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As we speak’s Enterprise Information: Reside Updates on United Airways and Unemployment Claims

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Michael Young for The New York Times

While vaccination efforts have gathered speed and restrictions on activities have receded in many states, the job market is showing signs of life.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell last week to 657,000, a decrease of 100,000 from the previous week, the Labor Department reported Thursday. It was the lowest weekly level of initial state claims since the pandemic upended the economy a year ago.

On a seasonally adjusted basis, new state claims totaled 684,000.

In addition, there were 242,000 new claims for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a federal program covering freelancers, part-timers and others who do not routinely qualify for state benefits, a decrease of 43,000.

Unemployment claims have been at historically high levels for the past year, partly because some workers have been laid off more than once. Much of the drop last week was accounted for by a decline in new claims in Ohio and Illinois, but economists said the overall trend was encouraging.

“This is definitely a positive signal and a move in the right direction,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist for High Frequency Economics. “We would expect to see further improvements as vaccines roll out and restrictions are lifted.”

Between the state and federal programs, the total number of new jobless claims was just under 900,000 after being stuck above one million a week.

Although the pace of vaccinations, as well as passage of a $1.9 trillion relief package this month, has lifted economists’ expectations for growth, the labor market has lagged behind other measures of recovery.

Still, the easing of restrictions on indoor dining areas, health clubs, movie theaters and other gathering places offers hope for the millions of workers who were let go in the last 12 months. And the $1,400 checks going to most Americans as part of the relief bill should help spending perk up in the weeks ahead.

Diane Swonk, chief economist at the accounting firm Grant Thornton, said she hoped for consistent employment gains but her optimism was tempered by concern about the longer-term displacement of workers by the pandemic.

“The numbers are encouraging, but no one is jumping the gun and hiring up for what looks to be a boom this spring and summer,” she said. “There is a reluctance to get ahead of activity.”

“We’ve passed the point where you can just flip a switch and the lights come back on,” she added. “We need to see a sustained increase in hiring, which I think we will see, but the concern is that it won’t be so robust. It takes longer to ramp up than it does to shut down.”

Most of United’s new flights will connect cities in the Midwest to tourist destinations.Credit…Sebastian Hidalgo for The New York Times

United Airlines plans to add more than two dozen new flights starting Memorial Day weekend, the latest sign that demand for leisure travel is picking up as the national vaccination rate moves higher.

Most of the new flights will connect cities in the Midwest to tourist destinations, such as Charleston, Hilton Head and Myrtle Beach in South Carolina; Portland, Maine; Savannah, Ga.; and Pensacola, Fla. United also said it planned to offer more flights to Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America and South America in May than it did during the same month in 2019.

The airline has seen ticket sales rise in recent weeks, according to Ankit Gupta, United’s vice president of domestic network planning and scheduling. Customers are booking tickets further out, too, he said, suggesting growing confidence in travel.

“Over the past 12 months, this is the first time we are really feeling more bullish,” Mr. Gupta said.

Airports have been consistently busier in recent weeks than at any point since the coronavirus pandemic brought travel to a standstill a year ago. Well over one million people were screened at airport security checkpoints each day over the past two weeks, according to the Transportation Security Administration, although the number of screenings is down more than 40 percent compared with the same period in 2019.

Most of the new United flights will be offered between Memorial Day weekend and Labor Day weekend aboard the airline’s regional jets, which have 50 seats. The airline said it would also add new flights between Houston and Kalispell, Mont.; Washington and Bozeman, Mont.; Chicago and Nantucket, Mass.; and Orange County, Calif., and Honolulu.

All told, United said it planned to operate about 58 percent as many domestic flights this May as it did in May 2019 and 46 percent as many international flights. Most of the demand for international travel has been focused on warm beach destinations that have less-stringent travel restrictions.

“That is one of the strongest demand regions in the world right now,” Mr. Gupta said. “A lot of the leisure traffic has sort of shifted to those places and it’s actually seen a boom in bookings.”

Delta Air Lines issued a similar update last week, announcing more than 20 nonstop summer flights to mountain, beach and vacation destinations. Both airlines have said in recent weeks that they have made substantial progress toward reducing how much money they are losing every day.

“Institutions that focus on diversity and do it well are the successful institutions in our society,” said Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair.Credit…Mandel Ngan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Jerome H. Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, said on Thursday that the central bank was trying to make its economic employee base more racially diverse and he was not satisfied with its progress toward that goal so far.

“It’s very frustrating, because we have had for many years a strong focus on recruiting a more diverse cadre of economists,” Mr. Powell said while speaking on NPR’s “Morning Edition,” after being asked about a New York Times story on the Fed’s lack of Black economists. “We’re not at all satisfied with the results.”

Only two of the 417 economists, or 0.5 percent, at the Fed’s board in Washington were Black, according to data the Fed provided to The Times earlier this year. By comparison, Black people make up 13 percent of the country’s population and 3 to 4 percent of the U.S. citizens and permanent residents who graduate as Ph.D. economists each year.

Across the entire Fed system — including the Board of Governors and the 12 regional banks — 1.3 percent of economists identified as Black. The Fed has been making efforts to hire more broadly, Mr. Powell said, including by working with historically Black colleges.

“It’s a very high priority,” Mr. Powell said of hiring more diversely. “Institutions that focus on diversity and do it well are the successful institutions in our society.”

The Fed chair was also asked about how he would rate the central bank’s sweeping efforts to rescue the economy as markets melted down at the start of the coronavirus outbreak last year. In addition to cutting its policy interest rate to near zero and rolling out an enormous bond-buying program, the Fed set up a series of emergency lending programs to funnel credit to the economy.

Rolled out over a frantic few weeks, the programs included ones that the Fed had never tried before to backstop corporate bond and private company loan markets.

“I liken it to Dunkirk,” Mr. Powell said, referring to the rapid evacuation of British and Allied forces from France in World War II. “Just get in the boats and go.”

Despite the speed of the decision-making, Mr. Powell said that he looked back on the results as positive.

“Overall, it was a very successful program,” he said. “It served its purpose in staving off what could have been far worse outcomes.”

Esther George, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said she expected inflation to “firm,” given time.Credit…Ann Saphir/Reuters

Esther George, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, says that although the outlook for growth has improved as vaccinations increase and the government rolls out relief packages, the path of the pandemic remains a major question hanging over the U.S. and global economies.

“We’re not out of this yet,” Ms. George said in an interview on Wednesday. “It’s hard to know what the dynamics will be on the other side.”

Ms. George said she was focused on labor force participation as a sign of the job market’s strength more than the headline unemployment rate, which has fallen to 6.2 percent from a 14.8 percent peak but misses many people who aren’t looking for new jobs after losing theirs during the pandemic. Participation, the share of people working or looking, remains a hefty two percentage points below its prepandemic levels.

“That might be the thing I really watch in the coming months,” she said.

Ms. George expects inflation to “firm,” but that the process is likely to take a while, she said, and it is “too soon to say” whether it will end with a more meaningful rise. Some prominent economists have begun to warn that prices, which have been low for decades, could rise rapidly as the government spends big and the Fed keeps rates at rock bottom to support the economic recovery.

