By Don Lee | LA Times
California’s massive budget deficit, coupled with the state’s relatively high level of joblessness, has become a major barrier to reducing the billions of dollars of debt it has incurred to pay unemployment benefits.
The surge in unemployment brought on by the COVID pandemic pushed the state’s unemployment insurance trust into insolvency. And over the last year California’s joblessness has been on the upswing again, reaching 5.3% in February, the highest among all states. The March job numbers come out Friday.
To keep the safety-net program operating at a time when the taxes paid by employers and earmarked for jobless benefits are insufficient, Sacramento has been borrowing billions of dollars from the federal government. The debt now stands at about $21 billion and growing, an increasing burden for state deficit fighters and for the businesses that pay into the jobless insurance program.
Read more at: LA Times
2 Comments
People pay into unemployment in order to receive benefits. So unless the government spent that money on something it wasn’t for then this shouldn’t even be happening. It all comes down to misappropriating of funds
Bullsh** Then where exactly is he getting the money to fund all these damn freeloading, waste of space illegals?! Quit spending our money like your personal piggy bank NewScumbag