Real Wages Fail to Match a Rise in Productivity

97silverlsc

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Real Wages Fail to Match a Rise in Productivity
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/28/b...&en=eae4ab9ab2ce13d5&ei=5094&partner=homepage
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE and DAVID LEONHARDT
Published: August 28, 2006

With the economy beginning to slow, the current expansion has a chance to become the first sustained period of economic growth since World War II that fails to offer a prolonged increase in real wages for most workers.

That situation is adding to fears among Republicans that the economy will hurt vulnerable incumbents in this year’s midterm elections even though overall growth has been healthy for much of the last five years.

The median hourly wage for American workers has declined 2 percent since 2003, after factoring in inflation. The drop has been especially notable, economists say, because productivity — the amount that an average worker produces in an hour and the basic wellspring of a nation’s living standards — has risen steadily over the same period.

As a result, wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation’s gross domestic product since the government began recording the data in 1947, while corporate profits have climbed to their highest share since the 1960’s. UBS, the investment bank, recently described the current period as “the golden era of profitability.”

Until the last year, stagnating wages were somewhat offset by the rising value of benefits, especially health insurance, which caused overall compensation for most Americans to continue increasing. Since last summer, however, the value of workers’ benefits has also failed to keep pace with inflation, according to government data.

At the very top of the income spectrum, many workers have continued to receive raises that outpace inflation, and the gains have been large enough to keep average income and consumer spending rising.

In a speech on Friday, Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, did not specifically discuss wages, but he warned that the unequal distribution of the economy’s spoils could derail the trade liberalization of recent decades. Because recent economic changes “threaten the livelihoods of some workers and the profits of some firms,” Mr. Bernanke said, policy makers must try “to ensure that the benefits of global economic integration are sufficiently widely shared.”

Political analysts are divided over how much the wage trends will help Democrats this fall in their effort to take control of the House and, in a bigger stretch, the Senate. Some see parallels to watershed political years like 1980, 1992 and 1994, when wage growth fell behind inflation, party alignments shifted and dozens of incumbents were thrown out of office.

“It’s a dangerous time for any party to have control of the federal government — the presidency, the Senate and the House,” said Charles Cook, who publishes a nonpartisan political newsletter. “It all feeds into ‘it’s a time for a change’ sentiment. It’s a highly combustible mixture.”

But others say that war in Iraq and terrorism, not the economy, will dominate the campaign and that Democrats have yet to offer an economic vision that appeals to voters.

“National economic policies are more clearly in focus in presidential campaigns,” said Richard T. Curtin, director of the University of Michigan’s consumer surveys. “When you’re electing your local House members, you don’t debate that on those issues as much.”

Moreover, polls show that Americans are less dissatisfied with the economy than they were in the early 1980’s or early 90’s. Rising house and stock values have lifted the net worth of many families over the last few years, and interest rates remain fairly low.

But polls show that Americans disapprove of President Bush’s handling of the economy by wide margins and that anxiety about the future is growing. Earlier this month, the University of Michigan reported that consumer confidence had fallen sharply in recent months, with people’s expectations for the future now as downbeat as they were in 1992 and 1993, when the job market had not yet recovered from a recession.

“Some people who aren’t partisans say, ‘Yes, the economy’s pretty good, so why are people so agitated and anxious?’ ” said Frank Luntz, a Republican campaign consultant. “The answer is they don’t feel it in their weekly paychecks.”

But Mr. Luntz predicted that the economic mood would not do significant damage to Republicans this fall because voters blamed corporate America, not the government, for their problems.

Economists offer various reasons for the stagnation of wages. Although the economy continues to add jobs, global trade, immigration, layoffs and technology — as well as the insecurity caused by them — appear to have eroded workers’ bargaining power.

Trade unions are much weaker than they once were, while the buying power of the minimum wage is at a 50-year low. And health care is far more expensive than it was a decade ago, causing companies to spend more on benefits at the expense of wages.