“Wages are a very telling factor in a story about inflation,” Ms. George said.

Many economists look for faster growth in compensation as a signal that inflation is sustainable, not just driven by short-lived supply constraints or temporary quirks in the data.

Ms. George’s colleagues, including Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, have been clear that they expect prices to move higher this year but will not necessarily see that as an achievement of their inflation goal. The Fed redefined its target last year and now aims for 2 percent annual price gains, on average, over time.

Ms. George did not venture a guess of when the Fed will hit its three criteria for raising interest rates: full employment, 2 percent realized price gains and the expectation of higher inflation for some time. Some Fed officials expect to raise rates next year or in 2023, but most of them expect the initial increase to come even later.

Dan Gilbert, the chief executive of Quicken Loans, which has been based in Detroit since 2010.Credit…Tony Dejak/Associated Press

Dan Gilbert, the Quicken Loans founder, has spent more than a decade putting billions into downtown Detroit. Now he’s broadening his scope.

The Gilbert Family Foundation and the Rocket Community Fund, the philanthropic arm of Quicken Loans’ Rocket Mortgage company, announced on Thursday a $500 million investment in Metro Detroit, to be spent over the next 10 years. The first $15 million will be put toward paying off property tax debt of low-income homeowners who qualified for Detroit’s Pay As You Stay initiative.

Quicken Loans has been based in Detroit since 2010, and Mr. Gilbert and his real estate firm, Bedrock, have spent billions buying and redeveloping properties there. Those efforts have been praised for revitalizing a downtown area of roughly seven square miles, but also criticized by some who contend they did not do enough to help those who live in the rest of the city.

“We feel like we’ve made Detroit into a tech boomtown,” said Mr. Gilbert. But he acknowledged that some may have felt left behind. “This can bridge that,” he said.

Mr. Gilbert added that his focus outside of Detroit’s city center stems from his work on President Barack Obama’s Blight Removal Task Force in 2014 as the city was emerging from bankruptcy. “Property taxes was the No. 1 issue that was causing the blight foreclosures,” he said.

Detroit’s housing crisis dates to “racial covenants” in the 1920s. In the mid-2000s, the city became a center of risky lending that defined the financial crisis, with subprime lending accounting for three-fourths of the mortgages in the city. (Quicken Loans settled a lawsuit with the Justice Department for its own lending practices during that time, but admitted no wrongdoing.)

The economic crisis that followed toppled a city already grappling with a dwindling population and shrinking revenue. Those who paid for the recovery were largely low-income housing owners — in many cases Black — whom the city was also accused of overtaxing. Poverty rates ascended and city services deteriorated as a result.

The investment announced on Thursday is an effort to address the lingering effects of the crisis. Twenty thousand families qualify for the tax-relief program, said Mr. Gilbert’s wife, Jennifer, who founded the Gilbert Family Foundation with her husband.

“By preserving that wealth, we also preserve opportunities for intergenerational wealth transfer,” she said. “The stability of the home allows for people to then focus on other economic opportunities that allow them to thrive.”

After the first $15 million of the initiative is spent paying back taxes of low-income homeowners, the remaining funds will be focused on, among other things, home repair and narrowing the digital divide.

The community will be vital for input, including those who qualify for the initial tax relief. “We can learn a lot about where we want to invest next and how best we can positively impact them and their lives,” Ms. Gilbert said.

A Nike store in Beijing on Thursday. Nike shares fell in premarket trading after it was criticized on Chinese social media over a statement it made about reports of forced labor in Xinjiang.Credit…Greg Baker/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Stocks on Wall Street dropped on Thursday even as the latest weekly data showed that state unemployment claims fell to the lowest level since the start of the pandemic.

The S&P 500 index and Nasdaq composite both fell less than half a percent in early trading.

Stock trading has grown choppy lately as investors weigh news of rising Covid-19 cases and new lockdowns, or the rollback of efforts to reopen economies, against mounting signs of economic recovery as more people are vaccinated and the effects of the $1.9 trillion stimulus package emerge.

On Thursday, the Labor Department reported that initial claims for unemployment benefits fell last week to 657,000, a decrease of 100,000 from the previous week. On a seasonally adjusted basis, new state claims totaled 684,000.

As Europe grapples with an emerging third wave of the pandemic, Germany has canceled a strict five-day lockdown that was set to start at the beginning of April. Chancellor Angela Merkel said she took “ultimate responsibility” for the reversal, which came after a large backlash to the plan, even from within her own party, and anger from retailers and restaurants.

“In the near term, this avoids the negative economic consequences of a lockdown,” Paul Donovan, an economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, wrote in a note. But over a longer a period of time, markets will question whether this will just delay Germany’s ability to restrain the virus and slow down the recovery, he added.

European stocks were lower Thursday. The Stoxx Europe 600 index was down 0.8 percent and the FTSE 100 in Britain fell 1 percent.

Oil prices dropped. Futures of Brent crude, the European benchmark, fell 1.5 percent to $63.45 a barrel and futures of West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, fell 1.8 percent to about $60 a barrel.

On Wednesday, oil prices jumped more than 5 percent after a container ship got stuck in the Suez Canal, blocking one of the world’s key shipping routes, which is also an important artery for the flow of oil. On Thursday, efforts to dislodge the ship were ongoing as some 150 other ships were waiting on either side.

The company trying to move the ship warned it could take weeks. Shipping has already been heavily disrupted by the pandemic, sending freight prices soaring.

  • Nike shares dropped more than 3 percent in early trading, and H&M shares fell close to 4 percent in Stockholm after Chinese social media users called for a boycott of the companies. The two fashion retailers published statements expressing concern over reports of forced labor in Xinjiang. Nike’s statement said the company didn’t source cotton from the region, but the online attacks have called it a boycott of the region’s cotton farmers.

  • Yields on 10-year Treasury notes fell to about 1.6 percent.

“We are here to help our small businesses, and that is why I’m proud to more than triple the amount of funding they can access,” said Isabella Casillas Guzman, the Small Business Administration’s administrator.Credit…Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

Companies harmed by the coronavirus pandemic can soon borrow up to $500,000 through the Small Business Administration’s emergency lending program, raising a cap that has frustrated many applicants.

“The pandemic has lasted longer than expected,” Isabella Casillas Guzman, the agency’s administrator, said on Wednesday. “We are here to help our small businesses, and that is why I’m proud to more than triple the amount of funding they can access.”

The change to the Economic Injury Disaster Loan program — known as EIDL and pronounced as idle — will take effect the week of April 6. Those who have already received loans but might now qualify for more money will be contacted and offered the opportunity to apply for an increase, the agency said.

The Small Business Administration has approved $200 billion in disaster loans to 3.8 million borrowers since the program began last year. Unlike the forgivable loans made through the larger and more prominent Paycheck Protection Program, the disaster loans must be paid back. But they carry a low interest rate and a long repayment term.

