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How the McEconomy Bombed the American Worker
The Hollowing Out of the Middle Class
Think of it as a parable for these grim economic times. On April 19th, McDonald's launched its first-ever national hiring day, signing up 62,000 new workers at stores throughout the country. For some context, that's more jobs created by one company in a single day than the net job creation of the entire U.S. economy in 2009. And if that boggles the mind, consider how many workers applied to local McDonald's franchises that day and left empty-handed: 938,000 of them. With a 6.2% acceptance rate in its spring hiring blitz, McDonald’s was more selective than the Princeton, Stanford, or Yale University admission offices.
It shouldn’t be surprising that a million souls flocked to McDonald's hoping for a steady paycheck, when nearly 14 million Americans are out of work and nearly a million more are too discouraged even to look for a job. At this point, it apparently made no difference to them that the fast-food industry pays some of the lowest wages around: on average, $8.89 an hour, or barely half the $15.95 hourly average across all American industries.
On an annual basis, the average fast-food worker takes home $20,800, less than half the national average of $43,400. McDonald's appears to pay even worse, at least with its newest hires. In the press release for its national hiring day, the multi-billion-dollar company said it would spend $518 million on the newest round of hires, or $8,354 a head. Hence the Oxford English Dictionary’s definition of "McJob" as "a low-paying job that requires little skill and provides little opportunity for advancement."
Of course, if you read only the headlines, you might think that the jobs picture was improving. The economy added 1.3 million private-sector jobs between February 2010 and January 2011, and the headline unemployment rate edged downward, from 9.8% to 8.8%, between November of last year and March. It inched upward in April, to 9%, but tempering that increase was the news that the economy added 244,000 jobs last month (not including those 62,000 McJobs), beating economists' expectations.
Under this somewhat sunnier news, however, runs a far darker undercurrent. Yes, jobs are being created, but what kinds of jobs paying what kinds of wages? Can those jobs sustain a modest lifestyle and pay the bills? Or are we living through a McJobs recovery?
The Rise of the McWorker
The evidence points to the latter. According to a recent analysis by the National Employment Law Project (NELP), the biggest growth in private-sector job creation in the past year occurred in positions in the low-wage retail, administrative, and food service sectors of the economy. While 23% of the jobs lost in the Great Recession that followed the economic meltdown of 2008 were “low-wage” (those paying $9-$13 an hour), 49% of new jobs added in the sluggish “recovery” are in those same low-wage industries. On the other end of the spectrum, 40% of the jobs lost paid high wages ($19-$31 an hour), while a mere 14% of new jobs pay similarly high wages.
As a point of comparison, that's much worse than in the recession of 2001 after the high-tech bubble burst. Then, higher wage jobs made up almost a third of all new jobs in the first year after the crisis.
The hardest hit industries in terms of employment now are finance, manufacturing, and especially construction, which was decimated when the housing bubble burst in 2007 and has yet to recover. Meanwhile, NELP found that hiring for temporary administrative and waste-management jobs, health-care jobs, and of course those fast-food restaurants has surged.
Indeed in 2010, one in four jobs added by private employers was a temporary job, which usually provides workers with few benefits and even less job security. It's not surprising that employers would first rely on temporary hires as they regained their footing after a colossal financial crisis. But this time around, companies have taken on temp workers in far greater numbers than after previous downturns. Where 26% of hires in 2010 were temporary, the figure was 11% after the early-1990s recession and only 7% after the downturn of 2001.
As many labor economists have begun to point out, we're witnessing an increasing polarization of the U.S. economy over the past three decades. More and more, we're seeing labor growth largely at opposite ends of the skills-and-wages spectrum -- among, that is, the best and the worst kinds of jobs.
At one end of job growth, you have increasing numbers of people flipping burgers, answering telephones, engaged in child care, mopping hallways, and in other low-wage lines of work. At the other end, you have increasing numbers of engineers, doctors, lawyers, and people in high-wage "creative" careers. What's disappearing is the middle, the decent-paying jobs that helped expand the American middle class in the mid-twentieth century and that, if the present lopsided recovery is any indication, are now going the way of typewriters and landline telephones.
Because the shape of the workforce increasingly looks fat on both ends and thin in the middle, economists have begun to speak of "the barbell effect," which for those clinging to a middle-class existence in bad times means a nightmare life. For one thing, the shape of the workforce now hinders America’s once vaunted upward mobility. It’s the downhill slope that’s largely available these days.
The barbell effect has also created staggering levels of income inequality of a sort not known since the decades before the Great Depression. From 1979 to 2007, for the middle class, average household income (after taxes) nudged upward from $44,100 to $55,300; by contrast, for the top 1%, average household income soared from $346,600 in 1979 to nearly $1.3 million in 2007. That is, super-rich families saw their earnings increase 11 times faster than middle-class families.