Together, these forces have caused a growing share of the economy to go to companies instead of workers’ paychecks. In the first quarter of 2006, wages and salaries represented 45 percent of gross domestic product, down from almost 50 percent in the first quarter of 2001 and a record 53.6 percent in the first quarter of 1970, according to the Commerce Department. Each percentage point now equals about $132 billion.

Total employee compensation — wages plus benefits — has fared a little better. Its share was briefly lower than its current level of 56.1 percent in the mid-1990’s and otherwise has not been so low since 1966.

Over the last year, the value of employee benefits has risen only 3.4 percent, while inflation has exceeded 4 percent, according to the Labor Department.

In Europe and Japan, the profit share of economic output is also at or near record levels, noted Larry Hatheway, chief economist for UBS Investment Bank, who said that this highlighted the pressures of globalization on wages. Many Americans, be they apparel workers or software programmers, are facing more comptition from China and India.

In another recent report on the boom in profits, economists at Goldman Sachs wrote, “The most important contributor to higher profit margins over the past five years has been a decline in labor’s share of national income.” Low interest rates and the moderate cost of capital goods, like computers, have also played a role, though economists note that an economic slowdown could hurt profits in coming months.

For most of the last century, wages and productivity — the key measure of the economy’s efficiency — have risen together, increasing rapidly through the 1950’s and 60’s and far more slowly in the 1970’s and 80’s.

But in recent years, the productivity gains have continued while the pay increases have not kept up. Worker productivity rose 16.6 percent from 2000 to 2005, while total compensation for the median worker rose 7.2 percent, according to Labor Department statistics analyzed by the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research group. Benefits accounted for most of the increase.

“If I had to sum it up,” said Jared Bernstein, a senior economist at the institute, “it comes down to bargaining power and the lack of ability of many in the work force to claim their fair share of growth.”

Nominal wages have accelerated in the last year, but the spike in oil costs has eaten up the gains. Now the job market appears to be weakening, after a protracted series of interest-rate increases by the Federal Reserve.

Unless these trends reverse, the current expansion may lack even an extended period of modest wage growth like one that occurred in the mid-1980’s.

The most recent recession ended in late 2001. Hourly wages continued to rise in 2002 and peaked in early 2003, largely on the lingering strength of the 1990’s boom.

Average family income, adjusted for inflation, has continued to advance at a good clip, a fact Mr. Bush has cited when speaking about the economy. But these gains are a result mainly of increases at the top of the income spectrum that pull up the overall numbers. Even for workers at the 90th percentile of earners — making about $80,000 a year — inflation has outpaced their pay increases over the last three years, according to the Labor Department.

“There are two economies out there,” Mr. Cook, the political analyst, said. “One has been just white hot, going great guns. Those are the people who have benefited from globalization, technology, greater productivity and higher corporate earnings.

“And then there’s the working stiffs,’’ he added, “who just don’t feel like they’re getting ahead despite the fact that they’re working very hard. And there are a lot more people in that group than the other group.”

In 2004, the top 1 percent of earners — a group that includes many chief executives — received 11.2 percent of all wage income, up from 8.7 percent a decade earlier and less than 6 percent three decades ago, according to Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Piketty, economists who analyzed the tax data.

With the midterm campaign expected to heat up after Labor Day, Democrats are saying that they will help workers by making health care more affordable and lifting the minimum wage. Democrats have criticized Republicans for passing tax cuts mainly benefiting high-income families at a time when most families are failing to keep up.

Republicans counter that the tax cuts passed during Mr. Bush’s first term helped lifted the economy out of recession. Unless the cuts are extended, a move many Democrats oppose, the economy will suffer, and so will wages, Republicans say.

But in a sign that Republicans may be growing concerned about the public’s mood, the new Treasury secretary, Henry M. Paulson Jr., adopted a somewhat different tone from Mr. Bush in his first major speech, delivered early this month.

“Many aren’t seeing significant increases in their take-home pay,” Mr. Paulson said. “Their increases in wages are being eaten up by high energy prices and rising health care costs, among others.”

