Special Series: Economic Recovery Watch
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Results by year: 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008
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Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the April Employment Report
May 3, 2013
Today’s jobs report shows that labor markets still bear the scars of the Great Recession despite 38 straight months of private-sector job growth and a drop in the unemployment rate from 7.9 percent to 7.5 percent since January. Unemployment remains stubbornly high and many people who would likely have a … -
Chart Book: The Legacy of the Great Recession
Updated May 3, 2013
The United States went through its longest, and by most measures worst economic recession since the Great Depression between December 2007 and June 2009. This chartbook will document the course of the economy following that recession against the background of how deep a hole the recession created … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the March Employment Report
April 5, 2013
Today’s jobs report, with disappointing job growth and a large drop in the labor force, shows that a robust jobs recovery remains elusive. That situation won’t likely improve in coming months as the sequestration budget cuts begin to slow the economic recovery and make it harder … -
Ryan Roundup 2013: Everything You Need to Know About Chairman Ryan’s Latest Budget
March 22, 2013
Below is a compilation of the CBPP analyses and blog posts on House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s budget, which the House has passed. Overview/General Statement: Robert Greenstein, President, on Chairman Ryan’s Budget Plan March 12, 2013 “When House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan released his previous budget last … -
SNAP Is Effective and Efficient
Updated March 11, 2013
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP — formerly the Food Stamp Program) is the cornerstone of the nation’s safety net and nutrition assistance programs. It currently provides over 47 million participants in about 23 million low-income households with debit cards they can use to purchase food each month.… -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the January Employment Report
February 1, 2013
Employers continued to add jobs in January (see chart), but the economy must grow faster to bring unemployment down more quickly. Instead, the recovery apparently has hit a soft patch, and both growth and job creation could slow further if policymakers let the automatic across-the-board … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the December Employment Report
January 4, 2013
The economy added private sector jobs for the 34th straight month in December, but a robust recovery remains elusive, long-term unemployment remains very high (see chart), and threats to the economy from misguided policies in Washington remain significant. Policymakers appropriately renewed … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the November Employment Report
December 7, 2012
Beyond the surprising news that Hurricane Sandy had little effect on overall job creation and unemployment, today’s report paints a familiar picture of moderate job creation and stubbornly high unemployment (see chart). Though unemployment fell, that’s because the labor force … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the October Employment Report
November 2, 2012
As today’s jobs report shows, the economy continues to create jobs but not fast enough to erase the huge job losses from the Great Recession (see chart). The unemployment rate has dropped more than two points from its peak, but it remains too high for policymakers to let emergency … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the September Employment Report
October 5, 2012
Today’s jobs report sent mixed signals about the overall job market but left no doubt that long-term unemployment remains a significant problem — making clear that policymakers must not let emergency federal unemployment insurance (UI) expire at the end of the year. Two-fifths of the … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the August Employment Report
September 7, 2012
Today’s disappointing jobs report shows that despite 30 straight months of private-sector job creation — including 103,000 new private-sector jobs in August — unemployment will likely remain high for the foreseeable future, suggesting policymakers should extend federal … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the July Employment Report
August 3, 2012
Today’s jobs report showing some pickup in job creation does not reduce the need for policymakers to implement measures to give the flagging recovery a needed boost, including preparing to extend emergency federal unemployment insurance (UI) past its scheduled expiration at the end of the … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the June Employment Report
July 6, 2012
The weak June employment report shows that it remains difficult to find a job in today’s job market, especially for the long-term unemployed (those who have been looking for work for 27 weeks or longer). The percentage of people in the labor force who are long-term unemployed remains … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the May Employment Report
June 1, 2012
Today’s disappointing employment report shows that the labor market remains far below full strength. The unemployment rate edged up to 8.2 percent and forecasters expect it to remain near 8 percent by the end of the year, which has important implications for the current temporary … -
Video: Jared Bernstein and Hannah Shaw Discuss the May Employment Report
June 1, 2012
Jared Bernstein, the Center’s Senior Fellow, and Hannah Shaw, one of the Center’s Research Associates, discuss the policy implications of the disappointing jobs report for May.
