EFTA00611945.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 118.7 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 2 pages
T;1) c Ascur ilork Limes March 1. 2013
As the Cuts Hit Home
Editorial
House Republicans were elated this week when their leader, John Boehner, made it clear that
deep, automatic spending cuts would begin as scheduled on Friday. Incredibly, some consider
the decision a victory.
As the cuts take effect, they will inflict widespread hardship. But some Americans will be hurt
more than others, and the people who will be hurt the most are those who are already struggling.
In the months ahead, an estimated 3.8 million Americans who have been unemployed for more
than six months face a cut in federal jobless benefits of nearly 11 percent — or about $32 a week
— all from the recent average weekly benefit of $292. And an estimated 600,000 low-income
women and toddlers will be turned away from the federal nutrition program for women, infants
and children, known as WIC.
It should not be this way. Deficit reduction should not occur on the backs of the poor and
vulnerable. At the insistence of Democrats, most major programs that help the needy have been
exempted from the cuts, including food stamps and Medicaid. Democrats also won exemptions
for beneficiaries of programs that are not explicitly aimed at low-income Americans but that are
crucial to keeping many retirees out of poverty or near-poverty, notably veterans' pensions,
Social Security and Medicare. Still, smaller, vital programs will fall under the knife, in part
because they are in spending categories deemed dispensable under the unthinking rules for
across-the-board cuts.
FEDERAL UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS By the end of the fiscal year, on Sept. 30, the
Labor Department estimates that $2.3 billion will be cut from federal jobless benefits. Those
benefits provide 14 to 47 weeks of aid after state-provided benefits run out, generally after 26
weeks. The support is critical. The share of unemployed workers who have been out of work for
more than six months was 38.1 percent in January, with the worst levels of long-term
unemployment occurring among workers 45 or older. That group is likely to have substantial
family and financial obligations, even as it is often shunned by employers. According to an
Urban Institute survey last year, workers in their 50s are about 20 percent less likely to be rehired
than workers ages 25 to 34.
Wage of 2
EFTA00611945
It will probably take the states, which administer the benefits, at least until April to make the
program changes. While that will postpone the immediate pain, it means that the cuts, when they
come, will be concentrated over an even shorter period.
NUTRITION AID The federal government has yet to issue specific guidance on how states
should handle an estimated cut to the WIC program of $340 million this fiscal year. Little will
happen until April, but, after that, priority is likely to be given increasingly to pregnant and
breast-feeding women and to infants, while women not breast-feeding are put on an indefinite
wait list, along with many children over I year old. The cutbacks to mothers would affect
African-Americans disproportionately, because their breast-feeding rates are lower than other
groups'. The cuts in aid to children will fall disproportionately on Hispanic families, who tend to
have more children.
Why are the Republicans so happy when they should be ashamed?
Wage of 2
EFTA00611946
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 0e560879-8e11-43c8-8ae8-198ab87aec81
- Storage Key
- dataset_9/EFTA00611945.pdf
- Content Hash
- c71ff147c5d5036303ffa0565e9494b8
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026