worker

Huffington Post…

INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Court of Appeals says a department store wasn’t justified in firing a worker who took two leftover hot dogs from a company picnic, so it must pay him unemployment benefits. The court ruled Thursday in the case of Nolan Koewler, who was fired from a Dillard’s store in Evansville a year ago. Dillard’s hosted a Fourth of July cookout for employees. Afterward, a manager ordered the leftovers stored in a break room freezer until Labor Day. The next day, Koewler took two hot dogs and ate them, an act caught on surveillance video. He claimed he never heard the instruction to save the hot dogs, and the three-judge panel sided unanimously with him. The opinion didn’t reveal the amount of unemployment benefits at stake.

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Court: Firing Worker Who Took Hot Dogs Unjustified

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Huffington Post…

Q: When is it better to work with contractors rather than hire employees? The following answers are provided by the Y.E.C. Mentors . Co-Founded by Donna Fenn and Scott Gerber , Y.E.C. Mentors is an initiative of the Young Entrepreneur Council , a nonprofit organization that provides young entrepreneurs with access to tools, mentorship, community and educational resources that support each stage of their business’s development and growth. Y.E.C. Mentors’ members are successful executives, serial entrepreneurs and thought leaders. A: Use Contractors in Non-Core Areas When our team encounters issues beyond our capabilities, we hire a project based contractor. The high cost of unemployment insurance and other employee contributions could last longer than the project. If the project is only short term, we do not want that extra overhead. However, we have retained as full time, two project staff because of their amazing culture and abilities. –Tom Walter, Tasty Catering A: Keep Fixed Costs Minimal, But Don’t Contract Out Critical Positions Look for independent contractors with the expertise to speed your way to success. It is much more cost effective to hire them by the hour instead of taking on their salaries; but beware that you have the right “work for hire” agreements in place to you own what you pay them for doing. And make sure you comply with the IRS rules on independent contractors. –Sharon Lechter ( @sharonlechter ), Pay Your Family First A: Invested Employees Sustain Growth Often times, you have more “control” over contractors than employees. They typically cost more per hour but you can use them only when you need them. Unless it’s core to your business contractors offer much more flexibility but come at a cost — such as their experience leaves with them. –Michael Holthouse ( @lemonadeday ), Prepared 4 Life A: Contactors are Invaluable for Bootstrappers The answer to your question isn’t really what’s better, but what is the nature of your relationship with the worker. If you are the sole company he or she works for and if you control his/her schedule and how the job is performed, then the worker is most likely an employee. Check out www.irs.gov which provides a list of criteria a worker must meet in order to be considered a contractor. –Susan Solovic ( @susansolovic ), It’s Your Biz

Originally posted here:
Donna Fenn: When Is It Best To Hire A Contractor?

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Susan Buchanan: Jobs Lost to Deep Drilling Ban Less Than Predicted

