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<blockquote data-quote="WhoSayWho?" data-source="post: 6087592" data-attributes="member: 568804"><p>Indeed, unemployment benefits are based on, oddly enough, whether one is unemployed. They do not look at how much money you have in the bank.</p><p></p><p>Also, your employer pays unemployment premium insurance. Since smart employers factor this cost in when determining how much it costs to employ someone (and from there, how much they should pay in salary) the employee has, at least in theory, been paying those premiums indirectly while they were working. Why would you not file a claim when an event occuurs that you have insured against?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WhoSayWho?, post: 6087592, member: 568804"] Indeed, unemployment benefits are based on, oddly enough, whether one is unemployed. They do not look at how much money you have in the bank. Also, your employer pays unemployment premium insurance. Since smart employers factor this cost in when determining how much it costs to employ someone (and from there, how much they should pay in salary) the employee has, at least in theory, been paying those premiums indirectly while they were working. Why would you not file a claim when an event occuurs that you have insured against? [/QUOTE]
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