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123 Monthly Lab. Rev. 21 (2000)
Why Are Many Jobless Workers Not Applying for Benefits

handle is hein.journals/month123 and id is 555 raw text is: Why are many jobless workers
not applying for benefits?
More than half of those meeting the official definition
of unemployment do not file for unemployment insurance
benefits-either because they think they are not eligible
or because they are optimistic about finding a job

Stephen A. Wandner
and
Andrew Stettner
Stephen A. Wandner
is an economist at the
Employment and
Training Administration
(ETA), U.S. Department
of Labor. Andrew
Stettner formerly
worked for ETA as a
research analyst.

he proportion of unemployed individuals
receiving unemployment insurance (Ut)
has dropped steadily over the past 40
years. Recipiency rates-the number of persons
receiving unemployment insurance benefits (from
administrative data) divided by the total number
of unemployed persons (from Current Population
Survey data)--have provided a consistent mea-
sure of the tn program's scope. Recipiency rates
averaged 49 percent in the 1950s, 42 percent in
the 1960s, 40 percent in the 1970s, and 33
percent in the 1980s. The rate reached a low
point of 28.5 percent in 1984, and since then it
has stayed above 30 percent, reaching a recent
high of 35.1 percent in 1996.1 (See table 1.) This
trend has raised concerns among policymakers
that the uTI program has become less responsive
to U.S. workers. One explanation for the drop in
recipiency rates is that fewer unemployed work-
ers are filing for uI benefits. Unemployed work-
ers cannot receive benefits if they do not apply.
However, very little is known about these
nonfilers, because they do not enter into the
ut system. This article reports on the results of
two recent supplements to the Current Popula-
tion Survey (cPS) that were designed to measure
the magnitude of nonfiling and to determine the
reasons that many unemployed persons do not
seek benefits. The supplements were jointly
sponsored by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) and the Employment and Training Admin-
istration (ETA) of the Department of Labor.
In its Report and Recommendations, the
Advisory Council on Unemployment Compen-
sation reported that declines in Ut recipiency

rates have raised particular concern, in large
part because they threaten the primary functions
of the U1 system.2 On the microeconomic level,
the decline in recipiency means that the uI
system is serving fewer workers as a temporary
wage replacement system. The decline in reci-
piency also has an impact on the macroeco-
nomic function of unemployment insurance. If
the recipiency rate does not increase substan-
tially during a recession, the economy does not
get a countercyclical infusion of consumer
spending in response to an increase in total ut
payments.
The structure of the Extended Benefits pro-
gram highlights the impact of the decline in
recipiency on the macroeconomic function of U1
benefits. The insured unemployment rate (IuR)--
the total number of continued unemployment
insurance claims divided by the total number of
employed covered by unemployment insurance-
is the statutory trigger used by the Extended
Benefits program, which provides benefits be-
yond the normal 26-week maximum benefit dura-
tion period during times of economic downturn.3
The long-term decline in ut recipiency rates
hampers the effectiveness of the Extended Bene-
fits program because the trigger rate is less likely
to cross the legal threshold during a recession.
Understanding why individuals do not file for
benefits may inform current policy discussions
about reforming the Extended Benefits program
of the ut system.
While a fair amount of research has been
published about the decline in recipiency rates,
research on why individuals choose not to file
Monthly Labor Review    June 2000   21

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