February 1, 2011

This article was published in “The Louisiana Weekly” on January 30, 2011 The Gulf Coast remains banged up and broken from BP’s spill but worries that Louisiana workers would be hit hard by the federal drilling ban — which ended in October — haven’t materialized. In an early January report on the moratorium, public-private partnership GNO, Inc. said big job losses that it and others expected haven’t occurred so far. Employment in the coastal, oil patch grew in 2010, according to the Louisiana Workforce Commission last week. If you tank up with gasoline, you probably figured out awhile ago that oil prices are rising. Petroleum companies have no intention of missing that boat, and want staff on hand at production facilities in Louisiana and elsewhere to help them meet demand and capitalize on higher prices. Robin Barnes, executive vice president at GNO, Inc., said “job losses on the Louisiana coast are, at least initially, not as high as we expected last June. Large and small companies have tried to retain employees rather than lay them off, and in some cases have shortened their hours.” GNO, Inc.’s January report was the second in its three-part Economic Impact Series, including an already-released segment on fisheries and a soon-to-be issued, final part on Louisiana’s brand. Barnes said smaller firms on the coast have dipped into their savings to cover payrolls. “Some companies have managed to hold on with money received from BP claims and the Vessels of Opportunity program,” she noted. “Unemployment could rise in the coastal economy this year, however, as businesses deplete their savings.” In September, the U.S. Dept. of Interior revised projected Gulf job losses from the deepwater moratorium to a range of 8,000 to 12,000, from an earlier view of 23,000. Those figures compare with Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal’s forecast last spring that 20,000 jobs would be forfeited to the drilling ban. Last June, GNO, Inc. saw a potential drop of 12,500 to 21,900 full-time-equivalent positions from the deepwater moratorium. The group’s January report said “to date, we have not seen evidence of these projections,” but added that since June, Louisiana has lost over 25,000 jobs statewide. “While this cannot be assumed a direct correlation — unemployment was rising around the country — we are confident that the decrease in drilling permits and the significant slow-down of the oil and gas industry had an impact on this number.” Since the release of GNO, Inc.’s January report, however, Louisiana officials said that the state’s jobs grew in 2010 as a whole and that December’s unemployment rate of 7.2%, not seasonally adjusted, was unchanged from 2009′s end. Seasonally adjusted, the December jobless number was 8%. Last October, GNO, Inc. began releasing a Gulf Permit Index, tracking approved, federal deep and shallow water permits on a biweekly basis. On the shallow end, permits in the last quarter of 2010 averaged 6.3 per month versus 7.1 in the year earlier quarter. Curry Smith, GNO, Inc. communications and research manager, said last week, “only two, new deepwater drilling permits have been approved by BOEMRE since the moratorium ended on Oct. 12. And since then, only 16 new shallow-water permits have been approved, though there was no official ban on shallow drilling.” Deepwater permits were issued for new exploratory wells in November and December, respectively, to BHP Billiton Petroleum. Last week, Senator Mary Landrieu’s office said “five, deepwater platforms operating in the Gulf have left for other parts of the world, costing Louisiana and the Gulf Coast nearly 5,000 jobs.” Most of those rigs moved to the coast of Africa, in some cases temporarily, according to their owners. As a reference point, GNO, Inc. used 33 as the number of deepwater rigs shut in the Gulf by the drilling moratorium, though the actual figure is lower. The group said that each rig directly or indirectly employs between 415 and 732 Louisiana workers, and 33 rigs would employ between 13,695 and 24,156 workers. “While we have not seen evidence of this high level of unemployment, should the lack of permits continue, the number of jobs at risk is significant,” GNO, Inc’s January report said. Separately, Eileen Angelico, New Orleans spokeswoman for the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, said last week that 21, rather 33 deepwater rigs were shut in the Gulf during the drilling ban. “Of the 33 deepwater rigs that were operating at the time that Interior Secretary Salazar called for the moratorium, 21 rigs eventually suspended operations,” she said. “Twelve rigs were completing operations, which were not covered under the moratorium, such as drilling a relief well; workover operations; and drilling waterflood, gas injections or disposal wells.” For example, Taylor Energy’s Diamond Ocean Saratoga was exempt as it continued to plug and abandon a Mississippi Canyon well, following platform damage from Hurricane Ivan. A notice from the Dept. of Interior late last May explained the types of rig operations that were exempt from the moratorium. Continuing with its reference number of 33 shut rigs, GNO, Inc. said “over the course of seven months from June to December 