking for food and clothing is up
- 32% from last summer.
- </p>
- <p> Dzintar Dowling, 37, lives in a three-bedroom house in the
- Chicago suburb of Brookfield with her two children, ages 15 and
- 10. She has been out of a job since last October, when she was
- laid off at International Harvester. Dowling is separated and
- gets no financial support from her husband. Her weekly
- unemployment check of $199 ran out weeks ago, and she is "down
- to my last $20." She is now considering what would be to her
- a drastic measure: applying for welfare. "This morning I sat
- down after my son had gone to school and just bawled," she
- says. "It isn't because I'm worried about myself. It's, my God,
- what am I going to do with the kids? If it was just me, I could
- find a room somewhere and live on Campbell's soup and bologna
- sandwiches. But when you have children, it's different."
- </p>
- <p> In Peoria, Ill., the Caterpillar Tractor Co. will lay off 1,700
- workers this week, and those who are about to join the jobless
- are still disbelieving. "It's like being wounded in battle,"
- says Jim O'Connor, president of United Auto Workers Local 794.
- "The initial shock is buried. Until a couple of months ago,
- people were walking around here with Reagan buttons on. Now I'm
- asking them if they liked inflation and a job better than no
- job. And they're saying `I'd rather have a job and raise hell
- about inflation.'"
- </p>
- <p> Some who cannot find jobs locally are taking Reagan's advice
- and "voting with their feet" by moving to other states. When
- General Motors closed its plant in St. Louis last July and
- shifted to a more modern factory in Bowling Green, Ky., about
- 800 of its 900 hourly workers followed from St. Louis.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the jobless who stayed put are struggling to cope. From
- the Detroit suburb of Hazel Park, Larry Hampton, 26, sets out
- once or twice a week in his pickup truck to search the streets
- for scrap. Sheet metal brings a penny a pound; cast iron $45 a
- ton. On a good day, Hampton earns $15, and it keeps him busy.
- "I've just got too many bills and not enough money to pay them,"
- says Hampton, who lost his job in a machine shop last November.
- "It's scary."
- </p>
- <p> Wayne Addison, 39, of Kokomo, Ind., lost his job with Chrysler
- last August, and has seven children to support, but claims not
- to be worried. "We've been cutting corners for years," he says.
- Addison's wife returned to work testing transistors at Delco,
- a division of General Motors. He buys most of the family
- groceries directly from farms, spending only $55 a week on food.
- Addison also barters his services, repairing a neighbor's
- clothes dryer in exchange for a new shirt. Still, Addison is
- bothered that his two eldest daughters must pay most of the
- bills for their weddings this spring. Says the father: "There
- ain't a man that likes to say, `Well, daughter, I can't afford
- it for you.'"
- </p>
- <p>THE WEST. The region is an economic patchwork quilt. Wyoming has
- an unemployment rate below 5%, California copes with 8.6%, and
- Oregon and Washington are suffering badly. Because the lumber
- trade has been crippled by construction woes. Oregon has an
- unemployment rate of 11.4%; Washington has 11.1%. By the middle
- of last month, 19,000 of the region's 102,000 sawmill employees
- had been laid off, while another 41,000 were working curtailed
- shifts. "It's like Chinese water torture," says John Hampton,
- chairman of Hampton Affiliates, a Portland-based logging
- company. "There's been no relief." Two weeks ago, the U.S.
- Postal Service in Portland announced that it would have between
- 800 and 1,000 new job openings over the next three years; 18,642
- applications flooded in.
- </p>
- <p> Since losing his job as a forklift driver at a mill in Molalla,
- Ore., last August, James Wittig, 35, has been scrambling for a
- job. He applied to work as an exterminator and tried to land a
- job laying gravel. "I'll try anything, but there's nothing," he
- says. "If there's a job open in Oregon, there's at least 100
- people trying to get it." Wittig's wife works as a cook for
- $360 a month to support him and their two children, but it is
- not nearly enough. Says Wittig: "I'd like to talk to the
- President for half an hour. I'd say, `You're living high off the
- hog. You're telling us how good everything's going to be in two
- years. But we're starving today!'"
