Jobs Act
American Jobs Act
The American Jobs Act of 2011
The American Jobs Act
This paper advocates passage of the American Jobs Act of 2011. Two years after the Great Recession of 2007-2009 ended, unemployment continues at near record highs. As of September 2011, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate held at 9.1%, with the number of unemployed persons at 14.0 million. The unemployment rates for adult men (8.8%), adult women (8.1%), teenagers (24.6%), whites (8.0%), blacks (16.0%), and Hispanics (11.3%) were essentially unchanged for September. The number of long-term unemployed, those who were jobless for 27 weeks or longer, was 6.2 million individuals, accounting for 44.4% of the unemployed. The number of individuals employed part-time for economic reasons, also referred to as involuntary part-time workers, rose to 9.3 million in September. These persons worked part-time because their hours had been cut back, or because they were unable to find a full-time job (Bureau of Labor Statistics, pars. 1-5).
About 2.5 million people were defined as marginally attached to the labor force in September, about the same number as reported a year earlier. These individuals were not in the labor force, wanted and were available for work, and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. Among the marginally attached, there were 1.0 million discouraged workers, down by 172,000 from one year earlier (Bureau of Labor Statistics, par. 6).
With these grim statistics as a backdrop, President Obama announced the proposed American Jobs Act of 2011, legislation designed to boost hiring and to help the ailing economy. This essay examines the key provisions of the Jobs Act. The Act provides a tax cut for small businesses that is designed to help them increase hiring and expand right away. There is an additional tax cut for any business that hires employees or increases wages. The Act also cuts the payroll tax in half, saving typical families an average of $1,500 per year (Obama, par.4).
The Jobs Act puts people back to work, including teachers who were laid off by state budget cuts, along with first responders and veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, and construction workers. The Act puts them to work repairing U.S. infrastructure, crumbling bridges, roads, and more than 35,000 schools, as well as hundreds of thousands of foreclosed homes and businesses across the country (Obama, par. 5).
The Jobs Act also helps out-of-work Americans by extending unemployment benefits which will allow them to support their families while they look for work. The Jobs Act also helps to reform the system with training programs and job-seeking assistance to help the long-term unemployed. The proposed legislation also bans employers from discriminating against the unemployed when hiring, and also provides a new tax credit to those employers hiring workers who have been out of work for more than six months. The Act expands job opportunities for hundreds of thousands of low-income youth and adults through a Pathways Back to Work Fund that supports summer and year round jobs. It also provides innovative new job training programs to help low-income workers connect to jobs quickly along with programs to encourage employers to hire disadvantaged workers (Obama, par. 7).
Another feature of the Jobs Act is that the proposed legislation is fully paid for by offsets to close corporate tax loopholes and by requiring America's wealthiest individuals to pay their fair share to cover the costs of the measure. The Act also increases the deficit reduction target for the Joint Committee by the amount of the jobs package cost and specifying that if the committee reaches the higher target, then their measures would replace and turn off specific offsets of the Jobs Act (Obama, par. 8).
To summarize, the Act includes $447 billion over ten years to pay for temporary stimulus spending, new job training programs, unemployment insurance and, and temporary tax reductions. To offset the cost of the legislation, the bill includes an estimated $467 billion in tax increases and spending cuts to take place on a more long-term schedule once the economy recovers. The bill also includes a payroll tax cut for employees and employers, and offers a tax credit to businesses that hire individuals who have been unemployed for more than six months. The Act also focuses on shovel-ready infrastructure projects like roads, railways, waterways, ports, and airports to modernize America. The proposed legislation includes more tax cuts and tax credits than it does stimulus spending, in an approximate ratio of 60-40 (Debatepedia, pr.1).
2. Arguments For and Against the...
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