Davis Opening Statement: Hearing on Reforms to Help Unemployed People Return to WorkToday's hearing is about how we can better help unemployed workers return to work. Clearly we have our work cut out for us. To help the unemployed re-connect with work, our nation operates “employment security” programs like unemployment insurance and employment security offices where laid off workers go to connect with new jobs. Last year we spent a stunning $165 billion on those benefits and services. We know that every year, according to the Department of Labor, some 50 million people get hired into new jobs. So someone is finding work. But what this chart shows is the how the unemployed have increasingly been left behind: Vice President Biden recently said that the unemployed should just “hang in there” and wait until jobs return. But at the current pace, it could be 2020 before the U.S. returns to full employment. That’s a long time to “hang in there.” Fortunately, we don’t have to wait that long to hear some good ideas about how to better help the unemployed. Joining us is a distinguished panel of experts to review what can be done – and in some States is being done – to help unemployed workers find and take new jobs. As we will hear, those policies range from promoting more job search, to better engaging people who need extra training, to simply focusing current benefits on places where the need is greatest. We also need to remember unemployment benefits are not free, and are supported by payroll taxes that are already going up dramatically. Improving our success in helping more unemployed people find jobs will help keep future job-destroying tax hikes to a minimum. That is a key goal, too. ### |