- </p>
- <p> Hilton Ridgeway, 41, never even got a job in the Northwest. He
- resigned as a computer programmer in Albany and moved to Oregon
- with his wife and four children last June, expecting to find a
- new job easily. After several months of looking, he tried to
- enlist in the Army, but was too old. Just before Christmas,
- Ridgeway found six weeks of work at $3.35 an hour on a Christmas
- tree farm. He doesn't like to recall that until recently he made
- $30,000 a year.
- </p>
- <p>THE SOUTH. The recession is blooming late in the region.
- Unemployment rates in many Southern states are below the
- national average, but they are gradually climbing upward.
- Georgia (6.8%) and Florida (7.7%) are relatively well off, but
- other Southern states have already surpassed the national rate:
- the figure is 10.2% in Arkansas and 10.4% in Tennessee. "We
- can't see any bright side," says Gene Keenum, a UAW union
- official in Memphis. "Everywhere we look, they're cutting
- back." The picture is totally different in booming Texas, where
- the rate is 4.5%. Says Terence Travland of the Texas Employment
- Commission: "There is no sense of crisis here--yet."
- </p>
- <p> Shutdowns and layoffs can be especially devastating in
- textile-mill towns that depend on only one or two factories for
- their existence. In Newberry, S.C. (pop. 10,000), the first blow
- came last month when the Collins & Aidman hosiery plant was
- closed down, idling 340 workers. Two weeks ago, Newberry Mills
- began shutting down its obsolete, 98-year-old cotton mill for
- good; 330 workers are being fired. Unemployment in Newberry
- County is now 16%, triple the rate of last December. "I've got
- two kids in college, and the mill didn't give us any pension,"
- says Everett Mays bitterly. "What kind of a job can a man get
- who's 48? Damn right I'm scared." Says Mill Superintendent
- Melvin Blackwell, 59, who also will be fired: "You meet people
- in the store crying. These people put their whole lives in that
- mill, their whole heart, and they get nothing out of it. Just
- a closing."
- </p>
- <p> For white-collar workers thrown out of work, the hardships can
- be just as painful. Virginia Hall runs a job-counseling club for
- unemployed professionals in Atlanta, and she has discovered that
- the psychological toll often exceeds the financial loss. "All
- these people have mortgages and are committed to certain
- life-styles," she observes. "In a way, they're more pitiful than
- the blue-collar workers who are unemployed. This is their first
- experience of losing a job, and they are stunned. They have no
- idea of how to cope."
- </p>
- <p> At the community kitchen run by St. Luke's Episcopal church in
- Atlanta, about 300 people a day showed up for free hot meals
- last winter. Today some 500 eat there daily, and Director Bill
- Bolling believes most of the newcomers are workers who have lost
- their jobs. "We have always had the derelicts," says Bolling.
- "But now we're seeing a different type of person--women,
- children, families." Even in prosperous Texas there are storm
- clouds on the horizon. Though jobs are still plentiful for
- skilled workers in Houston and Dallas, the rush of jobless from
- the North and Midwest has forced some less skilled natives out
- of work. Charles Croucs, 27, of Fort Worth lost his job as a
- painter two months ago. He blames outsiders who are willing to
- work for $6 an hour rather than the $8 or $9 he once collected.
- Says Croucs angrily: "All those people from up north just
- flooded the market."
- </p>
- <p> As unemployment casts an ever longer shadow across the country,
- some labor unions are attempting to save jobs by making
- concessions to employers on wages and benefits. At troubled
- Eastern Air Lines, the pilots have agreed, in principle, to a
- twelve-month wage freeze, while the Teamsters Union struck an
- agreement three weeks ago with 284 trucking companies that left
- them with one cost of living increase a year instead of two. The
- United Auto Workers had been negotiating with General Motors to
- hammer out a new contract that exchanged "givebacks" in benefits
- for greater job security and lower car prices, but the talks
- ended in failure last week. The UAW will nevertheless try to
- negotiate a similar contract with Ford Motor Co. this week.
