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CNBC: Ending federal unemployment benefits early will cost states more than $12 billion, new report finds

CNBC: Ending federal unemployment benefits early will cost states more than $12 billion, new report finds

Alicia Adamczyk | June 3, 2021

The recent move by Republican governors and state legislators to end pandemic-era federal unemployment programs earlier than their Sept. 6 expiration date will cost local economies more than $12 billion, a new report from Congress’s Joint Economic Committee found.

So far, 25 GOP-led states have said they will end federal unemployment insurance (UI) programs as early as June 12, including the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation (FPUC) program, the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program and the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC).

Most of those states are ending all three programs, while a handful are only ending the FPUC program, which provides the unemployed with an extra $300 per week on top of their state benefit. You can see a break down of the new timelines here.

Ending the FPUC program early alone will take over $755 million from those receiving UI, according to the JEC report. The report also estimates that every $1 in UI generates $1.61 in local spending. Without the $755 million in FPUC benefits, states stand to lose $12 billion from June 19 through September 5.

“By ending these programs early, states are refusing billions of already appropriated federal dollars that could be spent in local groceries, restaurants and retail shops,” the report reads.

Read the full article here.