Missouri’s Unemployment Compensation Problem
The Washington Post recently published an article that describes how states’ unemployment compensation funds are running dry in the recession. When a state has more unemployment claims than it can pay, it borrows the difference from the federal government. In all, 25 states — including Missouri — have already borrowed to make their payments, $24 billion in total.
If unemployment continues to rise in the near future, then Missouri will have to borrow even more money from the federal government in order to extend benefits. According to preliminary data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the seasonably adjusted unemployment rate for Missouri in November 2009 is 9.5 percent, which is an increase over recent months.
What can a cash-strapped state like Missouri do? From the article:
State unemployment-compensation funds are separated from general budgets, so when there is a shortfall, only two primary solutions are typically considered — either cut the benefit or raise the payroll tax.
Talk about being between a rock and a hard place. Although I hesitate to encourage cutting benefits, I think that that raising the payroll tax would be a particularly bad idea. Raising the payroll tax would raise the cost of labor, causing employers to stop hiring and/or further shed employees. When you tax something, you get less of it, after all. The state would have to find a way to support an ever-increasing unemployment population with an ever-decreasing employment base.
I also want to point out that employers pay more in unemployment taxes in Missouri than they do in most other states. Missouri employers already have to pay 3.510 percent of payroll in state unemployment taxes. For those in the construction-related industries, the rate is 3.600 percent. (According to the article, the average tax across states is about 0.6 percent.)


Admittedly, the state unemployment system is a mess. However, it is important to note that the unemployment tax rate only applies to the first $12,500 of wages in Missouri, not to the entire amount of wages earned. The federal unemployment tax applies only to the first $7000 of wages, I believe.
Comment by Joe Forshaw — December 29, 2009 @ 3:41 p.m.
I have been waiting for three weeks for my unemployment insurance to deposit to my bank account and no one seems to know what the computer needs to be input in order for me to get it. There truly is a mess in Jefferson City and people like me who need these monies to live are in dire straits with debtors who don’t want to wait till the problem is repaired in the state’s computer sytem. An article should be put in the newspapers or on the television.
Comment by Batshevah Riggs — January 8, 2010 @ 11:16 a.m.