- Charlie Renfro, an axle checker at a Ford truck plant in
- Louisville, is not happy with the prospect of givebacks but
- takes a common view: "Half a loaf is better than none."
- </p>
- <p> Many union leaders grumble that they are being unfairly called
- upon to fight a battle that Washington should be waging, and are
- demanding that the Administration take some action to curb the
- recession. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland last month blasted
- Reagan's economic program as "a hodgepodge of crank monetarism
- and bizarre macroeconomic nostrums," and urged the White House
- to take immediate steps to ease unemployment. Among the
- AFL-CIO's recommendations: revive the emergency local public
- works program, budgets at $6 billion in 1975 but not funded
- since then; restore CETA public service jobs; and create a new
- reconstruction finance corporation that would extend loans,
- loan guarantees and tax benefits to hard-hit companies in basic
- industries. The union also wants to get more help for the
- long-term jobless by renewing the 13 weeks of nationwide
- unemployment benefits that the Administration canceled last
- year.
- </p>
- <p> Kirkland's call for action is being echoed in Congress, but
- members are divided on what should be done. Senators Kennedy and
- Quayle defend their $4 billion jobs program bill as sufficiently
- different from the much criticized CETA program to make it
- worthwhile. Their bill would forbid local governments to use the
- federal funds to hire their own employees, such as policemen or
- firemen. Local businesses would also have a say in setting up
- job-training programs, thus ensuring that prospective employees
- were not trained in skills that were no longer in demand.
- </p>
- <p> Many Congressmen and economists reject the remedy of job
- programs to cure unemployment. "It's like trying to put a
- Band-Aid on a cancer after it's already grown, instead of
- preventing it in the first place," says Democratic Senator Bill
- Bradley of New Jersey. Observes Barry Bosworth, an economist at
- the Brookings Institution: "A federal job program inevitably
- turns into nothing more than an income-maintenance program, for
- the simple reason that when workers graduate from training
- programs, there are still no jobs for them. In a couple of
- months, 10 million people are going to be unemployed. To talk
- of job training is ridiculous. It's a flim-flam." Charles
- Schultze, who was chairman of President Carter's council of
- Economic Advisers, argues that job programs "wouldn't make much
- of a dent" in recession. One traditional problem is that
- Congress usually votes for such programs in the middle of a
- recession, but by the time the money gets around the country
- the economy has recovered and the added federal spending merely
- fuels inflation.
- </p>
- <p> Instead of job programs, Bradley suggests a short-term remedy
- of extending unemployment benefits; he predicts there will be
- growing pressure from Congress within the next two months as the
- 2.5 million people who lost their jobs late last year begin to
- run out of benefits. But in a meeting of the Cabinet Council on
- Economic Affairs last week, in which unemployment was on the
- agenda, Reagan and his aides did not discuss the proposal to
- extend benefits. Said a White House aids: "We feel we need to
- demonstrate concern for unemployment, but without reinstating
- benefits that would affect the budget." If the unemployment
- rate worsens, aides predict, Reagan may move up the starting
- date of some federal construction projects already approved by
- Congress, which would produce a limited number of jobs without
- raising the budget.
- </p>
- <p> The Administration plainly plans to stick to its conviction that
- its program of tax and budget cuts will revive the economy and
- eventually cure the triad of economic troubles: high inflation,
- high unemployment, high interest rates. Liberal and conservative
- economists tend to agree that the only real solution to
- unemployment is to focus on the entire economic picture. To a
- certain extent, though, the Administration's goals are
- contradictory in a faltering economy. "In large measure, you're
- stuck with a choice between unemployment and inflation," says
- Economist Rudolph Penner of the American Enterprise Institute,
- a conservative think tank. "The politicians who say they will
- not use high unemployment to cure inflation are just dreaming."