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New CBO Report Finds Hundreds of Thousands of People Still Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act
Updated May 29, 2012
A new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report estimates that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) increased the number of people employed by between 200,000 and 1.5 million jobs in March.[1] In other words, between 200,000 and 1.5 million people employed in March owed their jobs to the Recovery Act. This estimate, … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the April Employment Report
May 4, 2012
Today’s employment report shows that April’s job growth was disappointing for the second straight month and that the economic costs in terms of fewer jobs, less income, and lower growth remain very high. In particular, the number of workers in the Labor Department’s … -
Video: Chad Stone and Hannah Shaw Discuss the March Employment Report
April 6, 2012
Chad Stone, Chief Economist, and Hannah Shaw, Research Associate, discuss the disappointing jobs report for March and what it indicates about job creation and economic growth. Click the video for the full discussion. -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the March Employment Report
April 6, 2012
Today's jobs report disappointed expectations, with employers adding only 120,000 jobs in March, making clear that a strong jobs recovery remains elusive. The unemployment rate dipped to 8.2 percent, but that decline reflected people leaving the labor force, not finding jobs. The … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the February Employment Report
March 9, 2012
Today brought another solid monthly employment report. Nevertheless, the economic recovery still has a long way to go to erase the lingering effects of the Great Recession and restore full employment and a healthy labor market. Moreover, economic forecasters expect only modest economic growth … -
New CBO Report Finds Up to Two Million People Still Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act
Updated February 24, 2012
View the most recent version of this report: New CBO Report Finds Hundreds of Thousands of People Still Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act Updated May 29, 2012 A new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report estimates that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) increased the number of people employed by between 300,000 and 2 million jobs … -
Video: Jared Bernstein Discusses the January Employment Report with Chad Stone
February 3, 2012
Jared Bernstein, Senior Fellow, and Chad Stone, Chief Economist, discuss what the encouraging January employment report indicates about job creation and economic growth.
Chad Stone: “We’re smiling and the markets are smiling and this is actually a good jobs report. It’s one of the few good jobs reports we’ve had in this recovery. We had 240,000 jobs on private and government payrolls combined. 257,000 jobs in the private sector. 23 straight months of private sector job creation. Another two years of that, we’ll have erased the hole that got created by the Great Recession.”
Duration: 4:32
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the January Employment Report
February 3, 2012
Today's jobs report is encouraging, but we should judge it against the overall sluggishness of the economic recovery and a persistently large jobs deficit that remains after 23 straight months of private-sector job creation. Payroll employment is still 5.6 million jobs short of where … -
Testimony of Jared Bernstein Before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce
February 1, 2012
Chairman Kline, Ranking Member Miller, and members of the Committee, I thank you for the opportunity to testify today and applaud you for holding this hearing on the issue that matters most to most Americans right now: opportunity, jobs, and the living standards of the broad middle class. Introduction: Current Conditions and the American Middle … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the December Employment Report
January 6, 2012
Today’s employment report shows glimmers of hope for the job market, most notably the addition of 200,000 payroll jobs in December. Yet a strong jobs recovery remains elusive. The overall jobs deficit remains large, the labor force shrank for the second straight month, and the proportion … -
Congressional Impasse Jeopardizes January Jobless Benefits for Nearly Two Million Workers
December 22, 2011
Congress's failure to resolve differences over how to pay for renewing the payroll tax cut and federal emergency unemployment insurance (UI) benefits could mean an even colder January for jobless workers. States are already taking action to shut down the provision of federal benefits at the start of the new year, putting 1.8 … -
Key Things to Know About Unemployment Insurance
Updated December 20, 2011
In the heat of the battle over how to address the imminent expiration of federal emergency unemployment insurance (UI) benefits (and the payroll tax cut), policymakers should not lose sight of what UI is and how it has functioned over the years. UI not only cushions the financial blow for workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the November Employment Report
December 2, 2011
Today's employment report shows continued moderate growth in private payroll employment but a further decline in government jobs. Thus, the overall jobs deficit remains large (see chart) and jobs remain hard to find. The drop in the unemployment rate to 8.6 percent arises from people … -
New CBO Report Finds Up to 2.4 Million People Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act
Updated November 23, 2011
View the most recent version of this report: New CBO Report Finds Hundreds of Thousands of People Still Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act Updated May 29, 2012 A new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report estimates that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) increased the number of people employed by between 0.4 million and 2.4 million jobs … -
Video: A Discussion with Jared Bernstein and Chad Stone on the October Employment Report
November 5, 2011
Long-term unemployment is, in this recession, and aftermath, has been at unprecedented levels. In the really bad recession in the 1980s we didn’t see anywhere near as much long-term unemployment.