Normally, the decades-old disaster program makes loans of up to $2 million, and in the early days of the pandemic, the agency gave some applicants as much as $900,000. But it soon capped loans at $150,000 because it feared exhausting the available funding. That limit — which the agency did not tell borrowers about for months — angered applicants who needed more capital to keep their struggling ventures alive.

The agency has $270 billion left to lend through the pandemic relief program, James Rivera, the head of the agency’s Office of Disaster Assistance, told senators at a hearing on Wednesday.

  • Tribune Publishing’s board recommended that shareholders approve a purchase offer from the hedge fund Alden Global Capital over a higher bid from a Maryland hotel executive, according to a securities filing Tuesday. Alden, Tribune’s largest shareholder, agreed last month to buy the rest of the company at $17.25 per share and take it private in a deal that would value the company at $630 million. Last week, Stewart W. Bainum Jr., a hotel magnate, made an $18.50 per share offer for the whole company.

Jane Fraser in 2019. “The blurring of lines between home and work and the relentlessness of the pandemic workday have taken a toll on our well-being,” she told Citigroup employees.Credit…Erin Scott/Reuters

Complaints of “Zoom fatigue” have emerged across industries and classrooms in the past year, as people confined to working from home faced schedules packed with virtual meetings and often followed up by long video catch-ups with friends, reports Anna Schaverien of The New York Times.

But Citigroup, one of the world’s largest banks, is trying to start a new end-of-week tradition meant to combat that fatigue: Zoom-free Fridays.

The bank’s new chief executive, Jane Fraser, announced the plan in a memo sent to employees on Monday. Recognizing that workers have spent inordinate amounts of the past 12 months staring at video calls, Citi is encouraging its employees to take a step back from Zoom and other videoconferencing platforms for one day a week, she said.

“The blurring of lines between home and work and the relentlessness of the pandemic workday have taken a toll on our well-being,” Ms. Fraser wrote in the memo, which was seen by The New York Times.

No one at the company would have to turn their video on for any internal meetings on Fridays, she said. External meetings would not be affected.

The bank outlined other steps to restore some semblance of work-life balance. It recommended employees stop scheduling calls outside of traditional working hours and pledged that when employees can return to offices, a majority of its workers would be given the option to work from home up to two days a week.

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Uncounted within the Unemployment Charge, however They Wish to Work

Robert Hesse was expecting an upcoming promotion to manager of Sub Zero Ice Cream, a nitrogen ice cream parlor in Ventura, California when it closed in March due to the pandemic.

“I like to work,” said Mr. Hesse, a college graduate who will turn 26 on Tuesday. “Otherwise I feel useless.” But he was reluctant to find a new job because he lives with his parents, who have not yet been vaccinated, and is afraid of bringing the virus home to them.

“It’s just a health concern – I really don’t want to be in public just yet,” he said.

Mr Hesse represents what economists say is one of the most striking features of the pandemic-triggered economic downturn: the flood of workers who, the government counts, have left the workforce.

In the year the pandemic turned the economy into turmoil, more than four million people left the workforce, leaving a gaping hole in the job market that spans age and circumstance. An exceptionally high number were withdrawn due to childcare and other family responsibilities or health concerns. Others gave up looking for work because they were discouraged by the lack of opportunities. And some older workers quit earlier than planned.

These unemployed dropouts are not included in the most cited unemployment rate, which stood at 6.2 percent in February, making the group a hidden victim of the pandemic.

Now that the labor market is emerging from the vise of the pandemic, one of the big questions about the shape of recovery is whether those who have left the workforce will return to work – and if so, how quickly.

“There are many dimensions related to the pandemic that I believe are fueling this phenomenon,” said Eliza Forsythe, an employment economist at the University of Illinois. “We don’t really know what the long-term ramifications this will be as it is different from the past.”

There is reason to be optimistic. Economists expect that many who left the workforce in the past year will return to work once health concerns and childcare issues are resolved. And they are optimistic that the warming labor market will attract workers who have been disappointed in finding work.

For example, Mr Hesse said he was going to seriously look for a new job once he was vaccinated and hoped to go back to work this year.

In addition, after the last recession, many economists said those who left the workforce were unlikely to return due to disability, the opioid crisis, loss of skills, or any other reason. However, the labor force participation adjusted to demographic change eventually returned to the previous level.

But the speed at which the pandemic has displaced workers from the workforce has had a devastating impact that could cause permanent damage.

The employment rate among 16-year-olds or older fell from 63 percent in February 2020 to around 61 percent. For employees in their prime – between 25 and 54 years of age – it has fallen from 83 percent to 81 percent.

According to research by Wells Fargo, women were almost twice as likely as men to quit in their prime working years, partly because more women work in industries like recreation and hospitality, which are less suited to social distancing, and partly because women are more likely to be the burden of childcare. The proportion of black women who have left the labor force is more than twice the proportion of white men.

Then there are the many people who might be looking for a job but are unable to get one for health reasons, illness or due diligence. Bringing them into a gray area, as economists say – between unemployment and inactivity, violence – that has become more common during the pandemic.

A single mother, Frankie Wiley, 29, worked as a housekeeper at a resort in Bloomington, Minnesota until she was released in March last year. She wants a paid job, but has to stay at home with her 11-year-old daughter, who attends school from afar.

Updated

March 15, 2021, 5:59 p.m. ET

“I take care of her so I am her only support,” she said. She said she plans to return to work as soon as her daughter is safe to return to school.

Older workers have left the workforce in droves, including those who have been left out for health or illness reasons or who have taken the opportunity to take early retirement. Among those 55 or more, labor force participation has fallen from 40 percent last year to 38 percent.

A study by the research company Oxford Economics estimates that around two million workers have left working life since the beginning of the pandemic, more than twice as many as in 2019.

Such was the case of Ed Hoag, a public librarian for 35 years, who decided to retire early last summer for health reasons. He and his wife have no children, and he feared that if either of them got sick, no one would look after them.

The 60-year-old spends his days reading at his home in Lambertville, New Jersey, where he moved a few years ago in anticipation of a retirement that once seemed much further away.

“I miss the work,” he said. “I miss my colleagues, and I miss the library activities, the people who would come in, the jobs we did. I miss all of this interaction. But I think it was the right decision for me and my wife. “

The road ahead could be challenging for the legion of older workers hoping to get back to work after the pandemic. Studies show that older people who leave the workforce will have difficulty re-entering the workforce because of age discrimination and other reasons. If this reality is true during recovery, the number of older workers who have left the workforce – either because they were unable to find work or because they retired early – could be one of the long-term consequences of the pandemic.

A prevailing question is whether, as in the past, employers look askance at those who have been unemployed for some time.

Even in a tight labor market, long-term unemployed were stigmatized, said Maria Heidkamp, ​​director of the New Start Career Network, which helps older job seekers in New Jersey.

“In addition to any age, race or gender discrimination you may already encounter, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that it is easier to find a job when you already have a job,” she said. Although employers may overlook a loophole on a pandemic’s résumé, she said, “There is no reason to believe that this will be any different for these people who are on the edge and want to come back.”