- </p>
- <p> Inflation is indeed dropping: the rate for 1981 stood at 8.9%,
- down from 12.4% in 1980. The political question centers on how
- much unemployment the public is willing to accept to continue
- the battle against inflation. "There are a lot of people out of
- work now who aren't used to it, from General Motors executives
- to Oregon timbermen," says Frank Leary of Washington's Urban
- Institute. "A lot more people are feeling the cold breath of
- unemployment." On the other hand, inflation touches all
- Americans, and the country as a whole would pay a price if the
- White House switched from fighting inflation to combatting
- unemployment. Warns Federal Reserve Board Member Henry Wallich:
- "By the time you've made a dent in Detroit's unemployment,
- you've sent inflation through the roof for everyone." In
- effect, Reagan is betting he will not have to make that switch,
- but if the unemployment rate continues to climb, he may have no
- real choice.
- </p>
- <p>-- By James Kelly. Reported by Gisela Bolte/Washington, with
- other bureaus
- </p>
- <p>Less for More
- </p>
- <p> As the unemployment lines are growing longer across the country,
- the jobless are discovering a painful lesson of Reaganomics:
- fewer of them are eligible for unemployment benefits, and many
- of those who do receive benefits are getting smaller checks.
- </p>
- <p> Begun in 1935, under the auspices of the Social Security Act,
- unemployment compensation is funded by a combination of federal
- and state payroll taxes imposed on employers. Though benefits
- vary, most states give eligible workers a maximum of 26 weeks
- of unemployment pay. The checks, which are based on workers'
- previous earnings and length of employment, range from a weekly
- maximum of $222 in Alaska down to $90 in Alabama. By comparison,
- the average weekly manufacturing wage in September last year was
- $288.
- </p>
- <p> Congress raised unemployment benefits considerably during the
- 1970s. If joblessness among workers covered by unemployment
- insurance reached 4% within a state, or if the rate nationwide
- topped 4.5%, for example, an additional 13 weeks of benefits
- were paid out; Washington and the states split the extra costs
- evenly. Under the Trade Adjustment Assistance Program, as
- amended in 1974, employees who lost their jobs because of
- foreign competition, such as auto and steel workers, received
- up to 70% of their wages for a maximum of 18 months. These
- jobless workers, whose numbers reached 281,000 in fiscal 1981,
- also received regular unemployment checks, and some of them
- wound up with more money after taxes than they had when they
- were working.
- </p>
- <p> Then came the Reagan revolution. As part of its budget-cutting
- efforts, the Administration last August abolished the national
- unemployment trigger that provided an additional 13 weeks of
- benefits, but kept the individual state triggers intact. It is
- estimated that 640,000 workers will not get such payments during
- fiscal year 1982, for a savings to the Government of $690
- million. Also stopped were unemployment benefits for servicemen
- who choose not to reenlist. The rationale was that military
- service during peacetime is an occupation, and those who leave
- voluntarily are in effect quitting their jobs. Finally, the
- budget cuts virtually eliminated the extra benefits paid under
- the Trade Adjustment Assistance Program. In December 1980, some
- 233,000 jobless were given such aid. Only 12,100 received it
- last December.
- </p>
- <p> On Oct. 1, all states must raise their own trigger rates of
- unemployment that make the jobless eligible for 13 extra weeks
- of benefits by one percentage point, from 4% to 5%. In addition,
- new regulations will also require that any person drawing
- extended benefits must have worked at least 20 weeks during the
- previous year before losing his job: there is no such minimum
- requirement now. The logic behind these reductions in
- unemployment benefits was simple enough: the employer taxes that
- pay for them no longer cover the costs.
- </p>
- <p> The most ironic cut of all involves the firing, for budgetary
- reasons, of more than 18,000 employees from the public
- employment service, which helps the unemployed find jobs and
- which is linked to the unemployment insurance offices that
- process claims. Since the firing is being done by seniority,
- many specialists in job placement may be reassigned to process
- benefit claims. The probable result: more errors and long lines
- for those trying to pick up their checks. The lines could well
- include out-of-work employment service clerks who once were on
- the other side of the counter.</p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-