Duration: 4:34
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the October Employment Report
November 4, 2011
Today's employment report shows that jobs remain scarce, especially for the long-term unemployed. More than two-fifths of the unemployed have been looking for a job for more than six months (see chart) — and, according to a recent Pew Economic Policy Group Report, nearly a third of the … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the September Employment Report
October 7, 2011
Today's jobs report shows that more than two years after the recession officially ended, a strong jobs recovery remains elusive. With job creation still sluggish, unemployment still very high, and the share of Americans with a job still severely depressed (see chart), policymakers should enact a … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the August Employment Report
September 2, 2011
Today's jobs report highlights the critical need for policies to put people back to work. Employers added no net new jobs and the unemployment rate remained 9.1 percent. Most leading forecasters in government and out expect the unemployment rate to remain very high for the next few … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the July Employment Report
August 5, 2011
Today's jobs report shows that the labor market continues to limp along rather than put people back to work. The share of the population with a job remains severely depressed and unemployment remains alarmingly high — with more than 40 percent of the unemployment rate … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the June Employment Report
July 8, 2011
Today’s very disappointing employment report shows that two years after the technical end of the recession and after 16 straight months of private-sector job creation, the jobs deficit remains huge (see chart). The depth of the job losses from the recession is unprecedented since … -
Testimony: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, Before the Joint Economic Committee
June 21, 2011
Vice Chairman Brady and other members of the Committee, thank you for inviting me to testify. I feel especially privileged to be appearing as a witness before the Joint Economic Committee, which together with the President's Council of Economic Advisers — both established by the Employment Act of 1946 — … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the May Employment Report
June 3, 2011
Today’s employment report should be a wake-up call to policymakers who continue to say the budget deficit is a more immediate threat to the economy than the jobs deficit. Nearly two years after the economy technically turned the corner from recession to recovery, job growth was … -
Economic Downturn and Bush Policies Continue to Drive Large Projected Deficits
May 10, 2011
We have since updated this paper. To view the new paper, click here. Some lawmakers, pundits, and others continue to say that President George W. Bush’s policies did not drive the projected federal deficits of the coming decade — that, instead, it was the policies of President Obama and Congress in 2009 and 2010. But, the fact remains: the … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the April Employment Report
May 6, 2011
Today’s employment report provides mixed signals on the jobs market. The survey of employers shows they added jobs at a solid pace in April. Yet the jobs deficit from the recession remains very large and, even more discouraging, the survey of households shows that unemployment is still high, with too many people … -
Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the March Employment Report
April 1, 2011
Today’s employment report shows that the economy is creating jobs at a solid pace. But it also reminds us that without even stronger job growth, it will take years to erase the large jobs deficit that the 2007-2009 recession created (see chart) and to lower the unemployment rate … -
Podcast: The February Unemployment Report and What It Means for the Economy
March 4, 2011
The jobs report for February is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 2:46
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the February Employment Report
March 4, 2011
Today’s employment report shows job creation bouncing back from last month’s depressed level, but it also shows that the labor market is still suffering serious ill-effects from the 2007-2009 recession. Job growth thus far in the economic recovery has reduced only a small part … -
Creating Subsidized Employment Opportunities for Low-Income Parents
February 16, 2011
Issued Jointly With Amidst the worst downturn since the Great Depression, Congress included the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Emergency Fund [1] in the 2009 Recovery Act to help states cover the costs of providing more assistance to low-income families suffering from the ill effects of the … -
Podcast: The January Unemployment Report and What It Means for the Economy
February 4, 2011
The jobs report for January is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 3:07
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the January Employment Report
February 4, 2011
Today’s jobs report is another in the recent string of such monthly reports showing modest job creation. The unemployment rate dropped surprisingly to 9 percent, but it remains very high. While labor market conditions are brighter than two years ago when the economy was … -
Podcast: The Commerce Department’s Report on GDP and What It Means for the Economy and Job Creation
February 1, 2011
Chad Stone, the Center’s Chief Economist, discusses what the Commerce Department’s new report on gross domestic product means for the economy and job creation.
