By: National Academy of Social Insurance Unemployment Insurance Task Force
Published: July, 2024
Unemployment Insurance (UI) is a critical part of America’s social insurance fabric—and an essential part of the nation’s economic toolkit. In addition to providing countercyclical support during economic downturns, it helps people who have lost work through no fault of their own to maintain attachment to the workforce, prevent wage erosion, and help them pay bills, when forces out of their control limit their income.
Meanwhile, the COVID-19 pandemic exposed major cracks in America’s UI system, including massive technology failures, a core administrative structure ill-equipped to pay benefits on time and to the right people, and a base set of laws and assumptions that varied widely in benefit amount, duration, and access.
The National Academy of Social Insurance’s UI Task Force, first convened in December 2020, has spent the past several years looking at lessons learned from the pandemic; solutions proposed over the past few decades; and the vast knowledge base and range of its diverse members’ views. In July 2024, the Task Force—comprised of 24 leading experts from across the political spectrum—released its final report, to help policymakers, the media, and the public understand what policy levers exist, how they work, and what the trade-offs are for each one.
Members of the Academy’s Unemployment Insurance Task Force:
Michele Evermore, The Century Foundation and Rutgers University – Principal Investigator
Ben Gitis – Co-Chair
Julia Simon-Mishel, Philadelphia Legal Assistance – Co-Chair
Till von Wachter, California Policy Lab, University of California, Los Angeles – Co-Chair
David Balducchi, U.S. Department of Labor (retired)
Judy Chesser, U.S. Social Security Administration (retired)
Calvin Colbert, Challenger, Gray & Christmas
Matthew Darling, MEF Associates
Rebecca Dixon, National Employment Law Project
Brendan Duke, Center for American Progress
Althea Erickson, Working Matters
Mary Gable, American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees
Heidi Hartmann, American University
Douglas Holmes, National Foundation for Unemployment Compensation and Workers’ Compensation
Ray Khalfani, Georgia Budget and Policy Institute
Christopher O’Leary, Upjohn Institute
John Pallasch, One Workforce Solutions
Amy Perez, Stanford University RegLab
Will Raderman, Niskanen Center
Lily Roberts, Center for American Progress
Amy Simon, Simon Advisory
Ralph Smith, Congressional Budget Office (retired)
Amy Traub, National Employment Law Project
James Van Erden, National Association of State Workforce Agencies
Matt Weidinger, American Enterprise Institute
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