However, given the unique economic impact of the pandemic, many economists believe the extraordinary number of people who have left the workforce will be more of a passing slip than a symbol of a deeper structural problem.

“I don’t think the US labor force participation rate will stay any lower overall,” said Betsey Stevenson, professor of economics and public order at the University of Michigan who served on President Barack Obama’s council of economic advisers.

There is already evidence that people who have left the workforce are returning to work.

Young people’s labor force participation, which fell in the early stages of the pandemic, has rebounded significantly with the boom in the service industry.

And as the vaccination rate continues to rise and restrictions on activity mount across the country, more and more people who have left the workforce are beginning to plan their return.

Ever since she lost her job selling private events last March, Heather Kilpatrick has spent her days at home in East Boston looking after her daughter, who is now 3 years old.

Without her additional income, she and her husband, co-owners of a restaurant, could no longer provide day care at the local YMCA. Although Ms. Kilpatrick, 36, longed to get back to work, she felt like she was trying to solve a chicken and egg dilemma.

“No disrespect to women who want to stay home, but I’ve never been,” she said.

She recently finally got a part-time job for a home-based restaurant group.

Your work started last week.

Ben Casselman and Jeanna Smialek contributed to the coverage.

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F.A.Q. on Stimulus, Unemployment and Tax Rebates

Here’s what you need to know:

Stimulus Checks

The stimulus payments would be $1,400 for most recipients. Those who are eligible would also receive an identical payment for each of their children.

To qualify for the full $1,400, a single person would need an adjusted gross income of $75,000 or below. For heads of household, adjusted gross income would need to be $112,500 or below, and for married couples filing jointly that number would need to be $150,000 or below.

To be eligible for a payment, a person must have a Social Security number.

Yes. But payments would phase out quickly as adjusted gross income rises.

For single filers, the checks decrease to zero at $80,000. For heads of household, the cutoff is $120,000. And for joint filers, the checks stop at $160,000.

Payments for children decrease in the same way.

College students whom taxpayers claim as dependents are eligible. (They weren’t for past payments.) The payment would go to the parent taxpayer, not the child.

Good news here, too. If claimed as dependents, these relatives are also eligible this time. The payment would go to the taxpayer, not the dependent adult.

The most recent year on record at the Internal Revenue Service. If you’ve already filed your taxes this year, it would be 2020. If not, it would be 2019.

During the last round of payments, the I.R.S. got the first payments out within a few days. As before, you would track the status of your payments via the I.R.S.’s Get My Payment tool. Be aware that the volume of users sometimes overwhelms the site.

If you were in fact eligible to receive it, you can try to recover it through the so-called Recovery Rebate Credit when filing your 2020 return. Make your claim on Line 30 of Form 1040 or 1040-SR.

Unemployment Insurance

Credit…Alex Hecht for The New York Times

If you’re already receiving unemployment benefits, payments would generally be extended for another 25 weeks, until Sept. 6. The weekly supplemental benefit, which is provided on top of your regular benefit, will remain $300 but run through Sept. 6.

Although unemployment benefits are taxable, the new law would make the first $10,200 of benefits tax-free for people with income less than $150,000. This applies to 2020 only.

The extended payments would continue to be delivered through different federal programs, largely based on the type of work you did and for whom.

Benefits through the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program, which covers the self-employed, gig workers, part-timers and others who are typically ineligible for regular unemployment benefits, would be available for a total of 79 weeks, up from 50, and run through Sept. 6.

And benefits through the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation program, which essentially extends benefits for people who exhaust their regular state benefits, would be available for a total of 53 weeks, up from 24, also lasting through Sept. 6.

If you qualify for any benefits, you would also receive the full $300 supplemental payment for weeks ending after March 14 and through Sept. 6. Known as F.P.U.C., it’s called the federal pandemic unemployment compensation.

The bill would also extend an extra $100 weekly payment, called the mixed-earner supplement, through Sept. 6. This payment helps people who have a mix of income from both self-employment and wages paid by other employers, because they are often stuck with a lower state-issued benefit based on their (lower) wages.

The bill would also clarify that the $300 federal supplement would not be counted when calculating eligibility for Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program. But the mixed earner supplement would be counted.

If the bill becomes law, experts said, there may be a gap for beneficiaries in many states because it usually takes a couple of weeks for agencies to program any benefit extensions.

Health Insurance

Buying insurance through the government program known as COBRA would temporarily become a lot cheaper.

COBRA, for the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, generally lets someone who loses a job buy coverage via the former employer. But it’s expensive: Under normal circumstances, a person may have to pay at least 102 percent of the cost of the premium.

Under the relief bill, the government would pay the entire COBRA premium from April 1 through Sept. 30.

A person who qualified for new, employer-based health insurance someplace else before Sept. 30 would lose eligibility for the no-cost coverage. And someone who left a job voluntarily would not be eligible, either.

The bill would lower the cost of health insurance in many instances for people who bought their own health insurance via a government exchange. And the premiums for those plans would cost no more than 8.5 percent of your modified adjusted gross income.

These changes would be effective immediately and last through the end of 2022; they would not require people to re-enroll to access the lower prices.

If you don’t already have health insurance but would want it if the price was right, an open enrollment period is already in effect through May 15. You can also switch plans to try to lower the price you’re paying already or get more generous coverage. The Kaiser Family Foundation maintains a calculator that estimates your premiums based on your income and any available government subsidies, and it will be updated once the bill passes.

None this time, though there were some in the last stimulus bill.

Taxes

This credit, which helps working families offset the cost of care for children under 13 and other dependents, would be significantly expanded for a single year. More people would be eligible, and many recipients would get a bigger break.

The bill would also make the credit fully refundable, which means you could collect the money as a refund even if your tax bill was zero. “That will be helpful to people at the lower end” of the income scale, said Mark Luscombe, principal federal tax analyst at Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting.

The new bill would make the credit worth up to $4,000 for one qualifying individual or $8,000 for two or more. The credit would be calculated by taking up to 50 percent of the value of eligible expenses, up to certain limits, depending on your income. (The more you earn, the lower the percentage you can claim.)

Currently, the credit is generally worth between 20 and 35 percent of eligible expenses with a maximum value of $2,100 for two or more qualifying individuals.

The bill would also significantly increase the income level at which the credit begins to be reduced. Under current law, that starts at an adjusted gross income of $15,000, but the bill would make the full value of the credit available to households making up to $125,000.

Under current law, the credit is not further reduced below 20 percent, regardless of income, Mr. Luscombe said. But the proposed law would begin to reduce the credit below 20 percent for households with income of more than $400,000.

These changes would be effective for 2021 only.

The bill would make one big change. For 2021 — and only for 2021 — you could set aside $10,500 in a dependent care account instead of the normal $5,000. But employers would have to allow the change: You can’t adjust the withholdings from your paycheck yourself if your employer declines to provide the option.

The bill would make the credit more generous for 2021, particularly for low- and middle-income people.

Currently, the credit is worth up to $2,000 per eligible child. The bill would increase it to as much as $3,000 per child ($3,600 for ages 5 and under). It would also raise the age limit for qualifying children to 17, from 16.