What's causing this polarization? An obvious culprit is technology. As MIT economist David Autor notes, the tasks of "organizing, storing, retrieving, and manipulating information" that humans once performed are now computerized. And when computers can't handle more basic clerical work, employers ship those jobs overseas where labor is cheaper and benefits nonexistent.
Another factor is education. In today's barbell economy, degrees and diplomas have never mattered more, which means that those with just a high school education increasingly find themselves locked into the low-wage end of the labor market with little hope for better. Worse yet, the pay gap between the well-educated and not-so-educated continues to widen: in 1979, the hourly wage of a typical college graduate was 1.5 times higher than that of a typical high-school graduate; by 2009, it was almost two times higher.
Considering, then, that the percentage of men ages 25 to 34 who have gone to college is actually decreasing, it's not surprising that wage inequality has gotten worse in the U.S. As Autor writes, advanced economies like ours "depend on their best-educated workers to develop and commercialize the innovative ideas that drive economic growth."
The distorting effects of the barbell economy aren't lost on ordinary Americans. In a recent Gallup poll, a majority of people agreed that the country was still in either a depression (29%) or a recession (26%). When sorted out by income, however, those making $75,000 or more a year are, not surprisingly, most likely to believe the economy is in neither a recession nor a depression, but growing. After all, they’re the ones most likely to have benefited from a soaring stock market and the return to profitability of both corporate America and Wall Street. In Gallup's middle-income group, by contrast, 55% of respondents claim the economy is in trouble. They're still waiting for their recovery to arrive.
The Slow Fade of Big Labor
The big-picture economic changes described by Autor and others, however, don't tell the entire story. There's a significant political component to the hollowing out of the American labor force and the impoverishment of the middle class: the slow fade of organized labor. Since the 1950s, the clout of unions in the public and private sectors has waned, their membership has dwindled, and their political influence has weakened considerably. Long gone are the days when powerful union bosses -- the AFL-CIO's George Meany or the UAW's Walter Reuther -- had the ear of just about any president.
As Mother Jones' Kevin Drum has written, in the 1960s and 1970s a rift developed between big labor and the Democratic Party. Unions recoiled in disgust at what they perceived to be the "motley collection of shaggy kids, newly assertive women, and goo-goo academics" who had begun to supplant organized labor in the Party. In 1972, the influential AFL-CIO symbolically distanced itself from the Democrats by refusing to endorse their nominee for president, George McGovern.
All the while, big business was mobilizing, banding together to form massive advocacy groups such as the Business Roundtable and shaping the staid U.S. Chamber of Commerce into a ferocious lobbying machine. In the 1980s and 1990s, the Democratic Party drifted rightward and toward an increasingly powerful and financially focused business community, creating the Democratic Leadership Council, an olive branch of sorts to corporate America. "It's not that the working class [had] abandoned Democrats," Drum wrote. "It's just the opposite: The Democratic Party [had] largely abandoned the working class."
The GOP, of course, has a long history of battling organized labor, and nowhere has that been clearer than in the party's recent assault on workers' rights. Swept in by a tide of Republican support in 2010, new GOP majorities in state legislatures from Wisconsin to Tennessee to New Hampshire have introduced bills meant to roll back decades' worth of collective bargaining rights for public-sector unions, the last bastion of organized labor still standing (somewhat) strong.
The political calculus behind the war on public-sector unions is obvious: kneecap them and you knock out a major pillar of support for the Democratic Party. In the 2010 midterm elections, the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) spent nearly $90 million on TV ads, phone banking, mailings, and other support for Democratic candidates. The anti-union legislation being pushed by Republicans would inflict serious damage on AFSCME and other public-sector unions by making it harder for them to retain members and weakening their clout at the bargaining table.
And as shown by the latest state to join the anti-union fray, it's not just Republicans chipping away at workers' rights anymore. In Massachusetts, a staunchly liberal state, the Democratic-led State Assembly recently voted to curb collective bargaining rights on heath-care benefits for teachers, firefighters, and a host of other public-sector employees.
Bargaining-table clout is crucial for unions, since it directly affects the wages their members take home every month. According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, union workers pocket on average $200 more per week than their non-union counterparts, a 28% percent difference. The benefits of union representation are even greater for women and people of color: women in unions make 34% more than their non-unionized counterparts, and Latino workers nearly 51% more.
In other words, at precisely the moment when middle-class workers need strong bargaining rights so they can fight to preserve a living wage in a barbell economy, unions around the country face the grim prospect of losing those rights.
All of which raises the questions: Is there any way to revive the American middle class and reshape income distribution in our barbell nation? Or will this warped recovery of ours pave the way for an even more warped McEconomy, with the have-nots at one end, the have-it-alls at the other end, and increasingly less of us in between?


48 Comments so far
Show AllI'm getting tired of repeating that the economist's 'gold standard' of measurement for income inequality (the GINI Coefficient of Income Inequality) ranks the US close to Zimbabwe, and that 'our own' CIA ranks the astronomically high/unequal US GINI as far above the level at which they project "civil unrest" and potential revolution for any country.
