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Insolvency Looms For Connecticut’s Unemployment Fund Without Emergency Bailout

The Dem/Commie ‘Agenda’ doesn’t seen to be working … Dead on Arrival … Again

Source: ZeroHedge

Is it time for Connecticut’s Democratic Gov. to start sucking up to President Trump?

While investors somehow find solace in the ongoing negotiations between the White House and the Democrats (in case you actually believed that Friday’s ‘deadline’ was actually a hard deadline, well, it wasn’t), a report in the Connecticut Mirror hints at something we suspect markets haven’t entirely priced in – at least not yet.

The Connecticut Mirror’s Keith Phaneuf, an experienced chronicler of the state budget, drew attention to an imminent problem that could leave hundreds of thousands of nutmeggers blindsided when the reserve of money earmarked for unemployment benefits suddenly runs dry.

Phaneuf’s report about Connecticut’s predicament might help some understand where Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are coming from. As many blue states focused on trying to shore up funding for their pension obligations, preparations for another economic downturn were lacking.

Of course, as Phaneuf readily points out, American states are allowed to exhaust their emergency funds, and it sometimes happens during a recession. However, when this happens, the state must borrow from the federal government’s unemployment reserve fund, which charges interest in the form of a surtax born by state businesses.

While the Trump Administration hasn’t yet wielded it as such, the fact that states are effectively at the whim of the federal government when they need to borrow like this, is a powerful bargaining chip, and might offer a hint at why Trump has continued to hold out.

But if nothing else, this is just one more example of how state budget troubles might redound on the real economy. Connecticut’s unemployment trust fund is headed for insolvency by the end of the month, or possibly early next month.

Having received an unprecedented, 750,000 applications for unemployment benefits since mid-March, the state agency has paid out about $4.4 billion in benefits to date. Roughly $1.6 billion has involved state benefits, drawn from Connecticut’s unemployment compensation trust, and more than $2.8 billion in various forms of enhanced federal aid via grants from Washington.

As of Monday, about $118 million remains in the state trust, but between $250 million and $350 million will be needed monthly between now and the beginning of next month to extend benefits for the jobless.

Here’s more from the Connecticut Mirror.

Restaurants, tourism, and other seasonal industries will be the hardest hit by this, lumping even more injury on to their plate.

States that want to blunt the burden on businesses have an alternative: Connecticut has used its $1.38 billion federal Coronavirus Relief Fund grant to support COVID-19 testing, buy PPE and help subsidize state health-care providers to make access more readily available, and help towns and cities recoup costs. Some states have shifted their grant money from FEMA and other federal sources to their unemployment funds, in a legally questionable move that has nevertheless been widely allowed.

But ultimately, there’s only one long-term solution: Connecticut will eventually need to reexamine its requirements governing who can receive benefits. Right now, people earning less than $1,000 a year can still qualify.

The state could save billions, and help replenish the fund more quickly, if that rate was raised to just $3,000.

It’s almost as if the GOP and the White House has a point when it says we need to limit the scope of benefits to ensure we don’t unfairly subsidize blue states. Meanwhile, as Gov Andrew Cuomo takes a political swipe at the president, the governor warned that Trump’s EO won’t help dig the state of New York out of its fiscal hole.

But will it help the people dig themselves out of their financial holes?

Insolvency Looms For Connecticut’s Unemployment Fund Without Emergency Bailout

TD

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