Here’s where it gets interesting: You could receive some of the credit as an advance on your 2021 taxes.

The bill would make the credit fully refundable, which means you can receive money from it as a tax refund even if your tax bill is reduced to zero. And half of that money could be advanced to households over the next six months (based on their 2020 tax information, or 2019 if that was unavailable). It’s not clear how frequently payments would be made — perhaps monthly — but under the bill they would begin in July.

The changes are effective for 2021 only, though at least some Democrats would like to make it permanent.

Married couples who have modified adjusted gross income up to $150,000 (or heads of household up to $112,500 and single filers up to $75,000) would receive the full value of the new benefit.

But after that, the extra amount above the original $2,000 credit — either $1,000 or $1,600 per child — is reduced by $50 for every $1,000 in modified adjusted gross income that exceeds those levels. (For joint filers with one child age 6 to 17, the extra amount would be phased out at about $170,000.)

At that point, the tax credit levels out at $2,000, and is then subject to the current income limits. The $2,000 benefit begins to phase out when married filers have adjusted gross income of $400,000 ($200,000 for singles).

Should the bill become law, the advance payments would total up to half the value of the credit the household is eligible to receive. (The other half would be claimed on the 2021 return.) But exactly how often the payments would be sent out depends on what the Treasury Department decides is feasible.

Here’s how it might work for a couple earning $150,000 or less. With two children, ages 7 and 9, they would be eligible for a $6,000 credit ($3,000 times two). If the payments were made monthly, the family would receive $500 per month starting in July and lasting through the end of the year. The remaining $3,000 would be claimed in 2021 on their tax return.

For 2021 only, the bill would increase for childless households the size of the earned-income tax credit, which helps those at the lower end of the income scale, and make more taxpayers eligible.

The maximum credit amount for childless people would increase to $1,502, from $543.

The bill would also broaden the age range: People without children would be able to claim the credit beginning at age 19 instead of 25, with the exception of certain full-time students. The upper age limit, 65, would be eliminated.

Married but separated people could be treated as not married for the purpose of the credit if they don’t file a joint tax return.

This would apply only if the taxpayer lived with a qualifying child for more than half of the taxable year and didn’t have the same principal home as the spouse at least six months of the year. A separation decree or agreement would also suffice, as long as the individual didn’t live with the spouse by the end of the taxable year.

This change would be permanent.

  • For the purposes of calculating the credit in the 2021 tax year, taxpayers could choose to use their 2019 income if it was higher than 2021, according to a Senate aide.

  • People who otherwise would be eligible but whose children do not have Social Security numbers would be permitted to claim the version of the credit available to childless households. This change would be permanent.

  • Taxpayers wouldn’t be disqualified for the credit in 2021 until they had investment income of $10,000, up from $3,650. This change would be permanent, with the $10,000 threshold indexed to inflation.

Housing

The bill would provide assistance to people in danger of being evicted and to help homeowners avoid foreclosure.Credit…Anna Watts for The New York Times

The bill would provide billions of dollars in rental and utility assistance to people who are struggling and in danger of being evicted from their homes.

About $27 billion would go toward emergency rental assistance. The vast majority of it would replenish the so-called Coronavirus Relief Fund, created by the CARES Act and distributed through state, local and tribal governments, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition. That’s on top of the $25 billion in assistance provided by the relief package passed in December.

To receive financial assistance — which could be used for rent, utilities and other housing expenses — households would have to meet several conditions. Household income could not exceed 80 percent of the area median income, at least one household member must be at risk of homelessness or housing instability, and individuals would have to qualify for unemployment benefits or have experienced financial hardship (directly or indirectly) because of the pandemic.

Lower-income families that have been unemployed for three months or more would be given priority for assistance.

The bill would provide nearly $10 billion to help homeowners struggling with mortgage payments, utility bills and other housing costs.

Roughly $100 million would be dedicated to housing counseling.

About $5 billion would be allocated to help the homeless.

Student Loans

There would be a big one for people who already have debt.

You wouldn’t have to pay income taxes on forgiven debt if you qualify for loan forgiveness or cancellation — for example, if you’ve been in an income-driven repayment plan for the requisite number of years, if your school defrauded you or if Congress or the president wipes away $10,000 of debt for large numbers of people.

This would be the case for debt forgiven between Jan. 1, 2021, and the end of 2025.

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Politics

Democrats attain deal on unemployment help

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) speaks to reporters in the U.S. Capitol on Capitol Hill in Washington on February 10, 2021.

Al Drago | Reuters

Senate Democrats reached an agreement on Friday night on how to structure unemployment benefits in their $ 1.9 trillion coronavirus aid bill so the plan can move forward after hours of delays.

West Virginia Democratic Senator Joe Manchin backed his party’s unemployment benefit proposal after his reluctance to support an earlier iteration of the plan halted Democrats’ urge to approve the measure that weekend. The disagreement over unemployment insurance threw the Senate into chaos when Democrats and Republicans called on the Conservative Democrats to endorse their proposals on unemployment.

According to NBC News, the contract will extend an unemployment benefit supplement that is currently $ 300 per week through September 6. This will make the first $ 10,200 of unemployment benefits tax-free to avoid surprise bills. The provision applies to households with an income below $ 150,000.

“We have reached a compromise that will allow the economy to recover quickly while protecting those receiving unemployment benefits from unexpected tax burdens for the next year,” Manchin said in a statement on Friday.

Democrats will offer the unemployment change during a voting marathon on amendments known as Vote-a-Rama, which is expected to resume on Friday night. After receiving an indefinite number of amendments, lawmakers can move on to finalizing the bill, which Senate Democrats hope by next weekend.

The House intends to approve the Senate version of the plan by next week and send it to Biden for the bill to be signed.

Democrats want to approve their latest bailout before March 14, the day the current $ 300 a week unemployment benefit expires. However, the delays on Friday threatened the expiry of the deadline.

The Democrats initially proposed unemployment benefits of $ 400 a week through August, which was passed by Parliament on Saturday. Manchin had considered endorsing a plan put forward by Senator Rob Portman, R-Ohio, to extend the $ 300 weekly surcharge through July.

The move to unemployment benefits appeared to be an attempt to appease various members of the democratic caucus. The party cannot lose a vote and still win a simple majority, the baseline, which is needed for the budget vote in the chamber, is divided evenly between parties.

If the length of aid is cut too short, there is a risk that House Democratic support will be lost when legislation is expected to return next week for representative approval through the Capitol. President Joe Biden “supports the compromise agreement,” said White House press secretary Jen Psaki in a statement Friday evening.

“Most importantly, with this deal we can advance the much-needed American bailout plan,” she said of the Democratic Aid Act.

The $ 100 a week cut in unemployment benefits seemed like a concession to the most conservative Democrats. Party leaders have already agreed to limit the number of people who would receive direct payments of $ 1,400 amid Manchin and others raised concerns about the direction of the checks.

