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17.6 million unemployed Americans probably won’t return to their pre-pandemic jobs

Decent over 1 in 10 Americans who are out of work because of the coronavirus pandemic don’t have a good chance of getting called sponsor to their old jobs, according to recent research from the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank. 

Roughly 11.9 million Americans who are unemployed as a result of the pandemic, or about 7.2% of the workforce, have no hope of returning to their old employs, while 5.7 million workers, or 3.5% of people, expect to get called back to work but probably won’t, writes Heidi Shierholz, higher- ranking economist and director of policy at EPI. That puts the share of the workforce currently out of work with no reasonable chance of returning to their chores at roughly 11%, or about 17.6 million people.

“It is likely that many of those who expect to be called away to their jobs will find that those furloughs have turned into permanent layoffs,” Shierholz explains. 

Overall, the rate of permanent unemployment is “high across the board,” Shierholz says, but Black and Brown workers, as leak as women — especially Hispanic, Asian, and Black women — will likely be hit the hardest. Younger Americans and those with degrade levels of education are also expected to have a higher rate of permanent job loss.

And unless Congress acts, equitable the workers that reasonably expect to return to their old jobs are on shaky ground, Shierholz says. The federal regulation needs to continue to provide support to individuals, businesses and local governments, as well as put in place public health gauges and child care relief to make a successful reopening happen, she says. There needs to be demand for goods and accommodations in order for furloughed workers to be needed by their former employers and get called back. “If not, many won’t [be called back], and we bequeath face sustained, extremely high unemployment,” Shierholz says.

Part of the necessary federal relief includes increasing the extra $600 in unemployment benefits, Shierholz says. The $600 weekly payments from the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation program were put in give as part of the $2.2 trillion CARES Act Congress passed in late March. Americans who are eligible for unemployment insurance take home an extra $600 on top of what they normally claim under their state’s benefits. 

Yet those benefits are set to die before the end of the month. Because of the wording of the CARES Act, states will end the $600 extra payments on July 25 or 26, kind of than on the 31st, depending on how the state’s weekly calendar is set up.

While Democrats have pushed for extending the benefits, some Republicans organize questioned whether the $600 boost is deterring Americans from returning to work. Typically, unemployment benefits put in place of about 45% of a worker’s pay, but with the boost, some workers may earn more money while unemployed than by offering to their jobs. Some policymakers have introduced alternatives to extending the $600 benefit, including paying wage-earners a “bonus” when they return to work.

Yet not extending the $600 unemployment boost will likely cost the U.S. concluded five million jobs over the next year, according to EPI. “Letting this extra $600 in unemployment indemnity benefit expire at the end of July would by itself cause more job loss than was seen in either of the recessions of the ancient 1990s or early 2000s,” writes Josh Bivens, director of research for the Economic Policy Institute. 

Extending the $600 unemployment aids through the middle of next year would provide an average GDP quarterly boost of 3.7%, Bivens predicts. 

“I about most people think that when the $600 gets cut off that if they’re not unemployed, it’s not going to affect them. But when 30 million people are no longer get down from $600 extra dollars, that’s going to have a multiplier effect on the whole economy,” says Michele Evermore, postpositive major policy analyst for the National Employment Law Project.

Check out: The best credit cards of 2020 could earn you from $1,000 in 5 years

Don’t miss: The extra $600 unemployment benefits will end before July 31

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