And yet, some economic writers for the NYT ("Inequality Rising Across the Developed World"
By CATHERINE RAMPELL in the Times's Economix blog are STILL LYING THROUGH THEIR TEETH and 'reporting' (sic) that the US GINI is under .40 (rather than the real 0.49).
The Times either doesn't monitor such bold faced lies by their personnel OR they are complicit in such massive lying about the sorry state of the US economy and are intentionally understating the massive level of income inequality to protect their ruling-elite readership (and the hidden global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE posing as the US) from the revolution that even the CIA knows should be coming.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy over violent empire -- People's Party USA 2012
Huge fan of your keen analysis and potent reminders!
Me too
Kathy
The article isn't nearly hard-hitting enough. The author claims that "average" families have benefited over the past 30 years but, in fact, ALL of the increase in real incomes has gone to the top 10% of the US population, and about half of that to the top 1%. Today, the top 1% earn a full 24% of all income, compared with about 9% in the 1960s. This is as extreme as it's ever been in the US. See, e.g., elsa.berkeley.edu/~saez/saez-UStopincomes-2007.pdf
And the author pushes "technology" and lack of education for the loss of middle class jobs rather than laying it at the door of trickle-down economic policies designed to make the rich richer and damn the rest of us. The real culprit is an economic system that rewards greed and the exploitation of people, communities and the environment; an economic system that views employing people as something negative, rewarding managers who successfully "shed" jobs.
One prediction is that half the jobs added after the recession will be "contingent" (temporary or contractor) positions...
http://preview.tinyurl.com/2799alf
THE EMERGING NEW WORKFORCE:
Employment and Labor Law Solutions for Contract Workers, Temporaries, and Flex-Workers
"...The Littler Prediction: Contingent Workers Will Comprise 50% of the U.S. Workforce Added After the Recession..."
Nicely done Andy — if you'd have written all this 10 or 12 years ago it would have really been something. Let me see if I can bring you up to date.
Now it's no longer a two-party world, and comparing and contrasting Democrats and Republicans is as pointless as those well-reasoned Medieval debates on whether the Son was human or human-like while on earth.
The disparity in wealth is not greater than anytime since the Great Depression, it's the greatest ever and getting worse, and the Greatest Depression is now.
The wage scale for college graduates is deceptive since for some years less than half are finding jobs after graduation, and many of those selected for those exculsive food-service jobs will no doubt have a B.A. or better.
Your heart's headed in the right direction, but you're way behind. It's a different world now, and your's is a 1999-2000 world view.
And by the way, If you're not ever going to sleep on a fridgid state capitol floor again, who d'ya think should do that?
(I'm on the road for two weeks now and stopping at McDonald's about twice a day — not to eat, just to pee. The last dependably clean restrooms left as civilization comes to an end.)
Golly Gee,
That's about all I ever use a McD for--to piss in.
It was all clear enough 40 years ago - why did you not act? The first time I heard the joke, "Privatize the gains and socialize the losses" was in 1971. But everyone was too busy being mindless overconsumers to resist the tide. Now it may be too late for anything but bloody rebellion.
GollyGee and Lingum - You are compromising yourselves. You can't accept the service and then claim to protest.
Given the time that many of us have spent over the years cleaning up the windblown litter from McDonald's products that has drifted onto our yards, the use of their washrooms on occasion is not an unreasonable return for our service of cleaning up after them and their customers. I see no reason to feel compromised.
Your missing the point.
Piss on the walls.
WELL-said, Golly. Indeed, there won't be a "middle class" left in this country in 25 years. And - health permitting - unfortunately I will be around to see the horrific results: a nation of 300 million or so poverty-stricken slum-dwellers, and a few hundred thousand rich bastards in heavily-fortified gated communities. And I know quite well what group I will be in.
Move while you still can. Where? No idea. Austerity is happening everywhere as the Corporate Elite expand their grip all over the globe. But some countries are capitulating slower than others....
"He will never again sleep on the frigid stone floor of a state capitol."
___________________
Yeah, what's that about? It's tangential, irrelevant to the article, and arguably trivial. It may be an oblique inside joke-- winking, ironic, or tongue-in-cheek-- referring to something extraneous known to Mother Jones or TomDispatch readers.
But that whimsical tagline, if that what it's supposed to be, is bothersome-- like a popcorn kernel wedged between two molars.
What's their annual staff turnover these days? It used to be in six figures.
Sit tight for a couple of months, then make a big fuss about recruiting on one particular day.
Interesting technique.
"While 23% of the jobs lost in the Great Recession that followed the economic meltdown of 2008 were “low-wage” (those paying $9-$13 an hour),"
I live in Bloomington Indiana. The minimum wage is $7.25 and that is what workers are being paid. That is what "Low Wage" is. Waitresses are paid $2.15 plus tips. Hotel maids are paid $5.25 and they receive a gratuity. The minimum wage used to be $5.25 and that is what was being paid by "low wage" jobs. Even as a State of Indiana Caseworker I was paid less than $15 per hour, and that was after 18 years of service.