Duration: 3:12
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the December Employment Report
January 7, 2011
Today’s jobs report shows that after two years of net job losses, payroll employment grew modestly in 2010, with private employers adding jobs every month (see chart). The drop in December’s unemployment rate was welcome, but a key reason for it was people leaving … -
Podcast: The December Unemployment Report and What It Means for the Economy
January 7, 2011
The jobs report for December is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 3:29
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Podcast: Rising Need, Falling Funding for TANF Program
December 21, 2010
Director of the Center’s Welfare Reform and Income Support Division, Dr. LaDonna Pavetti, talks about cuts to the safety net despite the rising need among our most vulnerable citizens.
Duration: 4:43
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Podcast: The Recovery Act is Boosting the Economy
December 14, 2010
Michael Leachman, Assistant Director of the Center’s State Fiscal Project, discusses the latest information showing that the Recovery Act is creating jobs and boosting the economy.
Duration: 3:53
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Podcast: The November Unemployment Report and What It Means for the Economy
December 3, 2010
?The jobs report for November is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 3:57
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the November Employment Report
December 3, 2010
Today’s disappointing employment report shows that the economy is continuing to create jobs, but job growth is far too slow to bring down the painfully high long-term unemployment rate (see chart). With such a high percentage of the unemployed unable to find a job within 26 weeks, … -
Podcast: The Impact of the Expiration of Federal Emergency Unemployment Benefits
November 30, 2010
Chad Stone, the Center’s Chief Economist, discusses the expiration of federal emergency unemployment benefits and what it means for millions of jobless workers and the economy.
Duration: 3:33
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New CBO Report Finds Up to 3.6 Million People Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act
Updated November 29, 2010
View the most recent version of this report: New CBO Report Finds Hundreds of Thousands of People Still Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act Updated May 29, 2012 A new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report estimates that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) increased the number of people employed by between 1.4 million and 3.6 … -
Podcast: Key Issues Facing Congress
November 16, 2010
Jim Horney, the Center’s director of Federal Fiscal Policy, discusses the key issues facing Congress during the lame duck session that began yesterday.
Duration: 4:45
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Emergency Unemployment Insurance Benefits Remain Critical for the Economy
November 10, 2010
Although the unemployment rate is stuck at more than 9½ percent, jobless workers will see unemployment insurance (UI) benefits slashed to pre-recession levels unless Congress acts before the end of this month. That would deliver a harsh blow to most of the 5 million workers now receiving federal emergency UI benefits … -
Media Briefing: A Priority for Lame Duck Congress: Extending Federal Emergency Unemployment Insurance
November 10, 2010
Robert Greenstein, Executive Director and Chad Stone, Chief Economist explains what it would mean if Congress fails to continue the emergency UI program, which provides additional weeks of federal benefits to unemployed workers who exhaust their 26 weeks of regular state benefits before they can find a job.