2010, 33 working, deepwater rigs would have accounted for state and parish income and rig royalties of between $9,868,799 and $16,864,585. We cannot assume that all these taxes were lost as a result of the moratorium, because — as we have discussed — income-tax paying workers have been kept on payroll, and some companies have found other sources of revenue.” Layoffs on rigs since last spring are far less than initially expected. The $100 million Rig Worker Assistance Fund, established with BP funds, was created to compensate rig employees unable to work as a direct result of the moratorium. GNO, Inc. said in January “this fund, housed at the Baton Rouge Area Foundation, has received approximately 624 applications, 343 of which were compensated. We estimate that each deepwater drilling rig relies on approximately 230 direct workers.” Rig employees did not lose their jobs in large numbers, and some workers that were laid off chose not to apply to the fund, GNO, Inc. said. The group said “job losses were mostly suffered by members of the low-income, unskilled labor force. The majority of directly and indirectly impacted businesses chose to retain most of their employees, despite a sharp drop-off in their needs for labor.” GNO, Inc. also said “drilling rigs may be keeping employees on payroll, but are not purchasing the goods and services — known in the industry as ‘rope, soap, and dope’ — that they did previously.” When asked what he thought about earlier projections that the moratorium could result in losses of 20,000 Gulf jobs, Don Briggs, president of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association, said last week “I think they are probably high.” But, he said, “it’s been a very difficult number to quantify.” Briggs pointed out, for instance, that “companies like Baker Hughes, Halliburton and Schlumberger can move their people anywhere, to places such as the Haynesville,” the big natural gas-from-shale play in Northwest Louisiana. The GNO, Inc. study includes “qualitative” or anecdotal research from discussions with several, small business owners providing goods and services to oil and gas companies affected by the drilling ban. In addition, employees of non-profit groups assisting small businesses on Louisiana’s coast were interviewed. GNO, Inc. found that “the moratorium forced business owners to drastically change their business plans and utilize savings to compensate for significantly decreased revenue. Most small business owners have attempted to retain their employees in anticipation of drilling permits being granted in the near future.” GNO, Inc. expects that if drilling permits don’t increase much by second-quarter 2011, small businesses will be forced to begin major layoffs. Larger companies may choose to keep employees on longer, but not indefinitely. On January 3, BOEMRE told thirteen oil companies that they may be able to resume previously approved exploration and production activities without submitting revised plans. In its January report, GNO, Inc. said that its Gulf Permit Index had shown little increase in permits issued since then. “Thus, we maintain that a de facto, deepwater moratorium remains in place.” The group said that, given recent increases in shallow, permit approvals, however, “the de facto shallow-water moratorium ended.” GNO, Inc. said “the U.S. has experienced accidents in various industries, including mining, air travel, civil engineering, chemical transportation and others, yet none have resulted in the long-term, comprehensive shutdown of an industry.” The group does not weigh in on Louisiana’s clean energy-versus-oil debate. It does say “the safety of workers and the environment must be of paramount importance.” New systems and procedures should be described and implemented, using transparent methods. “This will allow the nation’s offshore oil and natural gas industry to return to work in a way that will preserve thousands of critical jobs,” in a region still recovering from hurricanes. Separately, Dr. Loren Scott, emeritus professor in economics at Louisiana State University, said he’s keeping an eye on job numbers in Metropolitan Statistical Areas in the coastal oil patch. In the Houma MSA, covering Lafourche and Terrebonne parishes, unemployment was 5.1%, not seasonally adjusted, in December, down from 5.7% in November and 5.3% in December 2009. Those numbers were all below prevailing national averages. Unemployment also fell in December in the Lafayette, Lake Charles and New Orleans MSAs, including Plaquemines Parish. Joseph Mason, LSU finance professor, said “nobody has a good number on job losses from the moratorium right now because of the nature of the holdups — limited licensing in shallow and deep water. The Administration and BOEMRE are still barely licensing projects — not just placing procedural hurdles, but simply locking out the industry, thereby leaving in place the ongoing, harsh economic effect.” Mason continued, saying “Obama said a few weeks back that permitting would gain speed,” but that hasn’t happened. Meanwhile, President Obama referred to oil as “yesterday’s energy” in his State of the Union speech last week, and said he wants the nation to focus on producing and using cleaner fuels. end

