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June 18, 2009

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Jacob Mays

Two questions:
First, is the author saying that businesses are individually responsible for the workers they fire?
Second, is their support for the claim that a business can expect to pay double what their former employees claim in unemployment? I find this hard to believe, since I would assume the system is set up to be neutral.

Michael Turner

"Thanks to the stimulus package — the stimulus package — the costs, paperwork, and legal exposure associated with hiring employees is on the rise."

Yes, but remember there's the other side of it: without a stimulus package in the first place, your laid-off employees would stay unemployed even longer, collect even more benefits, and thus increase your UI premiums even more -- and that's not even considering that, without a stimulus package, you'll have to lay off more employees if a worse recession means reduced demand for what you sell (which is the case for most businesses). And the extension of UI benefits helps prop up consumer demand -- the saying "what goes around comes around" applies equally to the good and the bad. Finally, there's even a silver lining with increased premia: if you view cash-strapped state governments as businesses of a sort that pay employees who represent some fraction of demand for what you sell, some of that money paid out in UI premia comes back to you in the form of sales you wouldn't otherwise have made.

That said, obviously, there should be legislation recognizing that present conditions are exceptional, conditions that justify capping the UI premia that businesses -- and not even especially small buinesses -- should be required to pay. The old formulae were very likely based on fairly reasonable assumptions that don't apply at the moment. Ideally, you extinguish the burning fuse before the time-bomb goes off. Your worst enemy in this: all the other time-bombs -- the ones that have gone off, and that will soon go off. An economy full of contractual obligations -- both social and legal -- predicated on many assumptions that no longer apply will be an endless source of legislative adjustment, and this particular issue might get addressed too late to prevent damage. "Incoming, sir. Far too much of it, in fact . . ."

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