At the same time, he said that the Bush administration was not responsible for the situation, pointing out that inequality had been increasing for many years. “It is neither fair nor useful,” Mr. Paulson said, “to blame any political party.”
 
That's only because real wages are calculated based on stripping out ALL benefits GIVEN to employees by employers. If you leave the benefits in, overall wages actually have increased.

Total misleading story.

Bogus again as usual, Phil.

BTW, I heard that Rove will be indicted this week. Any truth to that?
 
and you are still a Jackass, fossie. Maybe, just once, you could try to read the whole article before flapping your repug spunk covered gums!!!
Good to see someone pursuing what they are good at, you'll make a typical shyster!!!
:)
 
Downward Mobility
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/30/opinion/30wed1.html?hp
Published: August 30, 2006

If you’re still harboring the notion that the economy is “good,” prepare to be disabused.

Even the best number from yesterday’s Census Bureau report for 2005 is bad news for most Americans. It shows that median income rose 1.1 percent last year, to $46,326, the first increase since it peaked in 1999. But the entire increase is attributable to the 23 million households headed by someone over age 65. So the gain is likely from investment income and Social Security, not wages and salaries.

For the other 91 million households, the median dropped, by half a percent, or $275. Incomes for the under-65 crowd were hurt by a decline in wages and salaries among full-time working men for the second year in a row, and among full-time working women for the third straight year. In all, median income for the under-65 group was $2,000 lower in 2005 than in 2001, when the last recession bottomed out.

Despite the Bush-era expansion, the number of Americans living in poverty in 2005 — 37 million — was the same as in 2004. This is the first time the number has not risen since 2000. But the share of the population now in poverty — 12.6 percent — is still higher than at the trough of the last recession, when it was 11.7 percent. And among the poor, 43 percent were living below half the poverty line in 2005 — $7,800 for a family of three. That’s the highest percentage of people in “deep poverty” since the government started keeping track of those numbers in 1975.

As for the uninsured, their ranks grew in 2005 by 1.3 million people, to a record 46.6 million, or 15.9 percent. That’s also worse than the recession year 2001, reflecting the rising costs of health coverage and a dearth of initiatives to help families and companies cope with the burden. For the first time since 1998, the percentage of uninsured children increased in 2005.

The Census findings are yet another indication that growth alone is not the answer to the economic and social ills of poverty, income inequality and lack of insurance. Economic growth was strong in 2005, and productivity growth was impressive. What have been missing are government policies that help to ensure that the benefits of growth are broadly shared — like strong support for public education, a progressive income tax, affordable health care, a higher minimum wage and other labor protections.

President Bush is unlikely to push for those changes, wed as he is to tax cuts that mainly benefit the wealthy. But the economic agenda for the next president couldn’t be clearer.
 
97silverlsc said:
Economic growth was strong in 2005, and productivity growth was impressive. What have been missing are government policies that help to ensure that the benefits of growth are broadly shared — like strong support for public education, a progressive income tax, affordable health care, a higher minimum wage and other labor protections.

Here is what the author is really saying. You have to read between the lines.

We need to take the strong growth policies of the current administration and once again steal from the segment of our population actually creating wealth and redistribute it to those who don't.

Let's raise taxes and get a short term burst of treasury receipts and as the economy once again begins to sink, we'll hand over control to the conservatives again to rebuild. Heck, this has worked for us with Carter and Clinton. Why not with Kerry or Edwards?

Then we need to dump more money into a failed public education system that is turning out a stellar 50% drop-out rate like they do in Milwaukee.

Then we need to get back to the 80% tax rates on the richest Americans, those making over $50,000 a year. If you can afford meat, you don't need the money. Mac and Cheese for everyone.

And we need to give everyone unemcumbered access to health care, (not like they don't have it already), so people can call their doctor and check into the hospital to get a good nights rest when they are feeling tired.

And last, that CEO running that company and all the officers that either make or break it, they'll not be allowed to earn more than 20% greater than the poor soul on the production line putting wrappers on sticks. We all know how important that is. After all, without him, who would put the wrappers on the sticks?