Thank You pooka47401 for this brief dose of reality medicine.
Peace, Health, Luck and Solidarity
I did some reading a while back on the causes of the Winnipeg General Strike (1919). At the time there was unrest all over North America. Armed Mounties were used to put down the strike. The basic reason for the strike was that the working people were having a difficult time just getting by, barely able to afford food and a room despite full-time decent jobs. Eighty years later and the great-grandchildren of the elites have forgotten the lesson that their grandparents learned then, that impoverishing the working people will lead to organizing and rebellion.
"What's causing this polarization? An obvious culprit is technology."
You really need to do some ideological contortions to come up with technology as your number one reason for income polarization.
It wouldn't have anything to do with globalization and the fact we are now forced to compete with developing countries where low wages, captive workforces and income disparities are the norm would it?
http://kiely-flashpoint.blogspot.com/2011/05/neocon-future.html
You should photoshop Obama's face into that clown.
Wall Street patsy doesn't care he's going to drag the whole planet down.
Amerika is in its death throes!!!!!
Many children have an instinctive fear of clowns.
Now we have concrete proof of why.
Big Brother wears clown make-up.
http://www.buzzintv.co.uk/files/2011/02/John-Wayne-Gacy-Killer-Clown.jpg
"On an annual basis, the average fast-food worker takes home $20,800..."
Kroll should check his math: At $10/hr and a 40 hour week, your "average worker" would GROSS, NOT NET $20,800.
Then you subtract payroll taxes, income taxes, (if any), benefits deductions (if any), unpaid leave, possible uniforms, etc.
The net take-home is in the range of $15,000, if that. Somewhere around $300/week at best.
And the vast majority of "average" fast-food workers do not work anything near 40 hours/week so that employers can avoid all kinds of benefits and labor laws. (Though many work multiple jobs).
When nearly a million people apply for these kinds of jobs and only 62,000 people are hired, you get a pretty stark picture of the wage-slave evil that the US-led global "job machine" has become.
Kroll's solution proposes doing more of what has brought us to this point: support Democrats (has he ever heard of the DLC?) and depend on unions to deliver "the union advantage."
The tactic of supporting Democrats has been exposed in so many elections as a counter-productive farce that it's not worth talking about.
As for the union advantage, it has only been true for a relatively small minority of the workforce and is now almost non-exsitent. The greatest union density was about one-third of the workforce in the mid-1950s and has been in steady decline since.
The last gasps of public sector unionism are now being successfully destroyed by the radical right of both major parties.
So why does the "Union Advantage" argument consistently fail as a motivator in most organizing drives. Basically,it is a lie for the vast majority of workers because of multiple factors:
1) Constant and vociferous anti-union propaganda that reached its heights during the pre and post WWII years of the "red scare" has been highly successful and indeed became part of the language and thought of the union movement itself;
2) Outright brutal suppression of independent, democratic unions has been prevealnt throughout US history going back to the birth of the industrial era in the pre-Civil War US;
3) Close cooperation/collaboration between US union leaders, corporate leaders and government officialsin both the US and abroad;
4) Willful compliance by an ignorant and proudly anti-intellectual populace that refuses to recognize our class interests largely because of fundamentalist religions and the great myths of "American" indiividualism and exceptionalism;
5) White supremacy and sexism in the union movement and society often makes organizing people of color and women extremely complex, separating major unions from their strongest consticuencies.
In combination, these five factors, among others, create powerful conditions that yield the low wage, few benefits, high unemployment economy that we have today. The corporatists have won until we figure out how to organize in this restructured, hellish environment.
Kroll's approaches are counter-productive and distracting. Too many of us are destined to spend our worklives exhausted and sleeping on some version of cold stone floors. Our solutions, if any, will come from there and not DC pontificants.
Great post! Thanks.
RE: Another factor is education. In today's barbell economy, degrees and diplomas have never mattered more...
I wonder about this assertion. Who are getting those jobs on the right side of the barbell? For Most degrees no matter how advanced, there are no jobs for them. For example in the architecture field (highly trained professionals with advanced degrees) the unemployment rate is about 50%!
"Who are getting those jobs on the right side of the barbell?" -- Tom Larsen
You ask a very good question!
I discovered the high rate of unemployment amongst architects when I lost my job (in the music industry) in December of 1996. After doing some research, I found people all over the country in all professions with any number of degrees who were also without work. I ran across an architect who had lost his job and since he had a good work record and degrees, he thought he'd find another job equally as good with another firm. However, he did not! I found computer experts with advanced degrees who couldn't find work, either. Some people had lost their jobs to H1b applicants, and others had lost their jobs to outsourcing. If a job can be put on software, the authorities can ship your job overseas, and pay out a lot less in wages.
