Brian Kemp, governor of Georgia. Elijah Nouvelage | Bloomberg | Getty Images
They will forgo a cumulative $4.7 billion in assistance, according to the report. The governors of Arizona, Georgia, Ohio and South Dakota — which weren’t included in the analysis — also announced they would exit the federal programs. Their withdrawal would impact about 1.1 million more people, according to a CNBC analysis of Labor Department data issued Thursday. (Gig workers and the long-term unemployed would not lose benefits entirely in Arizona; they’d only lose the $300 supplement, according to an official at the state labor agency.)
The federal programs in question have been in place since the CARES Act was passed in March 2020. Montana was the first state to opt out of the federal aid, on May 4. “It’s absolutely a domino effect,” Andrew Stettner, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation, said of the state actions. “It’s a very drastic move to pull out of this type of program.” State officials said they’re ending participation early due to labor shortages in their respective states.
They claim enhanced unemployment benefits are causing workers to stay home instead of return to work, leaving businesses struggling to fill open jobs. It’s a similar argument Republican lawmakers made last year when they pushed back against Democrats’ wishes to extend a $600-a-week federal enhancement to state benefits. The U.S. added 266,000 jobs in April, which fell short of the 1 million expected. Job openings also hit a record high in March, according to Labor Department data reported this week. “Every small business owner and the workers that are currently working, they need more people,” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said Thursday. “It is hurting our productivity not only in Georgia, but across the country.”
Critics say enhanced benefits aren’t driving the shortage in available workers. Pandemic-era factors like erratic school openings, child-care duties, a lingering virus threat and relatively low vaccinations to date among working-age Americans have kept people sidelined, they said. Opting out of federal jobless funding also removes money that may otherwise be pumped into the economy, perhaps diluting demand and the need for additional workers, they said. It may be unrealistic to expect Americans to accept jobs at the same pace at which businesses are posting them, according to some economists. “Businesses are letting their optimism get a little ahead of where conditions in the labor market are,” Daniel Zhao, a senior economist at Glassdoor, a job and recruiting site, said. Labor supply typically responds more slowly than demand, Zhao said. That’s been true in other areas of the economy, too, as the U.S. witnessed recently with semiconductor and lumber shortages, he said. Montana and Arizona are offering return-to-work bonuses for those who find and hold full-time jobs.
Disparate impact
Ending benefits early would also have a disproportionate impact on minorities, according to worker advocates. For example, 50% of unemployment recipients in South Carolina are Black, as are 54% and 66% of those in Alabama and Mississippi, respectively — roughly three times the 18% national average, according to The Century Foundation.