Extending the supplementary unemployment benefits should also appeal to the Senators, led by Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden, who worried that millions of Americans would suddenly lose financial support when unemployment benefits expired in August. The provisions that promote unemployment benefits and expand eligibility for them once became obsolete last summer. Congress only renewed it in December.

Wyden has called for unemployment benefits to be tied to economic conditions so it doesn’t expire before the economy recovers. Some Republicans have spoken out against the relief bill, claiming a $ 400 weekly rise in unemployment would keep people from returning to work. They made the same argument when lawmakers approved a $ 600 per week allowance last year, but some research suggests the policy would not have a material impact on people who choose to look for work.

– CNBC’s Ylan Mui contributed to this report

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Politics

Home advances checks, unemployment enhance

President Joe Biden, flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris and House Spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), will meet with House Democratic leaders and House Committee Chairs on legislation to support coronavirus disease (COVID-19) Oval Office in the White House in Washington, February 5, 2021.

Kevin Lemarque | Reuters

Several House committees have approved portions of the Democrats’ $ 1.9 trillion coronavirus relief plan as the chamber passes the full package by the end of the month.

The Ways and Means Committee pushed a critical part of the legislation on Thursday evening. It would send $ 1,400 direct payments to most Americans, extend major unemployment programs through late August, and give families up to $ 3,600 a year per child.

Other House Boards, including the Education and Labor, Financial Services, Transportation, and Small Business Committees, have accepted their proposals. As part of the tedious budget reconciliation that the Democrats use to pass legislation without Republican votes, the House Budgets Committee will bundle the individual bills together.

House spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi told reporters on Thursday that she believed the House of Representatives would approve the bailout proposal before the end of the month. The California Democrat expects the bill to go through the Senate and across President Joe Biden’s desk before the lifeline for unemployed Americans expires on March 14.

Democrats have said they must act as soon as possible to put more money into efforts to contain the virus, accelerate vaccinations, and encourage Americans struggling to pay for food and housing. With unified but tight control over Congress and the White House, they seem ready to pass a bill on their own instead of taking weeks or months to negotiate a smaller package with the GOP.

Republicans have raised concerns about passing another massive spending bill after lawmakers approved a $ 900 billion bailout plan in December. A group of GOP senators met with Biden earlier this month and made a counter-offer of around $ 600 billion. The Democrats, however, rejected the plan as too small to handle the crisis.

Congress waited months for the December aid package to pass after key unemployment benefits and small business programs expired last summer. Inaction contributed to millions of Americans falling into poverty, finding it difficult to afford food, and receiving no rental payments.

The latest government data shows that more than 20 million people are receiving unemployment benefits.

Democrats still have hurdles to overcome to get the bill through Congress themselves. Not only do you need to ensure that the bill complies with Senate budget rules, but you cannot lose a single democratic vote in the chamber, which is evenly divided between parties.

The Ways and Means Committee portion of the House plan presented on Thursday contains a large part of the overall bailout proposal. It would target a sum of $ 1,400 to individuals earning up to $ 75,000 and couples earning up to $ 150,000.

To allay concerns about an effective targeting of money that was jeopardizing the Senate’s passage of the plan, payments would be phased out so that no person or couple earning more than $ 100,000 and $ 200,000 respectively would receive a check . Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said Thursday that the structure is “right in the ballpark” of what his caucus would support.

The bill, approved by Ways and Means, would increase the current unemployment benefit from $ 300 per week to $ 400 and extend it through August 29. Also, the programs would expand eligibility and the number of weeks that people can take out unemployment insurance on the same date.

The plan would also increase support for households with children. Americans would receive up to $ 3,600 per child for children under 6 and $ 3,000 per child for children under 18.

The relief would expire on an income of $ 75,000 for individuals and $ 150,000 for couples.

Under key provisions in other pieces of legislation, $ 20 billion would go into a national immunization program, $ 170 billion in spending on schools including reopening costs, and $ 350 billion in relief for state, local, and tribal governments. Biden met with a non-partisan group of governors and mayors on Friday to discuss the bailout package.

Before the meeting, he said: “We have to help the states economically” and “make sure they can return to schools”. Biden added that he wanted to hear from the state and local officials whether he should tweak his plan.

The House Democrats have also increased a minimum wage of $ 15 an hour, and Pelosi expects the House to pass the provision in final legislation. However, it is unclear whether the proposal complies with Senate budget rules.

Two Democratic senators – Joe Manchin from West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema from Arizona – have also expressed doubts about the adoption of a minimum wage of $ 15 an hour.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the government will take into account the views of Sinema and other senators as it pushes the relief plan.

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Business

Dip in Unemployment Claims Gives Hope as New Virus Instances Ease

Following a pandemic-induced surge in layoffs due to new restrictions in many states, unemployment claims are falling, aided by a decline in new coronavirus cases.

Initial unemployment benefits fell last week, the Labor Department reported Thursday, and were well below levels in December and early January.

The number of new coronavirus cases is down a third from two weeks ago, prompting states like California and New York to relax restrictions on indoor eating and other activities. This has given workers in the hardest hit industries some respite.

813,000 new state benefit claims were made last week, compared to 850,000 the previous week. Adjusted for seasonal fluctuations, the value for the last week was 793,000, which corresponds to a decrease of 19,000.

There were 335,000 new entitlements to Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a government-funded program for part-time workers, the self-employed, and others who are normally not eligible for unemployment benefits. That sum, which was not seasonally adjusted, fell from 369,000 the week before.

While claims remain extraordinarily high by historical standards, the improvement has raised hopes that layoffs will continue to slow as vaccinations spread and employers switch from laying off workers to adding workers.

“We’re stuck with this very high level of damage, but activity is picking up,” said Julia Pollak, employment economist at ZipRecruiter, an online job market. In fact, ZipRecruiter’s job postings are at 11.3 million, near the pre-pandemic 11.4 million level.

The improving pandemic situation has eased the burden on restaurants and bars, Ms. Pollak added. With nearly 10 million jobs deficit since the pandemic started and employers still cautious about hiring, the economy is facing major challenges.

Federal Reserve chairman Jerome H. Powell told the New York Business Club on Wednesday that policymakers should continue to focus on restoring employment, “Given the number of people who have lost their jobs and the likelihood that some struggle to find work in the post-pandemic economy. “

He found that employment for workers earning high wages had fallen by only 4 percent, but for the bottom quartile of those in work it was a “staggering 17 percent”.

Updated

Apr. 11, 2021 at 11:13 am ET

Many other signs of weakness remain. The Ministry of Labor reported that employers only created 49,000 jobs in January, underscoring the challenges facing the unemployed.

President Biden cited the poor performance to call for approval of a $ 1.9 trillion pandemic relief package. It would send $ 1,400 to many Americans, aid states and cities, and extend unemployment benefits, which is slated to run out to millions in mid-March.

The House Ways and Means Committee took an initial step on Wednesday when it began developing a measure that would continue emergency benefits through the end of August, increasing the weekly benefit premium from $ 300 to $ 400.

With the prospect of additional relief and a decrease in virus cases, some experts say a strong recovery is possible this year. Oxford Economics is forecasting economic growth of 5.9 percent in 2021, compared to a decline of 3.5 percent in the previous year.

