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Pa. Refinances Unemployment Debt with Citibank

More than $3 billion in unemployment debt has been cleared following Pennsylvania's refinancing with Citibank

By Eric Boehm | PA Independent

HARRISBURG – Pennsylvania has successfully refinanced more than $3 billion in unemployment debt with the federal government, a move the state says will save businesses an estimated $12 million in taxes and penalties over the next seven years.

Because the state was more than $3 billion in debt to the federal government after borrowing repeatedly to cover unemployment compensation payments during the economic downturn, businesses would have had to pay a 1.1 percent effective rate on payroll taxes, instead of the normal effective rate of 0.8 percent.

 

Department of Labor and Industry Secretary Julie Hearthway said the refinancing of Pennsylvania's unemployment compensation debt would help grow businesses and create jobs.

The increased rate would have cost employers $110 million this year alone, according to an analysis by the Senate Appropriations Committee.

“It was something that really needed to be done,” said Samuel Denisco, vice president of thePennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry, which represents businesses in the state. “This was a win for the business community.”

Pennsylvania cleared the debt through interim refinancing with CitibankGov. Tom Corbett announced in a statement last week.

“It’s a simple way to save some money,” Corbett said. “Transferring the balance on a high-interest rate credit card to a no- or low-interest card for a period of time allows you to pay off the debt while saving on interest. The private loan is at a lower rate, which provides the savings.”

Businesses, not taxpayers, will still have the responsibility to pay off the debt, though at a lower rate than before.

Legislation authorizing the refinancing of the federal debt was approved in June.

Denisco said the law that allowed the state to refinance the federal debt included “a hodgepodge” of other changes that would make the unemployment compensation trust fund – the fund which the state uses to pay claims – more solvent in the future.

Among those changes is an increase in the taxable wage base that will direct more dollars to the trust fund starting this year and changes to eligibility that will keep claimants with one high quarter of income from being able to get higher benefits.

Just Sick and Tired September 3, 2012 at 07:23 pm
So the banks ruin the economy and cause massive unemployment, get bailed out by taxpayer money, then the banks "lend" is money to cover the unemployment payments that they caused in the first place. It must be wonderful to be a bank, it really sucks being a taxpayer.
Just Sick and Tired September 3, 2012 at 07:29 pm
"Businesses, not taxpayers, will still have the responsibility to pay off the debt, though at a lower rate than before." is bull. Any cost to a business including the cost of higher unemployment rates will be passed along to the consumer. The consumer is ultimately pays all taxes.

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An interested bystander May 6, 2013 at 05:29 pm
Just pointing out facts. You are also forgetting that money withdrawn from an IRA or 401k (exceptRead More Roth IRAs) are taxed at withdrawal. I prefer my government not punish good financial actions. Sorry it's a quirk of mine, I think we should reward those who make good decisions, not punish them.
Tony Simek May 6, 2013 at 06:35 pm
I agree with you Interested Bystander. Problem is that if you punish the ones making the badRead More decisions, the Federal government will be punished all the time. In the current climate, poor decision making gets rewarded by voters. The middle class doesn't have a chance.
Bill May 9, 2013 at 05:11 am
Naziti and Caroline Johnson so sorry to take so long to get back to you from your comments onRead More Sunday, May 5th, I didn't think I would have to respond. I re-posted Ken's comment because the REAL issue is "AARP selling out it's faithful supporters for BIG MONEY. So let me break it down so even the Soros trolls understand. ObamaCare guts SS and medicare reserve money by 750 Billion. Which ends these programs as we know them. AARP publicly backs ObamaCare. Seniors confused about OCare but trust AARP and their massive ad campaign for OCare. AARP contributes to re-election AARP becomes insurance provided for OCare. Unleashes host of insurance options that Seniors will be needing to make decisions about in next 2-3 years. Complicate the choices for Seniors so they fall back on who they have trusted in the past. Still unaware of the great deception perpetrated by AARP. OCARE fully enacted 2014. AARP gets steady $$$ insurance income now (not $16 membership fees for whoever posted that line above). SS and MediCare bankrupt (3/4 trillion $ stolen to fund OCare) Result for SENIORS. NO SS or MEDicare it's dissolved or becomes something less. Free OCare that sucks. Pay AARP for supplemental Ins. Prescriptions too expensive to purchase so go without or pay AARP for better plan. AARP richer and more powerful represents Gvmt Seniors - Self rule lost You see they screwed the very people that paid dues for their protection!