Personally, I know three people who went back to school to earn their masters degree and have not found jobs despite the promises made to them. In addition, now they have student loans to pay off. One of my friends went back to school to earn certification and afterwards did not find a job in medical coding. She has a B.A., but it seems that NO amount of education is ever enough -- unless you have too much education.
Not long ago, I read a NYC transportation report that Manhattan has lost between 109,000 and 237,000 jobs over the past few years. This information was included in the transportation report because people in the boroughs are spending 3 and 4 hours getting to and from work because the hub of the public transportation system is in Manhattan which means workers have to make the trip into Manhattan, and then back out again to whichever borough employs them. Not as many people are working in Manhattan.
Recently, Mayor Bloomberg announced that 6,000 teachers in NYC will be let go -- about 2,000 will retire, and 4,000 will be fired. The news just gets worse!
I agree, Tom. I was in education and lost my position- and now area schools are cutting even more jobs. 100,000 teachers lost jobs last year. I have a Masters degree (plus accompanying student loan debt) and the job outlook is grim. I'm working part-time; it's low wages and limited hours but luckily it's from home so I don't have to show up at a slave wage office or fast fod place. Even if it becomes full-time, I will continue to have no health care and nothing saved for retirement. Still, had I known that 30 yrs after HS I'd be earning less with a Masters degree than I did straight out of HS, I wouldn't have gone back to school later in life.
I'm not sure we can call this the greatest depression just yet. The unemployment rate from the 1929 depression was around 25%, and we're close. But that wasn't the only depression from the past. What is striking is what people are beginning to notice, that the jobs that are returning are half the wages of the jobs that were lost. It's the end of the middle class. So what we really have is the Great Collapse. And with the downfall of our educational system and any but the increasingly few well-off able to go to college, just how many McBurger and mop-pushing jobs will be available for the rest of us? Along with 12 million illegal aliens willing to underbid any low wage jobs? Pretty soon, bills to eliminate the minimum wage should be appearing to "stimulate" economic recovery.
I have to admire the tolerance level of Americans for economic abuse by the rich. 0.49 GINI index? 2 years ago it was 0.46. Are we about to break all records on that too? My guess is yes.
As a recently retired high school teacher, I have grave concerns for how the 20-somethings will have positive expectations. Not just minimum wage, but part-time, no health/ leave benefits, abusive expectations by management and no hope of advancement. How can having a family, or a life, be seriously contemplated??
The release valve on this pressure cooker is screamin' its head off!
Public Central Bank - Fire The Fed
"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks...will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered... The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs."
Thomas Jefferson
The current banking and Wall Street crisis is a direct result of a private central bank system. We are cursed with the deliberately mis-named “Federal” Reserve which is no more than a privatized and exclusive debt-money creation system devoid of public ownership. In this so-called “independent” institution there is no public interest or power within its privately-owned, profit-seeking, system.
When the power to create our money and credit is in private hands, and based on an exclusive franchise for debt-money creation and sale of bonds at interest - as opposed to direct Treasury financing - then the entire economic and social system is set up for private profit, and debt ruin, at public expense. As history has proven, this structure is virtually guaranteed to result in endless predation, corruption, and eventual collapse at immense public expense.
The founders of this country well understood this very problem and so, in their wisdom, put the “purse powers” in the hands of the most democratic body – i.e., Congress – exactly so the people would have the right and power to vote on their monetary policy every two years, course correct their own society and economy, and escape the predictable ruin of a private debt-money system under which we have no alternative or escape.
Today, however, under a private central bank system we have no such public privilege or power. We are powerless at the hands of the real owners of the “Federal’ Reserve – i.e., the major investment banks and historic banking families both here and abroad. These are the very people and institutions who have profited, geared the structure to their endless, debt-money, advantage and proceeded to rape the system until it collapses and the public is forced to rescue and bailout the very predators and criminals at the helm. In any case, this is a society-controlling power no private entity should ever attain.
Despite the overwhelming and recurrent failures of this privatized system bailout plans are being devised by these very same bankers in order to give the “Fed” even more global powers – all to foster a pretense of regulation and eliminate any vestiges of public money powers around the world. In the midst of this crisis, our pathetic Congress – fed by corporate money and cowed by a corporate press - may well succumb to giving these expanded powers to the same group of international bankers responsible for this and every other monetary crisis.
Clearly, however, the time is ripe to fire the Fed. We must take its stock under public ownership, if for no other reason then for their ruination of the dollar, aggravating boom and bust cycles, bailout thievery, and to prevent exactly these occurrences again in the future – all of which stem from a lightly or completely unregulated, private, banking system acting to privatize profits and socialize losses. Moral hazard is endless and systemic under this oligarchic structure.
"The bank was saved but the money was ruined."
William Gouge (1796-1863)
"You gotta start executin’ a few of those white fuckin’ bankers"
George Carlin
The immense costs of banker bailouts today mean more bonds have to be sold, more deficit financing incurred, more commissions earned by the big bank Fed owners, more currency value ruin, and more interest payable to foreigners on our “public” debt. Interest on interest, and debt on top of debt until collapse occurs is exactly where a private central bank system always takes us - particularly within a political system driven by corporate power and money.