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Podcast: Emergency Unemployment Insurance Benefits Remain Critical
November 9, 2010
Chad Stone, the Center’s Chief Economist, discusses what’s at stake if Congress fails to renew the federal emergency unemployment benefits program that helps millions of laid off workers meet their families’ basic expenses at a time when jobs remain very hard to find. Duration: 3:48
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Podcast: The October Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
November 5, 2010
I’m Keri Fulton and I’m here with Chad Stone, the Center’s Chief Economist, to discuss the jobs report for October. 1. Chad, today’s jobs report seems to have generated some excitement for the first time in a while with the economy generating more jobs than expected. Is the … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the October Employment Report
November 5, 2010
Today’s employment report contains much better news on job creation than expected, but it does not change the underlying fact that the economic recovery remains weak and the economy needs a boost. For the tenth straight month, the private sector created jobs, but the pace of job creation … -
Podcast: State Ballot Initiatives Will Affect Public Services
November 2, 2010
Jon Shure, the Deputy Director of the Center’s State Fiscal Project, discusses how in some states people will vote today on ballot initiatives that will significantly affect public services.
Duration: 3:28
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Podcast: Why There Won’t Be a COLA in 2011
October 19, 2010
Paul Van de Water, Senior Fellow, discusses the news that seniors won’t receive a cost-of-living-adjustment to their Social Security benefits this year.
Duration: 3:12
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Podcast: The September Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
October 8, 2010
The jobs report for September is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone. Duration: 3:32
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the September Employment Report
October 8, 2010
Today’s jobs report shows that the economy still faces a long and difficult climb out of the jobs hole created by the recent recession. The private sector has created, on average, fewer than 100,000 jobs a month this year — not enough to keep up with population growth and not nearly … -
Understanding the Census Bureau’s Upcoming Report on Poverty
September 14, 2010
On September 16 the Census Bureau will release official figures on poverty in 2009.[1] Below are three facts to keep in mind when reviewing the new data: 1. Official Poverty Measure May Increase by Record Amount in 2009 We expect a large increase for 2009 in both the number of Americans in poverty and the percentage of the population in … -
Press Release: Minnesota Subsidized Jobs Program Will Be Scaled Back if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
Updated September 7, 2010
Clarification: We have updated this press release to reflect the fact that the subsidized jobs program originally placed five paid interns with Permac Industries. The press release originally stated that Permac Industries hired them as employees. Minnesota will have to scale back a subsidized transitional jobs program that it has expanded significantly during … -
Podcast: The August Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
September 3, 2010
The jobs report for August is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 2:57
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Statement by Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the August Employment Report
September 3, 2010
Today’s jobs report provided better news than expected about private-sector job creation, but the case for additional stimulus to boost a tepid economic recovery and revive the job market remains strong. The good news, as the chart below shows, is that the economy has now added private-sector jobs for eight straight months. The bad news is that adding … -
Press Release: Connecticut Will Be Unable to Expand Successful Jobs Programs if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
September 2, 2010
A greatly expanded Connecticut subsidized employment program, which has provided jobs for over 6,000 low-income parents and youth, will never reach its full potential unless Congress this fall extends the federal program that funded it, according to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The employment program uses federal dollars provided … -
Press Release: Ohio Counties Will Be Unable to Expand Successful Jobs Programs if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
September 2, 2010
A new Ohio subsidized employment program, which has provided jobs for 1,500 parents in 44 Ohio counties and 8,000 youth in 69 counties, will never reach its full potential unless Congress this fall extends the federal program that funded it, according to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The employment program uses federal dollars … -
Press Release: ‘Hire Colorado’ Jobs Program to End if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
September 2, 2010
Hire Colorado, a new subsidized employment program that has provided jobs for 1,600 parents in counties across the state, will shut its doors on September 30 if Congress fails this month to extend the federal program that funded it, according to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Most of the job placements for Hire Colorado are with … -
Press Release: South Carolina Will Be Unable to Continue Successful Jobs Program if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
September 2, 2010