And I really love this last line...
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- But the economic agenda of the next President couldn't be clearer.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Yes, destroy this economy, encourage terrorists to attack our homeland, play robinhood with the American taxpayer, continue to dumb-down the American voter and get back to groveling at the hands of the U.N. Great plan. Can't wait to vote for it. Thanks for the heads-up.
 
goodjobleninja1.gif
 
97silverlsc said:
and you are still a Jackass, fossie. Maybe, just once, you could try to read the whole article before flapping your repug spunk covered gums!!!
Good to see someone pursuing what they are good at, you'll make a typical shyster!!!
:)

And you are still an America-hater, Phillie. Maybe, just once, you could try to learn Economics 101 before you open your mouth and illustrate yet again just how ignorant you are regarding this subject.

Far be it from you to let facts get in the way of your hate-filled rhetoric.
 
fossten said:
And you are still an America-hater, Phillie. Maybe, just once, you could try to learn Economics 101 before you open your mouth and illustrate yet again just how ignorant you are regarding this subject.

Far be it from you to let facts get in the way of your hate-filled rhetoric.

Translation: blahblahblahblah, I know everything, you know nothing, blahblahblah.:)
 
97silverlsc said:
Translation: blahblahblahblah, I know everything, you know nothing, blahblahblah.:)

I notice that you never refute my posts. Hummm. Cutting too close to the truth I guess.
 
MonsterMark said:
I notice that you never refute my posts. Hummm. Cutting too close to the truth I guess.
Nothing to refute, they're usually too assinine to deserve a response.
"Then we need to dump more money into a failed public education system that is turning out a stellar 50% drop-out rate like they do in Milwaukee."

Are you referring to shrubs "No child left behind" that he drastically underfunded? The one you used to brag about as one of shrubs "great achievements"?

:)
 
I have no idea what Phil just said, because, unlike him, I am taking the advice in his sig.

Oh, by the way, Phil, you are officially *owned* YET AGAIN:

72 Hours after Mourning Death of Wage Growth, Times Notes Wages Up with GDP Growth

New data show wage growth at 7 percent after inflation factored out.

By Ken Shepherd
Business & Media Institute
8/31/2006 11:36:29 AM

What a difference three days make. 72 little hours.

In that time, a New York Times reporter went from tolling the death knell of real wage growth to reporting a 7-percent wage jump over last year after inflation.

“[T]he current expansion has a chance to become the first sustained period of economic growth since World War II that fails to offer a prolonged increase in real wages,” The New York Times’ David Leonhardt and Steven Greenhouse somberly noted in their page A6 article in the August 28 edition.

Greenhouse and Leonhardt added a political spin to data showing the “median hourly wage” dipping “2 percent since 2003, after factoring in inflation.”

“That situation is adding to fears among Republicans that the economy will hurt vulnerable incumbents in this year’s midterm elections,” the correspondents argued before remarking that “wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation’s gross domestic product.”

But new data released on August 30 pushed Leonhardt to admit the death of wage growth he wrote about earlier might be greatly exaggerated.

In an August 31 Business Day section story about new government data on the gross domestic product (GDP), Leonhardt found economists arguing the new report “was a welcome sign at a time of significant uncertainty about the economy’s direction.”

“Perhaps the biggest surprise,” Leonhardt noted, “was new evidence of a surge in wage-and-salary income in the first half of this year,” with pay up “at an annual pace around 7 percent after adjusting for inflation,” according to “an economic consulting firm, MFR.”

What’s more, Leonhardt conceded, “As a result, wages and salaries no longer make up their smallest share of the gross domestic product since World War II.” Instead, they now account for “46.1 percent of economic output in the second quarter,” and increase “from 45.4 percent last year.”

I guess it's back to lurking for you until another phony story comes across you at DU or Daily Kos or HuffNPuff.
 
97silverlsc said:
Are you referring to shrubs "No child left behind" that he drastically underfunded? The one you used to brag about as one of shrubs "great achievements"?

When it comes to school vouchers, yes. When it comes to dumping more money down the rat holes called 'public' education, no.