Nevertheless, the fact we have a private central bank called the Federal Reserve that is still taken by many economists (and those attached to their ruling-elite sponsored positions) as a virtual given is clearly perplexing at best, and devious at worst. Despite the fact the founders of this nation had seen the predations worked upon England and other countries by private central bankers today’s crop of ruling-elite sycophants continue to ignore the issue and our own Constitution’s clear mandate for public "purse powers."
"The money powers prey upon the nation in times of peace and conspire against it in times of adversity. It is more despotic than a monarchy, more insolent than autocracy, and more selfish than bureaucracy. It denounces as public enemies all who question its methods or throw light upon its crimes. I have two great enemies, the Southern Army in front of me and the bankers in the rear. Of the two, the one at my rear is my greatest foe."
Abraham Lincoln
Yet, in this crisis, for the first time in my memory we have more people now realizing the real nature of the problem - and so considering the very idea of a public central bank and returning to a Constitutional setup. Despite the massive debt and interest set upon the public the very malady-causing institution remains private and without audits of either institution or its mega-rich and powerful owners. To complete the coup, members of its own fed-owning institutions (Goldman-Sachs, et.al.) serve as “our” Treasury Secretaries in what is a massive conflict of interest and ongoing effort to forestall any public interest or power in their system.
Today the time is ripe and this seminal issue is emerging. Like Holocaust deniers, however, there are those who pretend a public central bank is somehow not possible or advisable, and so they run from the topic and even seek to punish those who pursue the issue. Yet their arguments fly in the face of those who wrote our Constitution and purposely gave the money creation powers to Congress, the people’s body – so we, the people, would not be buried in interest-bearing debt, bailout costs, and enslaved to bankers for the nation’s livelihood and advancement.
Centuries of planned "panics," depressions, and recessions - all of which have caused immense enrichment for the few and immense loss to the nation and costs to future generations - have resulted in mind-boggling levels of interest bearing debt, inflation, and currency value destruction now bringing the nation to a financial armageddon.
http://www.publiccentralbank.com/
Very informative and useful post.
If a country does not have a public central bank it is essentially perpetually held hostage to the often counter productive demands of private capital. It is sort of an economic slave at the level of nation states. Having a public central bank is necessary although not necessarily sufficient by itself to avoid being enslaved to the damaging effects of overly concentrated private capital.
I wish I had a lot more time than I do to comment but an occasional comment is better than none. (You could easily write several books on these subjects). To save time I’ll just make some bullet points. I can prove all of these beyond a shadow of a doubt but I have neither the space nor the time right here and now to show all the evidence. (Obviously you can’t much anyway in just 1,000 words.) And although this is usually not my style it is the style most appropriate in a context such as this.
--Even before the 2008 collapse there were already at least 15 million people in the US who will never get a job at all and at least another 15 million who will never get a job more than a trivial amount above minimum wage. There has always been “an army of the unemployed” in the US for which more than 99% of all jobs are off limits. The unemployed have always been severely discriminated against and recently it has become common for employers to openly refuse to even accept applications from the unemployed.
--Now you can conservatively just about double those numbers: there are more than 25 million people who need a job who will NEVER get a job and another group of at least 25 million who will NEVER get pay substantially above minimum wage. That’s at LEAST about 50 million (which not coincidentally is about the number with no health insurance) out of a total labor force of roughly 175 million people who economically speaking might as well not be in existence except to the extent they are living off savings.
Think of them as “The Others”. To say that the labor market is not generating jobs fast enough for these people is an understatement.
--Aside from “The Others” of course there are many millions who will be in and out of lower and middle income employment as always. Aside from the literal temporary workers there are many others who are in effect temporary workers. But ultimately what matters is not what your income is in any single year but what it is over a working career.
Note however that taxes are on annual income and the tax system assumes that people's income is relatively constant from year to year which today is obviously absurd. Therefore, the real tax burden on people of modest means is far higher than is understood or recognized..
--Some of “The Others” are willing to work for near slave wages at McDonalds etc. while others would rather not work at all unless they can get enough income for a humane existence. They would in many cases rather be self employed even if their income ends up lower than if they worked at McDonalds.
--“The Others” are supposed to go to their closets (or go somewhere) to get a magic wand with which they can get a job where no job exists, or else they are supposed to use the magic wand to create demand for a business that they start where there is no demand. There are many towns in the US now where people can’t even afford basic electrical or plumbing work but the magic wands are supposed to change that. In other words, the system pretends that magic wands exist and that they can be used by anyone who otherwise is unemployed and destitute.
--Legally the unemployed are responsible for unemployment and the poor are responsible for poverty. Tools such as credit reports, garnishment, foreclosure, child support laws and other similar day to day provisions are used to enforce this reality.