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Marshall Auerback: Reality Check: Why Truth Will Protect Social Security

December 20, 2010

It is clear from the comments on our last piece that we might have raised more questions than we answered. Above all, we want to make clear that when we discuss the funding aspects of the Social Security program, we are doing so in a way that is designed to safeguard it, not eliminate it . We believe that fictions are not necessary, because the truth will protect the program better than distortions, however well-intended. Enemies have lied enough; supporters do not need to battle fictions with more fictions. Here we will deal with a dozen issues surrounding the proposed payroll tax holiday, and illustrate why we do not believe that the holiday is a danger to the program — as long as we understand the facts. 1. Social Security Has Deep Support . Social Security is consistently counted as America’s most popular program. It lifts millions of seniors out of poverty. It provides benefits to widows, dependents and persons with disabilities. It has never missed a payment due. It is a federal government program, and as such has the full faith and credit of our government standing behind it. There is absolutely no reason to believe that it would ever default on its commitments. Its promises are as secure as any promises made anywhere in the world. One of the things that makes it so popular, and hence safe from political interference, is that it is essentially a universal program — Congress determines eligibility requirements. It has no means tests, so unlike “welfare” programs it is available for poor and rich alike. So it commands political legitimacy in a way that welfare programs do not. 2. Social Security is a Generational Promise . In real terms, Social Security is an assurance program, maintained by a promise by Americans of working age to provide material support for seniors and other beneficiaries (those widows, dependents, and people with disabilities). It is an assurance that is renewed every generation: those of working age produce the goods and services needed by Americans of all ages, secure in the knowledge that when they become aged or infirm, the next generation will work hard to support them. 3. There is No Viable Alternative . What would be the alternative to this social assurance program? Previous to the creation of Social Security, most elderly people lived in (or near) poverty, relying largely on handouts coming from their own children or, in many cases, from charities. Few Americans had adequately provided for their own retirement. All studies today demonstrate that the average American still has not adequately prepared for retirement. For most Americans, the Social Security “leg” of the retirement stool is absolutely essential for a dignified retirement. There is no reason to believe things will ever be different. There is no alternative to public support for retirement. If we also add in widows, dependents, and people with disabilities (who now account for a quarter of all beneficiaries of Social Security) it becomes even more obvious that Social Security is necessary and is here to stay. 4. The Payroll Tax is Unpopular . In spite of the defense by well-intentioned, albeit misguided, liberals, no one really loves the payroll tax. It is the most burdensome federal tax for 70% of all Americans. It adds to the cost of employing American workers — making it hard to compete in a global economy in which many of our competitors have no equivalent business cost. In most nations, a public pension for retirees, as well as social protection for dependent youths and people with disabilities, is not a cost imposed on business. Rather, it is a cost born by society as a whole. In America we impose a cost on employment — both employee and employer — that is not typically born by our competitors. Just as in the case of imposing health care costs on employers, the US almost uniquely puts barriers in the way of employment. Social Security alone adds 12.4% (half each on employer and employee) to employment costs. Further, the tax is poorly designed because it is regressive, with much lower tax rates on high income earners. It also taxes only employment income. This is extremely problematic in a nation in which the share of wages in national income has been declining on trend and is projected to continue to decline in coming decades. While we do not endorse such projections, we wish to point out that these have a lot to do with the projections of future financial “shortfalls”. In addition, as income becomes more unequally distributed, more employment income at the top becomes exempt from the tax — another reason for projected shortfalls. Again, we do not endorse the projection, but it provides fuel to the fire of neocons who point to projected shortfalls in their argument that the program is financially unsustainable. Our point is that a payroll tax cut reduces employment costs, will restore ‘spending power’ and, by helping households to make their mortgage payments, will help to fix banks from the bottom up. Maximizing employment and output in each period is a necessary condition for long-term growth. A payroll tax reduction helps to mitigate the impact of rising unemployment. So even on the conventional accounting grounds that today’s Social Security Trust Fund will have “shortfall” (to reiterate, a position which we do not endorse), full employment provides greater tax revenue to the government, which will shut down these discussions about Social Security’s “affordability”. 5. Tying Social Security to the Payroll Tax is Problematic . Even if we strictly stick to conventional understanding of government finance, it makes little sense to tie the program’s fortunes to the payroll tax for the reasons enumerated above. The tax base has been falling. The tax is regressive. The tax helps to make America uncompetitive. More importantly, the tax is almost unique among federal taxes — it is “dedicated” to a single program. That allows both “money’s worth” (comparing taxes paid to individual benefits received) calculations as well as calculations of “Armageddon day” (when revenues fall short of benefit payments). It also has led to completely unnecessary tax hikes over the years, from a tax of about 2% of wages on the parents of baby-boomers to the current 6.2%. These current tax rates have nothing to do with current benefit payments — Greenspan pushed them up far beyond what was necessary on the argument that we needed “advanced funding” for benefits that would be paid 50 or 75 years into the future. By contrast, there is no dedicated military tax. Imagine tax policy that would try to increase taxes today on the argument that we will need to increase military spending in 2075. It would be rejected as nonsense. In fact, no one wastes time trying to calculate the defense spending “shortfall” through the next 75 years, let alone “infinite horizon” shortfalls (as is done by inter-generational warriors in the case of Social Security). Too silly to imagine. Without a “dedicated” payroll tax, such