Once again I exaggerated..

Jay P. Greene, Ph.D.
Senior Fellow
Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
September 28, 2004
Choice and Public School
Students in Milwaukee

• In the graduating class of 2003, Milwaukee students using vouchers to attend private high schools had a 64% graduation rate.
• That same year, the 37 Milwaukee public high schools for which data are available had a combined graduation rate of 36%.
Milwaukee’s six academically selective public high schools, whose students are likely to be more advantaged than choice students, had a combined graduation rate of 41% in 2003.


NCLB Act signed January 8, 2002.
50 + years of the public education system turning out dependent Democrats and Bush is supposed to cure that in one year. OK, if you say so.
 
"and you are still a Jackass, fossie!" ....and the personal attacks start while facts and common sense go out the window.
 
fossten said:
What’s more, Leonhardt conceded, “As a result, wages and salaries no longer make up their smallest share of the gross domestic product since World War II.” Instead, they now account for “46.1 percent of economic output in the second quarter,” and increase “from 45.4 percent last year.”

I guess it's back to lurking for you until another phony story comes across you at DU or Daily Kos or HuffNPuff.

The initial article always gets the hugh media hit and the retraction gets nothing. This has been the left's modus operandi for the last 4 years. Lie first, then tell the truth later when no one is listening. Bunch of a-holes.
 
U.S.: Pay Gap Widens Between CEOs and Workers
by Abid Aslam
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0412-10.htm

WASHINGTON -- The chief executives of major U.S. corporations enjoyed double-digit pay raises last year, adding to a record of ''jaw-dropping'' compensation largely undisturbed by recent years' falling profits and share prices and a wave of scandals involving management chicanery, the country's leading labor federation said in a new survey.

Chief executive officers (CEOs) were being enriched at the expense of working families' retirement savings, the AFL-CIO said in its Executive Pay Watch study, released Monday as a Web site. The latest annual update aimed to rally support for labor and other investors who plan to force some 140 companies to confront pay issues at annual shareholders' meetings in coming months.

''We have seen a tremendous amount of interest among workers in holding CEOs and their boards accountable,'' said Richard Trumka, secretary-treasurer of the 13-million-member labor federation. ''They are rightfully outraged when they learn about jaw-dropping executive compensation packages. It's time to put the brakes on runaway CEO pay.''

An analysis of securities filings showed that CEO salaries rose 12 percent in 2004 compared with average raises of 3.6 percent for rank-and-file workers, further widening the world's largest gaps between executive and labor pay.

The average CEO of a major corporation received $9.84 million in total compensation in 2004, the AFL-CIO said.

Business Week magazine arrived at similar numbers last week, when it released its 55th annual executive pay scorecard. It pegged the average CEO pay raise at 11.3 percent and described this as ''not far off the rise in shareholder gains'' last year.

''Increases were moderated in 2004 by the continued impact of corporate reform, an ongoing shareholder revolt over astronomical pay levels, and pending accounting changes that are reining in the use of stock options,'' said the magazine's survey of 367 CEO pay packages.

But it also found that CEO raises once again dwarfed those of the average worker, who saw pay rise 2.9 percent, to $33,176 per year, and concluded: ''Nearly 40 of the nation's chief executives walked away with more than $20 million, excluding windfalls from option exercises. There have been improvements, but pay for performance is still not the standard practice everywhere. Some [corporate] boards, at least, are still lavishly rewarding CEOs who deserve far less.''

With more than $400 billion in assets invested in the capital markets through pension funds, unions have emerged as increasingly vociferous and influential investor activists, especially on pay-related issues.

Last year, union-sponsored pension plans won majority shareholder support for an unprecedented 34 proposals on CEO pay. Although shareholder resolutions usually are non-binding, those that win majority backing have been virtually impossible for companies to disregard.

Activists and analysts alike have credited investor pressure as a major reason why firms have begun to wean themselves off stock options, which give executives the right to buy shares at a fixed price over a specified period, essentially gambling that the price will have risen by the time they convert the options into actual shares. They then keep or sell the shares as they prefer.