--Generally speaking you can’t live on minimum wage even if you have no children.
--If you have a child in the States and you can’t afford it you can very possibly end up in jail; there is very very little support for destitute people anymore in the States.
--In the US College degrees are not even close to being a guarantee of employment or income. Under certain scenarios (which have become far more common now) you can end up poorer than if you have no degree. Unpaid Student loans are now generally taken to the grave. For example, there are hundreds of blogs written by law school graduates who can not get higher pay employment who believe they were scammed when they piled up massive law school loans. Remember, law school graduates have two higher degrees, not just one, and even they increasingly can not find meaningful employment with good pay.
--As measured by real income including all subsidies and benefits, the lower half in the US are worse off than are the same in virtually all the countries that have above average per capita incomes. It’s not just Sweden and Norway but also Canada, Japan and God only knows exactly how many other countries where the lower half is better off than in the US.
--There has been a lot of talk recently about how nice it would be if the US dollar would go down because then exports will go up and exports are about the only thing the so called experts can think of lately that might boost economic growth. However, if the US dollar goes down, the price of basic imported goods at Wal-Mart etc. go up which will make Americans including of course poorer ones immediately much poorer. Much better growth strategies such as direct government hiring, single payer health care, lower taxes for poor people, higher taxes for rich people, reinstallation of strategic import tariffs, and many other beneficial policies are not even on the elites’ table.
--Black people have been and are being economically destroyed at substantially higher rates than are white people. If you look at actual economic changes to households President Flim Flam (Barrack Obama) has been the worst President in history for black people. And he has added insult to injury with his support for the anti-black and anti-American rebels of Libya.
Bottom line: the hard right US economic system has failed beyond even the expectations of its critics.
Good post!
Excellent post! My job is one of those a little above minimum wage, but I earned a good wage during the nineties and the beginning of the oughts. I own my own home and two vehicles, but I can't afford gasoline for my pickup. I don't think that's likely to change any time soon, either.
I know there are people in a lot worse shape than me, and I feel for them, but I don't even know what can be done for any of us. I just feel like our elected government ought to be ready to do a little more for us, but I know that's laughable.
1. We need an NEW PARTY (yet to be named) which can successfully gain the majority in Congress and the Presidency in 2012. See: http://usaaltgov.wetpaint.com/page/PROTOCOL+FOR+THE+FORMATION+OF+THE+ALTERNATIVE+GOVERNMENT
2. We need to start our main rebellion by refusing to support the corporate members and wealthy families which are enrolled in the Corporate State of America, which has been in control of the Federal government and many state governments for several years. We can do this first step by creating the BOYCOTT THE BASTARDS campaign. See: http://usaaltgov.wetpaint.com/page/BOYCOTT+THE+BASTARDS
3. We need to shift our economy from a top-down capitalistic system to a bottom-up capital system known as the worker cooperative. See: http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=rainbow+grocery&emb=0&aq=0&oq=rainbow+groce#q=rainbow+grocery&emb=0&aq=0&oq=rainbow+groce&start=10
Comments are invited,
Jim Miller
jimmiller5417-at- yahoo.com
Recently the head of the International Firefighters Union announced that the union would no longer donate money for federal elections that benefits either the Republicans or Democrats. The reason given was that they must now concentrate at the State level on preserving their union from Tea Party assaults on their collective bargaining rights and benefits and those of other public sector workers such as nurses, police, teachers, etc.
Since the majority of that union's donations went to help Democrats running for election at the federal level the message to President Obysmal and the failed Democratic Party is clear: Team Obama and the Party proved they couldn't be trusted when they wouldn't get public sector workers' backs in Ohio, Wisconsin and elsewhere--so they have no excuse to complain when this union does not donate or campaign for their federal elections in 2012.
Because the most famous first responders on 9/11 were firefighters, Democratic politicians considered support by the firefighters union as the most sought-after union endorsement because it was good public relations. This was probably why Obama made a "symbolic" gesture to the firefighters union by dedicating the SEAL assassination of Bin Laden to firefighters. He no doubt thinks they're naive enough to fall for it and forgive him and his fellow DLC Democrat weasels.
However, still going dysfunctionally hand-in-hand with the anti-labor, neo-liberal, "free trade" pushing Democratic Party are larger unions such as the UAW, AFL-CIO and "service workers" unions.
They are ignoring a tremendous opportunity offered to them by the International Firefighters Union because they are sticking with a degenerate Democratic Party that has increasingly opposed the interests of organized labor and the working-class since the advent of NAFTA in 1994.
Legalizing usury, "free trade" treaties lacking enforceable labor or environmental protections; deregulation of and non-enforcement of laws regarding corporations and workers safety; deregulation of derivatives and banks (gutting the Glass-Steagall Act); ignoring the pro-union Checkcard Voting Act and ignoring the Koch brothers-backed Tea Party assault on public sector unions have been the Democratic Party's anti-working-class, anti-union stock-in-trade for thirty years now.