A new South Carolina subsidized employment program (known as the STEP program), which has provided jobs for 650 parents, will stop placing South Carolinians in jobs on September 30 unless Congress this fall extends the federal program that funded it, according to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The STEP program uses federal dollars … -
Press Release: 12,000 Pennsylvania Jobs to Disappear on September 30 if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
September 2, 2010
As many as 12,000 workers in Pennsylvania could lose their jobs this month if the Senate fails to extend federal funding that allowed the state to create Way to Work, a highly successful program that subsidizes private- and public-sector jobs for unemployed parents and youth, according to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Way to Work … -
Press Release: 26,000 Illinois Jobs to Disappear on September 30 if U.S. Senate Fails to Extend TANF Emergency Fund
September 2, 2010
As many as 26,000 workers in Illinois could lose their jobs this month if the Senate fails to extend federal funding that allowed the state to create Put Illinois to Work, a highly successful program that subsidizes private- and public-sector jobs for unemployed parents and youth, according to a new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Put … -
Walking Away From a Win-Win-Win
September 2, 2010
An emergency jobs program through which 37 states have provided subsidized jobs for nearly 250,000 otherwise unemployed parents and youth — helping families, businesses, and communities across America weather the recession — will end September 30 unless the Senate joins the House in voting to extend it. The TANF … -
Video Clip: CNN Europe cites the Center on State Budget Gap Data
August 31, 2010
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the July Employment Report
August 6, 2010
Today’s jobs report shows a labor market that is still not generating enough jobs to lower the unemployment rate. Unless job creation picks up dramatically, unemployment will likely remain elevated for some time to come, as it did in the previous two recessions, though at much higher rates this time (see chart). Creating fewer than … -
Podcast: The July Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
August 6, 2010
The jobs report for July is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone. Duration: 3:01
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July 30 Data Release Will Capture Only a Portion of the Jobs Created or Saved by the Recovery Act
July 29, 2010
On July 30, the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board will post on its website, www.recovery.gov, data on jobs funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). This data release will capture only a portion of the jobs created and saved by the Act, due to ARRA’s limited reporting requirements. According to the … -
Going, Going, Almost Gone: Job-Creating TANF Emergency Fund Set to Expire
July 26, 2010
The subsidized jobs programs that states have created through the TANF Emergency Fund are a bright spot in an economy that is producing new jobs at a very slow pace, but some of these programs have already stopped taking applications in anticipation of the fund’s September 30 expiration, and … -
Podcast: The Need for Extending the TANF Emergency Fund
July 20, 2010
Dr. LaDonna Pavetti, Director of the Center’s Welfare Reform and Income Support Division, discusses how states are using the TANF Emergency Fund to create jobs – and the need for extending the program.
Duration: 4:35
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, as the Senate Nears Approval of Unemployment Insurance
July 20, 2010
The Senate’s move today toward extending the Recovery Act’s extra weeks of jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed will provide much-needed help to almost 3 million unemployed workers and a boost to the economy, since those workers will spend their benefits quickly … -
Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the June Employment Report
July 2, 2010
The good news in today’s jobs report is that the private sector continued adding jobs in June — though, as expected, the economy lost jobs overall due to the scheduled reduction in temporary census jobs (see chart). The bad news is that private sector job creation must be much … -
Podcast: The June Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
July 2, 2010
The jobs report for June is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone. Duration: 2:48
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Critics Still Wrong on What’s Driving Deficits in Coming Years
Updated June 28, 2010
The data in this analysis has been updated, but this version has a detailed critique of a misleading report by the Heritage Foundation that places blame for the deficits on rapid growth in Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and interest costs, and dismisses the significance of weak revenues in general and the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts in particular. To view the … -
Over 3 Million Low-Income Children in Rural Areas Face Cut in Child Tax Credit if Recovery Act Improvement Expires
June 10, 2010
Issued Jointly With Nearly 3.3 million low-income children with working parents in rural areas will lose important tax benefits if Congress does not extend the Child Tax Credit improvements that the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provided for low-income families, as President Obama has proposed. These … -
Podcast: The Recovery Act is Working
June 8, 2010
The latest information showing that the Recovery Act is creating jobs and the need to extend more aid to states is discussed by Senior Policy Analyst, Michael Leachman.