Stock options made up 69 percent of a typical CEO's compensation in 2001 but last year the figure was down to 31 percent, the AFL-CIO said, citing news reports.

This year, unions have submitted more than 140 shareholder resolutions demanding that firms tie CEO pay to corporate performance, limit ''golden parachute'' severance packages, and seek shareholder approval of preferential executive pensions.

Executive Pay Watch highlighted six companies it described as emblematic of the issues confronting firms at this year's annual shareholders' meetings.

The AFL-CIO said it would ask biotechnology firm Amgen to boost the amount of company stock that executives are required to hold. This, it added, was because CEO Kevin W. Sharer had cashed in millions of dollars in stock options in recent years without actually owning any of the biotech firm's shares outright. Amgen in 2002 began requiring company executives and directors to own more of its stock but they were given five years to comply.

Unions said they would demand that Sempra Energy clearly state the costs of issuing stock options when it prepares its income statements. U.S. accounting rule makers have ordered large companies to do so beginning with financial statements issued after Jun. 15 and Sempra has said it would comply.

In addition, they would ask Wal-Mart Stores, the world's largest retail chain, to switch from stock options to actual shares when compensating top executives, and to grant shares based on corporate performance.

Other proposals will target CEO pay and severance levels at Coca-Cola, energy supplier Dynegy, and communications company Sprint.

The United States long has had the industrialized world's largest gap in pay between chief executives and blue-collar workers. CEO compensation swelled from 85 times what workers earned in 1990, to 209 times in 1996, and 326 times the following year. In 1999, CEO pay surged to a record 419 times the average worker's wage, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The gap then declined, to 282-to-1 in 2002, before surpassing 300-to-1 the following year, according to the research and advocacy group United for a Fair Economy (UFE).

Comparable figures for other wealthy nations generally do not exceed the double digits.

U.S. CEOs' pay rose 313 percent from 1990 to 2003, UFE said. By contrast, the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index rose 242 percent and corporate profits gained 128 percent.

During the same period, average worker pay rose 49 percent while inflation climbed 41 percent.
 
So?

Is that important?

Would you like a government program that makes sure that a Boss can't make x-times as much as their lowest paid employee? Never mind, I'm sure you'd love to do away with that whole "capitalism" thing. In your mind, I guess it's silly to leave discissions like that up to the share-holders and board of directors, surely you know best.
 
Insidious anti-labor bias hurts workers
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/connelly/283710_joel04.html
By JOEL CONNELLY
P-I COLUMNIST

In what I hope was an early-morning miscue, the weekend KPLU newsreader recently told listeners that "labor bosses" were gathering in Wenatchee for the Washington State Labor Council's annual convention.

Defining terminology, on the airwaves and deftly inserted in mainstream media, has been one of the right wing's small triumphs in forging America's new Gilded Age.

Anyone who protests social injustice is a "bleeding heart." Those who commit themselves to its prevention are "do-gooders." "Liberal" is practically a curse word. Anybody who preaches reconciliation is "soft" -- on crime, on communism, on "Islamic fascism."

Union officials get labeled as "bosses," while executives who slash corporate payrolls or dump employee pension plans get celebrated as "cost cutters" and "downsizers."

A generation ago, Sen. Robert Kennedy was joining Cesar Chavez as the leader of California's impoverished farm workers broke a fast by taking communion. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was checking into a Memphis motel to continue his support of striking sanitation workers.

Nowadays, vulgar billionaire Donald Trump gets feted on a TV show where his function is to say, "You're fired!"

Labor leaders are lucky to get one network talk show invite a year -- on the Labor Day weekend. Talking heads from conservative think tanks get to tell us who counts, and who does not, in the new Gilded Age.

One recent book, "Epitaph for American Labor," published by the American Enterprise Institute, actually argued that the free market has removed the need for workers to organize and assert their rights.

"America today is more than ever an equal-opportunity society where individuals can rise on their merits, a condition that makes unions irrelevant," wrote author Max Green.

advertising
Unions are in decline. In 1960, organized labor spoke for one-third of America's work force. John F. Kennedy formally launched his fall campaign before a huge Labor Day crowd in Detroit's Cadillac Square.