The Obama administration and the Democratic "leadership" in Congress have proven themselves to be entirely self-serving, cowardly and treacherous.
ALL of America's union should JOIN with the International Firefighters Union and, united for the common good of all working-class Americans, call for the Black and Progressive Caucuses to withdraw from the Democratic Party and work with the unions and others to the left of the DLC to form the nucleus of a new national populist progressive movement and/or Third Party.
If the rest of the unions fail to recognize this opportunity to join with the International Firefighters Union, then they are dooming themselves to wither away under un-opposed top-down class warfare sustained by a run amok Wall Street/corporatist neo-con/neo-lib Machine and its plutocratic resource extraction and military industry backers, and they are offering up younger generations of Americans' futures on the alter of that Machine's soulless, limitless greed, reckless plundering and poisoning of the national and global environment, and lust for over-concentrated power.
RE: They are ignoring a tremendous opportunity offered to them by the International Firefighters Union because they are sticking with a degenerate Democratic Party that has increasingly opposed the interests of organized labor...
Very important point!! The firefighter's union is showing the way.
This is a good and informative post. For one thing, it indirectly helps to explain why there is no NDP-US.
There is very little other than nostalgia to motivate labor to vote Democrat any more. The abandonment of workers goes beyond the sheer lack of pro worker legislation produced by these Democrats. It goes right to the psychological roots of the belief systems of Obama and the Democrats. Many Democrats including Obama have been quite clear that they are more impressed by multi-millionaire corporate high rollers than they are by "mere workers". The present day elite "Democrats" in power seem to consider aggressive greed to be a very laudatory personality characteristic.
Similarly, in the minds of these elites, if business revenue comes from scams, from government bailouts, and/or from unconstitutional government mandates instead of from the traditional and ethical workings of the free market, so be it. For Obama etc. the important thing is the millions and millions of dollars that someone has. Whether someone got the money ethically or not is of very little importance.
Where do fast food workers earn $20K a year? You could live on that in some parts of NM, so it can't be my state.
You can cling slightly above or significantly below the poverty line (depending primarily on your health, the health of your family members and housing costs) on an annual pre-tax full-time salary of $10 an hour. A nation as rich as the U.S. where CEOs now earn over 350 times what their own entry-level workers earn (a higher income disparity than any other nation) can afford to do far better.
Here's a download link to a study that directly addresses this problem in an informed, progressive manner:
"Combining Minimum Wage and Earned Income Tax Policies to Guarantee a Decent Living Standard to All U.S. Workers"
http://www.peri.umass.edu/236/hash/9b8a787cfa16226190e4f96e582348cd/publication/428/
Their goal is for a national minimum wage of $12.30 per hour. That would allow this country to reverse the four decade decline in the spending value of the minimum wage in inflation adjusted dollars.
Here's a nice little video of what happened at a McDonald's near me on their big hiring day:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoQS2Ucgdic
The working classes have been doublecrossed by the
DLC,,,,The Democratic Leadership Council...made up of
Bill aka Slick Willie Clinton, Senators Joe Lieberman,
Kennedy, Kerry, Dodd and Al Gore. They all voted for
Nafta along with the Republican Party, against the wishes
of Ross Perot who tried to warn us. We need a new party
for the working classes and the Middle Class. It has to
be done before the 2012. Obama is a shill for Corporate America. Biden is part and parcel of the
corporate movement.
Amen and well said Freddie K.
Mickey Mac set the hiring trends and qualifications many years ago as was
recognized in "FAST FOOD NATION". This was also a possible origin for "part time" commonly known "associates" of recent workforces.
GENERAL STRIKE
As we slip closer to the abyss of modern feudalism, the McEconomy, I've written a proposal that describes a mechanism through which we can fund a massive number of new business ventures by tapping the financial power of Wall Street to create jobs on Main Street. The purpose of this mechanism is to take a private sector proactive approach to address the expected long-term high unemployment problem, which presumably would function as a counterweight to the growing McJobs problem. You can read the proposal at Newsvine.com: http://jpbulko.newsvine.com/_news/2011/04/20/6500827-a-modest-proposal-to-save-the-american-economy-entrepreneurial-blitzkrieg-as-job-creation-vehicle-
Joseph Patrick Bulko, MBA
As we slip closer to the abyss of modern feudalism, the McEconomy, I've written a proposal that describes a mechanism through which we can fund a massive number of new business ventures by tapping the financial power of Wall Street to create jobs on Main Street. The purpose of this mechanism is to take a private sector proactive approach to address the expected long-term high unemployment problem, which presumably would function as a counterweight to the growing McJobs problem. You can read the proposal at Newsvine.com: http://jpbulko.newsvine.com/_news/2011/04/20/6500827-a-modest-proposal-to-save-the-american-economy-entrepreneurial-blitzkrieg-as-job-creation-vehicle-
Joseph Patrick Bulko, MBA
great post<3