- Republican Rep.
Kevin Brady unveiled a bill that would offer a $1,200 cash bonus for Americans going back to work. - It would be equivalent to collecting two weeks of ramped-up unemployment payments currently in place.
- Still, some experts say they are wary about a policy that could leave out essential workers who stayed at their positions at great personal risk for low wages.
Republican Rep. Kevin Brady introduced legislation to get Americans back to work with a $1,200
Under the proposal, workers would be eligible to get the cash, which is equivalent to an unemployed person collecting two weeks of ramped-up unemployment benefits. The $600 federal boost in payments is set to expire on July 31.
Brady, the top Republican on the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, said the plan represented an "important part in preventing a prolonged recession."
"For us to rebuild our economy, we must make sure Americans can get back to work in a safe, healthy environment," Brady said in a press release. "Through a
The
But some experts are skeptical of implementing a hiring bonus during the
"This is a public health crisis," Olugbenga Ajilore, senior economist at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank, told Business Insider. "People are not staying home and not going to work because they are lazy bums."
"Twelve hundred dollars doesn't mean anything if you're putting your life and health at risk," Ajilore said.
He said the policy would lock out essential workers — such as grocery store workers, warehouse employees, and bus drivers, among others — from receiving the payment since many remained at their positions and kept American society running through the pandemic, often for low wages and at great personal risk.
"You're going to have a set of workers who stayed home and now they're going to work and they're going to get $1,200," he said. "And all these people who put their lives on the line to work, what happens to them?"
Democrats passed a sweeping plan for $3 trillion in emergency relief spending to mitigate the economic fallout and combat the pandemic, though Republicans refuse to take it up. Its provisions include a $200 billion fund to provide "hazard pay" for front-line workers and essential employees, and allow them to get as much as $25,000 through 2020.
Over 40 million Americans have filed for unemployment so far during the pandemic, a figure equivalent to the population of California. The jobless rate surged to nearly 15% in April.
There's little prospect of a quick economic recovery, economists say. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projects the unemployment rate will hover around 10% for much of 2021.
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