"The labor movement lifted up working people -- not just union members, all working men and women," the late Monsignor George Higgins, longtime adviser to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, wrote shortly before his death.

Nowadays, labor represents less than 15 percent of the nation's workers: As a union member, I am part of only about 10 percent of workers in private industry who remain organized.

In the Puget Sound area, labor still counts -- at times, in places.

The burn barrels that go up periodically outside Boeing's Everett assembly plant signal a union -- the aerospace Machinists -- that can still sustain a strike, win a fair contract and turn back management's demands for concessions.

By contrast, the 2000-01 Seattle newspaper strike was an unmitigated disaster in its impact on employees and employers alike.

A well led, focused organization -- the King County Labor Council -- was pivotal in electing Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels.

An initiative sponsored by the State Labor Council is responsible for Washington having a $7.63-an-hour minimum wage, compared with the pitiful $5.15-an-hour federal minimum.

On the minus side, the Service Employees International Union spent more than $250,000 on an unsuccessful 2004 primary challenge to state Rep. Helen Sommers. The Democrats' budget brain in Olympia fought back, and won.

Driving past the SEIU's big purple phone bank trailer -- parked off Denny Way -- a question often came to mind: Why don't you go pick on a reactionary politician somewhere?

But the value of unions goes far beyond political clout.

If you work in a corner office atop a glass skyscraper, these are the best of times.

The stock market is up. Executive salaries are way up. Even though we are at war, the Bush administration has cut taxes for the wealthy -- and wants to cut more.

But if you wash windows or floors in that skyscraper, life is a struggle. It involves taking a second, even a third job.

Even if you are a midlevel employee, chances are that your income has lately gone flat.

"The problem we face is not only a loss of living standards, but a loss of moral standards as well," Monsignor Higgins wrote. "Increasingly our economy is sending the message that it values accumulated wealth over honest work. In this economy it seems that everything is going up -- except the earnings of working people."

In the new Gilded Age, and the new global economy, demeaning people does not matter.

Consider the Enron employees who believed reassurances from company brass, only to lose jobs and retirement savings.

Or airline retirees who have seen companies file for bankruptcy protection and dump pension plans.

Or laid-off workers who watch the downsizing boss reap millions in salary and stock-option benefits.

A few years back, a retired Philadelphia laborer told an AFL-CIO-sponsored discussion: "There is no longer the relationship that once did exist between company and employee, where there was a bond, a family type of feeling. Today, it's a 'me' feeling: What's the bottom line? What am I going to get out of it?

"I think that this situation is ugly, not only for us as workers but for us as a country."
 
Lessons for Labor Day

CEO's in the oil and defense industries are making out like profiteering bandits. Wages for American workers are declining while their productivity is rising. Recent polls show that workers feel pessimistic about their economic prospects. And a new US Census Report reveals growing poverty, especially among children.

Happy Labor Day.

The 13th annual "Executive Excess" http://www.faireconomy.org/press/2006/ee06_ceos_pocket_the_spoils_preview.htmlreport from the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) and United for a Fair Economy indicates that "the CEO's at the top 34 military contractors have enjoyed average paychecks that are double the compensation they received in the four years leading up to 9/11."

George David, CEO of United Technologies – the maker of the Black Hawk helicopter – pocketed $200 million since 9/11, explaining, "Obviously, military was a big bang for us in the post-September 11 period." UTC is currently suing the Pentagon to stop the release of documents pertaining to Black Hawk quality-control problems.


These 34 defense CEO's have been paid nearly $1 billion since 9/11. As soldiers have made the ultimate sacrifice for our nation, the average army private earns $25,000 per year while the average defense CEO makes $7.7 million.

As IPS's Sarah Anderson writes, "Imagine how it must feel to be risking your life every day on the front lines in Iraq, knowing that military contractors are getting grotesquely rich in the comfort of their executive suites? No wonder we're seeing the US Marine Corps having to force their reservists back to the battlefield."

