|
|
![]() | |||||||
Is Social Security a Federal Monopoly?Besides the three kinds of benefits provided under the federal Social Security Act, many states have for a long time been operating social security programs of their own. The earliest type of coverage and the one most important in state programs now is workmen’s compensation. Workmen’s compensationEvery state but Mississippi has some kind of law providing compensation payments for workers injured on the job, no matter who was to blame for the accident. Thirty-two states also compensate workmen disabled by occupational diseases—such as the lung ailment called “silicosis” which miners get from breathing dust-laden air. All these laws recognize that a disabled worker is entitled to receive compensation while he is laid up and to have at least part of his medical expenses paid. Except for slight employee contributions in a few states, the employer alone foots the bill. Although the principle is the same in every law, in practice the benefits paid out vary a good deal. Each state has its own system and schedule of payments, and within any state different workers may be eligible to receive payments of differing size—or none at all. Top payments may range from 50 to 70 percent of regular wages and last as long as the man is disabled or for a specified period, usually amounting to a number of years. However, in. every state but Arizona flat dollar-and-cents limits, ranging from $12 to $30 a week, may cut off the actual payment below the percentage maximum. In case a worker is killed on the job the pension goes to his widow, though often at a reduced figure. Not all employees are covered by these laws, either. Many state laws exempt from coverage agricultural or domestic workers, or those engaged in nonprofit or “nonhazardous” employment. Railroad workers and others in interstate and foreign commerce, federal employees in any part of the country, and private employees in the District of Columbia are covered by federal rather than state laws. Furthermore, about half the states allow employers to stay out of the workmen’s compensation program if they prefer to risk damage suits by injured workmen or take out private insurance. The rest of the states have compulsory systems; that is, the employers must come in. Small employers, however, are exempt in a great many instances. From the point of view of the family income, it makes little if any difference whether the breadwinner is laid up or laid off. In either case his normal earnings are interrupted. But there is a difference, interestingly, in the amount of compensation he may be entitled to receive. A comparison of workmen’s compensation with unemployment compensation benefits shows that the former are usually more adequate. The percentage maximums and the dollar-and-cents maximums are both likely to be higher for disability than for unemployment compensation. And the period of eligibility for compensation payments is always longer for “temporary” disability than for unemployment. In fact, 26 weeks is the longest duration in any state for unemployment compensation, while most temporary disability benefits run for at least five years. We haven’t space for more than one example, so let’s take Texas—not because it’s typical but just because it’s Texas. There the top weekly benefit is $18 for unemployment insurance and $20 for workmen’s compensation. The maximum rate is set at 50 percent of wages in unemployment and 60 percent in workmen’s compensation. Unemployment insurance extends only to employers having eight or more workers for 20 weeks, while the workmen’s compensation law applies to employers of three or more persons at any time. Compensation for temporary disability may run for 401 weeks compared to 4 to 18 weeks for unemployment. The Texas workmen’s compensation law, however, is “elective,” which means that employers do not need to take advantage of it if they do not wish to. Rhode Island’s cash sickness insuranceRhode Island is the only state to adopt a state-wide system of sickness insurance. By 1944 this state had protected more than four-fifths of its civilian labor force against sickness while on the job. Under the Rhode Island plan an unemployed worker is eligible for a cash sickness benefit, after a waiting period of one week, if his unemployment is due to sickness and if he has earned at least $100 in a specified base period in any occupation covered under the state’s Unemployment Compensation Act. Employers do not make contributions to the fund, which is built up by contributions of 1 percent on wages of less than $3,000 in any calendar year. How unemployment insurance works in the statesTop weekly payments to unemployed workers vary from $15 a week in 10 states, and $16 or $18 a week in 14 states, to $20 or more in 27 states. Only 6 states pay benefits of $24 to $28 a week, including allowances for dependents. Many individual benefits, of course, are far below these top benefits. In 1942, a prosperous year, more than one-fourth of all checks for total unemployment were less than $10 per week. In 16 states over half the checks were for less than $10. And in 6 states from 10 to 20 percent were under $5 per week. Also, the ceiling of $15 to $20 in practically all states automatically limits all better-paid workers to less than half the wages they would get if working. Steady employment during the war meant that workers piled up high individual wage credits, so that if they should need to, many former war workers can draw the highest legal benefits.
|