States Use COVID-19 Relief Dollars to Hold Down Business Taxes

By: - July 27, 2020 12:00 am

Jobseekers wait to be called into the Heartland Workforce Solutions office in Omaha, Nebraska. Nebraska is among the states using federal coronavirus aid money to shore up its unemployment insurance trust fund. Nati Harnik/The Associated Press

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Governors and lawmakers in at least eight states have used millions of federal coronavirus relief dollars to protect businesses from tax increases as unemployment skyrockets.

They’re pushing relief dollars into unemployment insurance trust funds, which are funded by business taxes and pay out benefits to laid-off workers. If the funds start to run out of money — as they now are in many states — state and federal law triggers tax increases to replenish the accounts.

Many Republicans and business groups say avoiding business tax increases during a recession is a no-brainer. West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice, a Republican, wants to spend $687 million — more than half the money the state received in March — on unemployment insurance, for instance.

But some Democrats and unemployment insurance experts say the money could be better spent on direct assistance to workers and local governments, such as money for rental assistance and food banks, rather than on preventing minor tax increases that won’t kick in until next year or 2022. 

“I think it’s bad policy,” West Virginia state Del. Mick Bates, a Democrat, said of Justice’s plan, “and doesn’t address what Congress wanted us to address, which is the needs we have today.”  

The March federal payments may have been the last such assistance states get this year. While congressional Democrats want to give states and cities more money in a new coronavirus relief package, Republicans want to let states use existing federal aid in more ways.

So far, lawmakers in Iowa, Maine, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia have announced that they’ll spend federal aid dollars on their unemployment insurance trust funds. 

States and the federal government work together to fund unemployment benefits. State trust funds rely on a per-employee tax that’s higher for companies that have laid off a lot of workers recently. The federal trust fund, meanwhile, relies on a tax that maxes out at $42 per employee per year for companies that pay state taxes on time in states with solvent trust funds.

State funds have been rapidly depleted this year as a recession and public health orders have led to business closures and layoffs. But states must keep paying unemployment benefits, even when their trust funds run low.

To do that, states charge businesses higher taxes and borrow money from the federal trust fund. Ten states already have borrowed money this year, including West Virginia. If the federal loans aren’t repaid in two years, federal unemployment insurance taxes start to creep up, too. 

South Carolina business groups and elected leaders want to stop the state trust fund from cratering the way it did after the Great Recession. 

“Many businesses will not survive paying higher taxes to replenish the fund twice in one decade,” Republican Gov. Henry McMaster wrote in a June letter to the legislature. Two weeks later, lawmakers approved his plan to spend about a quarter of the state’s $1.9 billion in federal aid on the trust fund.

McMaster’s plan wasn’t controversial, said Ted Pitts, president and CEO of the South Carolina Chamber of Commerce. “There was really little debate,” Pitts said. “There was broad agreement that this was a way to help businesses get back on their feet.”

South Carolina unemployment insurance taxes range from $8.40 to $764.40 per employee per year, depending on a company’s layoff record.

In 2011, when the trust fund was running an almost billion-dollar deficit, taxes ranged from $10.30 to $1,127.90 per employee per year — at least, until the legislature brought taxes down by appropriating more money to the trust fund and cutting unemployment benefits.

North Dakota’s Republican Gov. Doug Burgum and his all-Republican emergency committee have so far approved $310 million in federal relief dollars for the state unemployment insurance trust fund.

Most North Dakota employers currently pay up to about $30 per employee per year in unemployment insurance taxes, said Darren Brostrom, North Dakota’s director of unemployment insurance. Before the emergency committee intervened, state officials projected that the fund could run out of money by June and force taxes up to a couple of hundred dollars per employee.

“The dollar amount may not seem, to some, to be huge,” Brostrom said, “but the percent increase was large.” 

North Dakota Senate Majority Leader Rich Wardner, an emergency committee member, said the projected tax increase would have been impossible for some employers to absorb. “Some of them would have just gone out of business,” he said.

The cash infusion won’t fend off tax increases forever, however. The money approved by the committee is expected to keep the trust fund solvent only through September, Wardner said.

Some unemployment insurance experts say lawmakers’ fear of unemployment insurance tax increases is overblown. “The tax is not really that large,” said Andrew Stettner, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, a progressive Washington, D.C., think tank.

And he said there’s little evidence that such taxes can drive employers out of business and lead to more layoffs. “I’ve never seen anyone come up with any compelling evidence that the unemployment tax impacts job losses,” he said.

Stettner said he supports states using federal relief aid to shore up trust funds if that prevents unemployment benefit cuts later. But he said he worries states may end up cutting benefits anyway.

Michele Evermore, a senior policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project, a D.C. think tank that advocates for workers, said she was surprised when state leaders began asking federal officials to confirm that they could spend coronavirus aid on unemployment trust funds.

“Most states have not exhausted their trust funds, and once they do, either interest-free or very-low-interest loans are available from the federal government,” Evermore said. Congress passed legislation in March eliminating interest payments on the loans through the end of the year. 

As states have other options for funding unemployment benefits, Evermore said, policymakers should focus on using federal relief aid on direct aid to people who are struggling. “It could be spent in a way that actually stimulates the economy,” she said. 

Some Democrats and left-leaning organizations at the state level agree. 

The $490 million Republican Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds has allocated for unemployment insurance could be better spent elsewhere, said Peter Fisher, research director for the Iowa Policy Project, an Iowa City-based nonprofit. 

“She’s spending 40% of [the $1.25 billion federal allocation] to keep employer insurance rates from going up in a couple of years,” he said. Fisher argued that the money could instead be used to help schools prepare to reopen safely, fund county general assistance programs, or any of several other policy options.

In West Virginia, Justice has indicated that he could reallocate the money he’s set aside for unemployment insurance if Congress moves to help states again.

The millions he’s earmarked for the trust fund, he said during a June briefing, “may very well be forgiven, from the standpoint of the government, and sent right back to us, and then we’ll have more dollars to be more aggressive in broadband or whatever it may be to help our people in this state.”

Bates said he thinks Justice is parking the money in the trust fund temporarily, perhaps until he gets long-hoped-for permission from Congress to use it to balance the state budget.

“I think the play here — and I think this is what some governors have decided to do — is to spend it without spending it,” Bates said of the federal aid. 

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Sophie Quinton

Sophie Quinton writes about fiscal and economic policy for Stateline. Previously, she wrote for National Journal.

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