Derrick Jackson of the Boston Globe concludes, "There is no evidence of a [defense] contractor having a soul in the 13th annual Executive Excess CEO survey…."

The oil barons are also enjoying the spoils of our energy crisis. Last year they averaged $32.7 million in compensation, 518 times more than the average oil worker. Chuck Collins and Eric Benjamin write, "Big Oil CEO's should be held to account for their failure to dedicate their mountains of excess cash toward seeking new energy sources that move us beyond fossil fuels."

But the fact is that what is happening in the numb-to-greed defense and oil industries is not dissimilar to the rest of our economy. According to the Washington Post, "the top fifth of American households received 50.4 percent of all income last year, the highest proportion since 1967, when the census bureau started following that trend. The biggest gains were concentrated in the top five percent."

Steven Greenhouse and David Leonhardt write in the New York Times that "wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation's gross domestic product since the government began recording the data in 1947, while corporate profits have climbed to their highest share since the 1960's."

According to Greenhouse and Leonhardt, the median hourly wage since 2003 – adjusted for inflation – has declined 2 percent since 2003 while productivity "has risen steadily over the same period." Moreover, as Paul Krugman points out in an op-ed, "The most crucial benefit, employment-based health insurance, has been in rapid decline since 2000." In fact, according to the Center for American Progress, "the number of people living in the United States without medical insurance rose 2 percent--1.3 million--to a record 46.6 million over the last year alone as health-care costs climbed three times as fast as wages.

Jared Bernstein, of the Economic Policy Institute, told the Times, "If I had to sum it up, it comes down to bargaining power and the lack of ability of many in the work force to claim their fair share of growth.

Nevertheless, George Bush claimed this month, "Things are good for American workers." According to the polls, American workers disagree.

An "overwhelming majority" of adults feel workers have "less job security… than 20 to 30 years ago." A majority feel their incomes are lagging behind inflation. And more than twice as many people feel the economy will worsen next year than believe it will improve.

As AFL-CIO president, John Sweeney, told the Times, "Economic trends have strained working families to the breaking point. Workers are not sharing in the wealth they helped create, and our nation's economic recovery has not been a recovery for workers at all."

Anna Burger of Change to Win added, "These [poll] results tell us that five years into an economic recovery working families are feeling battered and are losing hope for the future."

This week's US Census Report suggests that the American people's perceptions are far more accurate than the galling assertions of the man who would be Hereditary King. In the nation's capital itself, poverty rose in 2005 by more than 10,000 people last year to 104,000. And 1 out of 3 children in the Compassionate President's city now lives in poverty.

According to Krugman, the Census Report indicates "that in 2005, four years into the economic expansion, the percentage of Americans with private insurance of any kind reached its lowest level since 1987."

Our nation has seen some miserable times when it comes to numbness to greed, and we are in another such period now. The question is: what to do?

The civilizing advances in our country, when it comes to working people – child labor laws, collective bargaining rights, Social Security, Medicare, decent and secure pensions, Head Start... all of these were fought for by movements, and then advanced by progressive legislators.

Krugman reaches a similar conclusion, writing that current times call for "a smart, bold populism. All we need now are some smart, bold populist politicians." I'd argue that to fight for shared prosperity isn't really that bold these days--it's really about rebuilding America and its social contract.

So, on this Labor Day 2006, let's support policies and ideas that will make this economy work for those who have helped create this country's wealth. For a start: Stop the assault on labor and strengthen collective bargaining. Then, let's pass universal health care and a living wage, craft trade and industrial policies that create jobs and restore workers' rights, and rebuild our ravaged pension system. These are just a few steps toward a more humane, decent and rational system that would fulfill America's promise.
 
Hey, did you check the back issues of Pravda? There might be some good stuff their too.
 
97silverlsc said:
This week's US Census Report suggests that the American people's perceptions are far more accurate than the galling assertions of the man who would be Hereditary King.

I love to seeing the hate oozing from their pores. LooooSERS!
 

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