According to economists at ZipRecruiter and another major online job board, Employers, employers are already putting out the welcome mat in certain areas.

Ms. Pollak said employer posts at ZipRecruiter in the past few days have offered hope. “We have seen employers exceed all of our expectations and show a lot of exuberance,” she said. “There are clear differences between different industries.”

In addition to strength in industries that benefit from the stay-at-home trend, such as B. Warehousing and deliveries, the recruitment of engineering, professional and business services has recently shown signs of life.

“Companies are looking to the future and are somewhat optimistic,” said Ms. Pollak.

AnnElizabeth Konkel, an economist at Indeed Hiring Lab, added that demand for pharmacists was up 23 percent year-over-year while openings for drivers were up 18 percent. “Everything is directly related to the pandemic,” said Ms. Konkel.

Nevertheless, there were regional differences. In cities like Washington, Seattle, Boston, and San Francisco, where many people work remotely, there were fewer vacancies in some areas than in places with more people back in the office.

“People don’t come to their local café on their way to work or stop at a store to pick up something when they work at home,” said Ms. Konkel, and that affects attitudes.

Restaurant openings have declined for a year, as have positions in arts and entertainment, hospitality and tourism.

At ZipRecruiter, the energy industry posted more jobs after heavy losses at the beginning of the pandemic. Manufacturing has also seen more openings lately.

“Some of the losers are finally coming back a bit,” said Ms. Pollak. “But so many industries are impossible to resume while the pandemic continues.”

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Business

Unemployment Claims Stay Excessive as Thousands and thousands Nonetheless Wrestle to Discover Work

For many people, the economy will not improve noticeably for at least a few months. Ms Swonk expects attitudes to remain unchanged or decrease in December compared to November.

Updated

Jan. 3, 2021, 1:23 AM ET

“The entire labor market loses momentum at a critical point when cases rise,” she said.

Seasonally adjusted, the number of new government claims was 787,000, down from 806,000 the previous week.

The second stimulus

Answers to your questions about the stimulus calculation

Updated December 30, 2020

The economic aid package will issue payments of $ 600 and will distribute federal unemployment benefits of $ 300 for a minimum of 10 weeks. Find out more about the measure and what’s in it for you. For more information on how to get help, please visit our hub.

    • Do I get another incentive payment? Individual adults with adjusted gross income on their 2019 tax return of up to $ 75,000 per year will receive a payment of $ 600, and a couple (or someone whose spouse died in 2020) who earns up to $ 150,000 per year receives twice this amount. There is also a payment of $ 600 for each child for families who meet these income requirements. Individuals filing taxes with head of household status and earning up to $ 112,500 will also receive $ 600 plus the additional amount for children. People with incomes just above this level will receive a partial payment that decreases by $ 5 for every $ 100 of income.
    • When could my payment arrive? The finance department said on December 29 that it had started making direct deposits and would be mailing checks the next day. However, it will take a while for everyone to receive their money.
    • Does the agreement concern unemployment insurance? Legislators agreed to extend the length of time people can receive unemployment benefits and restart an additional federal benefit that is on top of the usual state benefits. But instead of $ 600 a week it would be $ 300. That will last until March 14th.
    • I am behind on my rent or expect to be soon. Do I get relief? The deal calls for $ 25 billion to be distributed by state and local governments to help backward tenants. In order to receive support, households must meet various conditions: the household income (for 2020) must not exceed 80 percent of the area median income; At least one household member must be at risk of homelessness or residential instability. and individuals must be eligible for unemployment benefits or face direct or indirect financial difficulties due to the pandemic. The agreement states that priority will be given to support for lower-income families who have been unemployed for three months or more.

Tighter state and local restrictions on restaurants and other businesses will weigh heavily on the labor market in the coming weeks, said Scott Anderson, chief economist at Bank of the West in San Francisco.

Mr. Anderson believes the monthly employment report will show the unemployment rate rose from 6.7 percent in November to 6.9 percent in December. The unemployment rate has fallen sharply from its high of 14.7 percent in April, but hiring has slowed as the economy has stalled in recent months.

The economy may have only created about 20,000 jobs in December, said Rubeela Farooqi, US chief economist at High Frequency Economics. That would mean a “huge slowdown from last month,” she added, as the wage bill rose 245,000.

Additionally, the pace of layoffs has remained high as industries like hospitality, travel, and entertainment struggle with the pandemic keeping many people at home, even in states and cities that haven’t placed many restrictions on businesses. In contrast, many employees who were able to work remotely emerged relatively unscathed from the economic turmoil.

The introduction of vaccines is a bright spot, as are positive economic signs such as rising stock prices and a booming real estate market. But it will be months before enough Americans can be vaccinated so that people can go to restaurants, events, and movie theaters without fear of infection.

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Business

Trump Indicators Pandemic Aid Invoice After Unemployment Assist Lapses

House Democrats plan on Monday to vote on laws that will allow direct payments of $ 2,000. Spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi said Mr. Trump should “immediately urge Congressional Republicans to end their disability” and support the measure. New York Senator Chuck Schumer, the minority leader, said he would pass the bill in the Senate, but such a maneuver would require Republican support.

However, during the negotiations, Senate Republicans have refused to increase payments, citing deficit concerns. In a statement welcoming the president’s signature, Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, did not mention the $ 2,000 payments or the president’s allegations about next steps for the chamber he controls.

“I applaud President Trump’s decision to get hundreds of billions of dollars of crucial Covid-19 aid out the door into the hands of American families as soon as possible,” McConnell said, without mentioning the delay caused by Mr. Trump .

While legislation provides for expanded and expanded unemployment benefits, the delay in Mr Trump’s signing phased out two critical programs this weekend, guaranteeing a delay in benefits for millions of Americans who had relied on income. Legislation provides for a weekly federal benefit of $ 300 – roughly half the original benefit set out in the March Stimulus Act – for 11 weeks and extends the two programs.

Given that state employment offices are waiting for federal guidelines on how to implement the new legislation, it is unclear how quickly these programs could resume and whether the benefits would be retroactive to accommodate the delay. Because unemployment benefits are processed on a weekly basis and the legislation is not signed before the week starts, workers in most states are likely to lose a week of extended program benefits and a week of $ 300 supplementary benefit.

Updated

Apr. 27, 2020, 6:19 am ET

“You might get it on the back end, but there are bills tomorrow,” said Michele Evermore, senior policy analyst for the National Employment Law Project, a not-for-profit workers’ rights group. “It’s just so frustrating that he couldn’t have found out yesterday. A day late is a disaster for millions. “

A Democratic adviser said Sunday most states would need guidance from the Department of Labor to see if they could pay benefits for the week of December 27.

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Politics

Unemployment Help Set to Lapse Saturday as Trump’s Plans for Aid Invoice Stay Unclear

“Why shouldn’t politicians want to give people $ 2,000, just $ 600?” he said on Twitter, possibly referring to his own party’s move on Thursday to block a House Democratic bill that would have increased the amount of direct payments to $ 2,000. “It wasn’t their fault, it was China. Give the money to our people! “

Updated

Apr. 25, 2020, 7:16 am ET

Mr Trump was largely uninvolved in the legislative negotiations, but Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is believed to have negotiated on behalf of the President.

