Business & Economy

On The Money: COVID-19 relief debate stalls in Senate amid Democratic drama | Manchin holds up bill over jobless benefits | US adds 379K jobs in February

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THE BIG DEAL—COVID-19 relief debate stalls in Senate amid Democratic drama: This was supposed to be the easy part, but Democratic drama over unemployment benefits is snagging the Senate’s coronavirus relief debate.

What’s going on: The Senate has been stuck in a state of limbo for hours as senators try to figure out the path forward on 10 weekly unemployment payments. Senators have filed two competing unemployment proposals: 

Both are changes from the House bill, which provided $400 per week through August, but Democrats unveiled the agreement earlier Friday as a deal worked out by their moderate and progressive factions. Hours later, in the middle of a failed vote on raising the minimum wage, it became clear they were premature.

The Hill’s Jordain Carney breaks it down here.

All eyes on Joe Manchin: In order for Democrats to attach their proposal to the coronavirus bill, they would need the support of all 50 members of their caucus and Vice President Harris to break a tie. But in a significant snag, Portman told reporters that he believes he can get the support of all 50 GOP senators and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) to vote for his proposal.

“I think so,” Portman said, asked if he has the entire GOP caucus and Manchin.

Manchin has declined to talk to reporters about the state of negotiations, but President Biden has reportedly been on the phone with him a few times in search of a deal.

Read more about the relief bill: 

LEADING THE DAY

Economists warn positive jobs report obscures challenges ahead: A surprising February jobs gain and drop in the unemployment rate is obscuring the long road to a full recovery from the coronavirus recession, economists say.

The U.S. added 379,000 jobs last month, more than double what analysts had expected, and saw the jobless rate drop to 6.2 percent, the lowest level since March 2020.

But while the February employment report showed signs of an accelerating recovery, the job gains were just a drop in the bucket compared to the deep damage built up within the labor market over the past year. The deceptively low unemployment rate also ignores the millions of Americans who’ve been forced out of the labor force by COVID-19 and its disproportionate toll on women of color.

I explain why here.

The state of play: 

Why the unemployment rate seems low anyway: The unique toll of the pandemic has also rendered the unemployment rate nearly useless for gauging the health of the labor market.

Read more: Top White House officials took little solace in the better-than-expected February jobs report, insisting that the U.S. was far from a full and equitable recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.

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