KEY POINTS
  • There remains little evidence that workers who lost federal unemployment benefits in June or July have rushed to find jobs, according to labor economists.
  • Data suggests factors aside from enhanced benefits, like health and child care, have impacted the labor market to a larger degree.
  • The dynamic suggests the Labor Day unemployment cliff may also not provoke a surge of job growth.
A person reads a list of employers as they attend a job fair at SoFi Stadium on Sept. 9, 2021, in Inglewood, California.

There remains little evidence that states successfully nudged people back to work by ending federal unemployment benefits early, according to economists.

Twenty-six states withdrew pandemic-era jobless support in June or July. Their governors, predominantly Republican, believed enhanced jobless aid offered an incentive to stay home instead of work.