The aid bill also includes billions of dollars to help states distribute coronavirus vaccines, a replenished small business loan program, and airline aid. It was passed along with a spending measure to keep government funding going for the remainder of the fiscal year. The cost of the combined package is $ 2.3 trillion.

Treasury officials had expected the president to sign the bill this week and planned to overhaul the Christmas break to restart the small business paycheck protection program and push payments through direct deposit through early next week. However, all of this is now suspended.

The second stimulus

Answers to your questions about the stimulus calculation

Updated December 23, 2020

Legislators agreed to a plan to provide $ 600 stimulus payments and distribute $ 300 federal unemployment benefits for 11 weeks. Here you can find out more about the bill and what’s in it for you.

    • Do I get another incentive payment? Individual adults with adjusted gross income on their 2019 tax returns of up to $ 75,000 per year would receive a payment of $ 600, and heads of household up to $ 112,500 and a couple (or someone whose spouse died in 2020) would receive up to to earn $ 150,000 per year Get double the amount. If they have dependent children, they will also receive $ 600 for each child. People with incomes just above this level would receive a partial payment that decreases by $ 5 for every $ 100 of income.
    • When could my payment arrive? Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CNBC that he expected the first payments to be made before the end of the year. However, it will take a while for everyone to receive their money.
    • Does the agreement concern unemployment insurance? Legislators agreed to extend the length of time people can receive unemployment benefits and restart an additional federal benefit that is on top of the usual state benefits. But instead of $ 600 a week it would be $ 300. That would take until March 14th.
    • I am behind on my rent or expect to be soon. Do I get relief? The deal would provide $ 25 billion to be distributed through state and local governments to help backward tenants. In order to receive support, households would have to meet various conditions: the household income (for 2020) must not exceed 80 percent of the regional median income; At least one household member must be at risk of homelessness or residential instability. and individuals must be eligible for unemployment benefits or face direct or indirect financial difficulties due to the pandemic. The agreement states that priority will be given to support for lower-income families who have been unemployed for three months or more.

Lawmakers in Congress and White House officials have indicated that they are unsure whether Mr. Trump will give in and sign the legislation, formally veto it, or simply not sign it. While Congress could potentially override Mr Trump’s veto, the next Congress would have to reintroduce the legislation early next year and vote on it when it sits on the bill – a so-called pocket veto.

California Democrat spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi said she would hold a roll-call vote Monday on direct payments legislation that would meet Mr. Trump’s $ 2,000 direct payment request and put pressure on Republicans who oppose such high payments. Congress could also be forced to pass another emergency measure to avoid a shutdown.

Official figures released this week showed continued stress on the economy as personal incomes fell and unemployment claims remained high. Another 398,000 people applied for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, one of two federal programs to expand unemployment benefits that will be phased out.

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Business

Unemployment Claims Present Influence of Layoffs as Virus Surges

The surge in coronavirus cases is rippling through the economy, forcing employers to lay off workers with an extraordinarily high layoff rate, even as new vaccines and the possibility of further government aid offer hope for the next year.

The number of Americans filing initial unemployment insurance claims remained high last week, the Department of Labor reported Thursday. After falling earlier in the fall, claims have risen, dwarfing the pace of past recessions.

Consumer caution, coupled with new restrictions on business activities such as indoor restaurants, has hit the hotel, lodging, airline and other service industries. The debut of a coronavirus vaccine offers some prospect of relief, but until mass vaccination begins next year the economy will remain under pressure.

“Companies are closing, and as a result, job losses are increasing – and that is exactly what we feared we were going into the winter,” said Rubeela Farooqi, US chief economist at High Frequency Economics. “It will definitely be a challenging couple of months.”

The pace of retail sales has already slowed, as has overall economic growth. Few expect coronavirus cases to subside this winter and further drag on economic activity, but advances on a new relief law on Capitol Hill could ease the blow.

935,000 new state benefit claims were made last week, compared to 956,000 the previous week. Adjusted for seasonal fluctuations, last week’s value was 885,000, an increase of 23,000.

There have been 455,000 new applications for assistance from Pandemic Unemployment, a government-funded program for part-time workers, the self-employed, and other people who are normally not eligible for unemployment benefits. This sum, which was not seasonally adjusted, increased by 40,000 compared to the previous week.

The move to limit business and consumer activities by government agencies was evident in the new data. In Illinois, where indoor eating was banned on November 20, claims rose by over 35,000. In California, where restrictions went into effect December 3, new registrations rose by nearly 24,000.

As of late November, more than 20 million workers were receiving unemployment benefits under state or federal programs, according to data from the Department of Labor. Although the unemployment rate fell from 14.7 percent in April to 6.7 percent in November, the ongoing layoffs underscore the economic fragility of many Americans.

Economy & Economy

Updated

Apr. 17, 2020, 4:35 pm ET

“We’re not going in the right direction,” said Gregory Daco, chief US economist at Oxford Economics. “With the services expiring, it’s even more worrying.”

The pain in the labor market is particularly acute for the less skilled, whose jobs and finances are far more affected than those of wealthier Americans.

The S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrials and the Nasdaq Composite Index closed at record highs on Thursday and have completed a strong rally in recent weeks. The IPO was hot news and shaped thousands of paper millionaires in Silicon Valley and elsewhere.

The housing market has also been resilient, fueled by low interest rates that make mortgages more affordable as city dwellers flee to the suburbs.

Total wages and salaries have returned to pre-pandemic levels at $ 9.6 trillion a month after falling below $ 8.7 trillion in the depths of the spring recession. But the American share of the labor force remains well below a year ago, underscoring the deep hole the economy is slowly working its way out of.

Republican and Democratic leaders in Congress resumed talks Thursday on another pandemic relief bill that economists have warned is overdue. With no action taken, two key unemployed programs will expire this month – Pandemic Unemployment Assistance and Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which provide extra weeks of assistance after government benefits expire and cut payments to millions.

In addition to extending these programs, the $ 900 billion package is expected to include $ 600 stimulus payments to individuals, a $ 300 weekly unemployment benefit allowance, and rent and food aid.

The $ 2.2 trillion CARES bill, passed in March, has been credited with helping the economy weather the depths of lockdowns in many parts of the country last spring. But partisan battles in Washington have held up renewed federal support for months.

Economists have warned that without a new aid package from Washington, economic growth could stay flat in the first quarter of 2021. In addition, the abrupt end of unemployment benefits for millions could further weigh on consumer spending.

Data released on Wednesday showed retail sales declined 1.1 percent in November, a disappointing start to the crucial Christmas season. Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial Services, expects economic growth to be weak for the next several months before accelerating later in 2021.

“Until we vaccinate many people, the economy will face a difficult test,” he said. “I don’t know if there will be a total decline or loss of jobs, but the pace of improvement will slow significantly.”