Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefits provide individuals with temporary income when they lose their job through no fault of their own. Most employers pay contributions—payroll taxes—to finance unemployment benefits. A contribution paying employer's tax rate is experience-rated so that the rate is determined, in part, by the benefits paid to its employees. A benefit ratio is computed for each qualified employer by dividing the total amount of benefits charged to the account of the employer by the taxable payrolls.
In addition to the experience-rated tax, employers may pay a social cost factor rate (social tax). The social tax is calculated in two parts:
A solvency surcharge applies if there are fewer than seven months of UI benefits in the UI trust fund, which may not exceed 0.2 percent. The solvency surcharge was waived through 2025.
Social Tax. In 2022, the maximum social tax is reduced from 0.75 percent to 0.50 percent. In 2023, the maximum social tax is reduced from 0.80 percent to 0.70 percent.
Small Businesses. In 2023, employees with 10 or fewer employees, as of the fourth quarter 2021, will have a graduated social tax factor capped at rate 7. This would lower the tax rate for small businesses who are in rate class 8 or higher.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: The bill reduces the unemployment insurance (UI) tax increase. There is still an increase but it is not as much. We are again emphasizing extra relief for the small businesses that are larger bearers of the social tax part of the UI tax. These changes will not undermine the benefits and there will be sufficient funds to pay benefits, as needed. It will be a tax cut that is not as big as last years $2.2 billion UI tax cut but it will be a two-year tax cut for businesses, amounting to $240-250,000.
On paid family leave, it will help the premium that workers pay out of their paychecks to stay the same as opposed to almost doubling. The employer side did not change much for 2022 so that is why there is no change on the employer side. These are more modest tax cuts than last year during the throws of the pandemic but are necessary to keep a strong economy.
Last year provided relief from the dramatic increases from unemployment insurance taxes that were on the horizon. Employment has rebounded and the UI trust fund is replenishing at a healthy rate. Last year, employers were facing seven-to-ten-fold increases, the trust fund going insolvent, and potential federal UI loans. Last year's bills were critical for businesses that saw a 600 percent increase, but everyone still saw an increase in UI premiums.
Small businesses are still struggling with pandemic related shutdowns and slowdowns. Sixty-five percent of them have not seen sales return to pre-pandemic levels. Small businesses are also struggling with workforce supply chain issues, inflation, and other increasing premiums. Many small employers are reporting their UI taxes doubling or tripling even when they have had no layoffs or UI claims filed. The bill would provide welcome relief.
The hospitality industry was hardest hit by the pandemic. The federal, state, and local relief saved businesses, including the relief the Legislature provided last year. Fourteen-thousand fewer businesses closed their doors during the second six months of the pandemic than the first six months.
Despite last year's unprecedented relief, employers are still paying significantly more, $400 million more in 2022 than in 2020 and $800 million more in 2023. This legislation is critical for Washington businesses. People will still see an increase but it softens the blow of the increase. The decrease may be modest but it makes sense. The bill will continue relief for every business by capping the social tax, without general fund impact or a negative impact on the UI trust fund.