Duration: 3:29
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Podcast: The May Employment Report and What It Means For the Economy
June 4, 2010
The jobs report for May is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone. Duration: 2:33
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the May Employment Report
June 4, 2010
Today’s jobs report shows a labor market that has turned the corner and is creating jobs but one with a long way to go toward a full recovery from the devastating job losses of 2008-09. The percentage of the population with a job is generally moving in the right direction but remains at a … -
Statement: Nicholas Johnson, Director, State Fiscal Project, on NGA and NASBO's “Fiscal Survey of the States”
June 3, 2010
Today’s “Fiscal Survey of States” from the National Governors Association (NGA) and the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO) underscores the urgent need for Congress to extend fiscal relief to states in the pending jobs legislation. Without further assistance, … -
New CBO Report Finds Recovery Act has Preserved or Created up to 2.8 Million Jobs
May 26, 2010
View the most recent version of this report: New CBO Report Finds Hundreds of Thousands of People Still Owe Their Jobs to the Recovery Act Updated May 29, 2012 A new Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report estimates that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) had preserved or created between 1.2 million and 2.8 million jobs as … -
“YouCut” Vote Mischaracterizes TANF Emergency Fund
May 20, 2010
The description of the TANF Emergency Fund on the House Republicans’ “YouCut” website is fundamentally inaccurate, so the vote by respondents to eliminate the program is essentially meaningless. Despite what the website suggests, the Fund reflects the main tenets that federal … -
Budgetary Concerns Should Not Be An Obstacle to Passing the New Jobs Bill
Revised May 20, 2010
Congress is about to take up a jobs bill that will provide a needed boost to the economic recovery and help people still struggling to find work in a difficult labor market. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Sander Levin today released a summary of … -
Podcast: The April Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
May 7, 2010
The jobs report for April is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 3:23
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Statement: Chad Stone, Chief Economist, on the April Employment Report
May 7, 2010
Today’s jobs report contains much encouraging news, but it also reminds us that the economic recovery will have to gather more strength to bring down the unemployment rate. While the economy has been growing since the middle of last year and employers are beginning to add jobs, the … -
TANF Emergency Fund Extension Has Wide Support
May 3, 2010
With the TANF Emergency Fund slated to expire on September 30, public officials and private experts are calling for its extension as part of jobs legislation because it is an important tool to help put Americans back to work. These key individuals include: Mark Zandi, Chief Economist at Moody’s Analytics; Karen Lee, President … -
Failure to Renew Federal Benefits Changes the Map for State Unemployment Insurance Coverage
April 14, 2010
For updated data see: Policy Basics: How Many Weeks of Unemployment Compensation Are Available? Congress’s failure to extend the measures providing extra weeks of unemployment insurance (UI) and subsidized COBRA health insurance coverage for unemployed workers – which President Obama and Congress enacted in the 2009 American … -
Congress Should Act Quickly to Extend UI/COBRA Benefits Through the End of This Year
April 12, 2010
The long-term unemployment rate — the percentage of people in the work force who have been out of work for over half a year and are still looking for a job — reached an unprecedented 4.3 percent of the labor force in March (see the chart). Yet Congress has allowed the Recovery Act measures that provide additional weeks of … -
Extending the TANF Emergency Fund Would Create and Preserve Jobs Quickly and Efficiently
Updated April 6, 2010
The TANF Emergency Fund created by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) has enabled states to create subsidized jobs for TANF recipients and other low-income unemployed individuals and to bolster overall consumer demand by helping states meet the growing need for basic assistance among very poor families … -
Podcast: The March Employment Report and What It Means for the Economy
April 2, 2010
The jobs report for March is discussed by Chief Economist, Chad Stone.
Duration: 2:36




