Biden said he'd cut down on unemployment benefits, but he really might reinstate a pre-pandemic job-seeking policy

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Biden said he'd cut down on unemployment benefits, but he really might reinstate a pre-pandemic job-seeking policy
President Joe Biden.AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File
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President Joe Biden said in a speech on Monday that Americans receiving unemployment benefits must either take a job that is "suitable" or lose their benefits, as he encouraged states to reinstate a pre-pandemic policy of requiring people to search for work.

"We're going to make it clear that anyone collecting unemployment who is offered a suitable job must take the job or lose their unemployment benefits," Biden said at the White House.

According to a White House fact sheet released after the speech, the Department of Labor will "reaffirm longstanding" unemployment-insurance requirements to ensure that states, workers, and employers understand the rules regarding the benefits.

The Department of Labor will also issue a letter to states reaffirming that people receiving benefits cannot turn down a suitable job to continue receiving their benefits.

Experts said these job-seeking guidelines were in place before the pandemic, and states scrapped them last year as the economy crashed, which caused a surge in unemployment. While the economic situation is improving, those experts said factors like a lack of childcare and school closures were keeping some people out of the workforce.

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"On the whole, the Biden Administration is moving to return UI slowly like the rest of the economy to its" pre-pandemic rules, Andrew Stettner, an unemployment expert at the Century Foundation, said in emailed comments to Insider.

"Advocates are concerned that policy makers ensure that no workers are cut of off benefits because they cannot find affordable child care, and the reinstatement of work search requirements raises the stakes for this type of protections," he added.

This announcement came after a jobs report last week that fell significantly short of expectations, with Republican lawmakers casting the blame on too-generous unemployment benefits disincentivizing Americans from returning to work.

While Biden said in his speech that "we don't see much evidence" of benefits hurting job growth, his remarks suggested he was listening to GOP criticism on the issue.

Since the start of the pandemic, Republicans and businesspeople have criticized expanded unemployment insurance - inserted into March 2020's CARES Act by Democrats in the House - as too generous. While the $600 federal unemployment addition to weekly benefits expired last year, Congress reinstated it in December at $300 a week, which Biden extended through September 6 as part of the stimulus law in March.

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The US Chamber of Commerce called for an end to the benefits in the wake of the April jobs numbers, but Democrats like Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont said on Twitter that "workers desperately need" the benefits.

While states waived their unemployment-benefits work requirements at the start of the pandemic, 39 of them have already started, or are planning to, reimpose them.

Biden said: "We'll insist that the law is followed with respect to benefits, but we're not going to turn our backs on our fellow Americans."

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