calculations would never be done because they could not be done. A “hypothecated tax” supposedly designed to safeguard Social Security’s long-term viability, then, actually provides the political means to destroy it. 6. Ignoring “Financing”, There is no Social Security Crisis . As we explained in our first piece, aging raises the real “burden” in the sense that eventually we will have only two workers per beneficiary versus three today. But all reasonable projections of rising worker productivity easily takes care of that. If we stick to “real” arguments Social Security, proponents can defeat neocon critics hands-down. The burden rises very slowly, and by less than it has risen over the past half century — we have already dealt with a rising number of seniors as great as what will occur in the future. In truth, we have already completed most of the transition to an aged society. And it ain’t that bad. Yes, we need more old folks’ homes; but we need fewer day care centers. We need more hip replacements but we need fewer neonatal units. It is almost a wash — that transition from baby-boomer young to baby-boomer old. And they’ll all soon enough be gone, anyway. In truth, the baby-boomers were a blip on the historical radar screen and we are almost done with them. Yes, they were a burden — from birth to death — but they gave us one heck of a lot of excitement, from war protests to sexual revolutions, and from drug experimentation to the best music the country ever produced. 7. Sustainability Calculations Are Distorted . Only in financial terms can the program look unsustainable — but that is entirely due to the myth that the payroll tax must pay for the program. The shortfall is due to several factors, most of which are based on the assumption that recent trends will continue. As discussed above, it is partially due to projections that the distribution of income will continue to shift away from wages and toward rentier income and high income earners. It is also due to projections of low wage growth and to other projections about “real” variables: low immigration of workers to the US, low economic and productivity growth, low birthrates, falling retirement ages, and low labor force participation rates. Most of these are arguable, and some are policy variables (if desired, there is a nearly infinite supply of potential immigrants). But the bigger point is the one we have made above: these sustainability calculations rely on projections of faster growth of benefit payments relative to the growth of payroll tax revenue. If there were no dedicated tax, there could be no “financial” calculation of sustainability. Instead, we would have to focus on the much more relevant “real” variables: will we have enough workers of sufficient productivity to produce all the goods and services we will need to support elders, dependents, people with disabilities, and workers? The answer is a resounding “Yes”. There is no controversy about that, even taking the pessimistic assumptions used by program critics. The “financing” diverts us from the real issue. 8. The Holiday is Good for the Economy . Eliminating the payroll tax ends the irrelevant “money’s worth” and “sustainability” calculations. It also relaxes the fiscal stance by an amount that is probably sufficient to remove the fiscal drag that prevents the economy from operating at full employment. The “holiday” is a move in the right direction with regard to loosening the fiscal stance and tax relief is well-targeted to workers and firms. We can begin with the 2 percentage point reduction and move forward to greater reductions. It is possible that our calculations are wrong. If so, it will be necessary to increase taxes or reduce spending when — and if — our economy finally recovers. When that becomes necessary, there are better taxes than a payroll tax that punishes employers and especially lower and middle class workers. 9. Payroll Taxes Do Not “Pay for” Social Security. Let us first look at this from a conventional viewpoint of government finance. Benefit payments are made by Treasury, just like any other federal government spending. Payroll taxes are paid to Treasury, just like any other federal taxes. If total spending, including Social Security, exceeds total tax revenue, including payroll taxes, the government records a budget deficit. It does not matter whether one part of the budget — say Social Security — receives dedicated taxes greater than spending. We can just as easily imagine that fuel taxes “pay for” transportation, and that income taxes “pay for” military adventures. If Social Security runs a surplus but the rest of the budget runs an equal deficit, the government has a balanced budget. It can say that the rest of the budget “owes” Social Security — but that is just internal record keeping. Later, if the rest of the budget continues to run deficits and then Social Security also runs a deficit, the sum of those two equals the budget deficit — an external deficit. The internal records that show Social Security has run years’ worth of surpluses do not change that fact at all. From the perspective of the budget as a whole, this internal accounting makes no more sense than when a household allocates the husband’s income to the house payment and the wife’s income to the auto loan with careful record keeping to track the husband’s debt to the wife when he comes up short. If total income is less than spending, there is an external budget deficit and the wife cannot collect from the husband on all the internal debts he may owe her from previous years. But in reality, the government is not like a household and we cannot use conventional views about government finance. While we treat tax revenues as “income,” it is not the same as a household’s income and does not really finance government spending in the way that a household’s income finances its spending. The government actually receives back its own IOUs when taxes are paid; it issues its own IOUs when it spends. Deficits mean it issues more IOUs than it receives back. It cannot run out of its own IOUs. This is not a policy proposal, but rather a description of government spending. We do not imply that the government can never issue “too many” IOUs. The government can spend too much, causing inflation and, possibly, causing currency depreciation. But when the government promises to make Social Security benefit payments, it is promising to credit bank accounts with its own IOUs. It cannot run out; it will never reach a point at which it cannot fulfill its promise. “Finance” is not constrained in this case. This is not a controversial point; it is accepted by all mainstream economists from Paul Samuelson (who wrote the textbooks most students used) and Milton Friedman to Ben Bernanke . There are many other issues associated with government spending — it can be of the wrong type, it can be so large that it causes inflation, it can reward friends and punish enemies, and so on. But it cannot be financially constrained. 10. Political Reality Check . Our support for a tax holiday has been labeled “politically naïve.” You want political reality? Retaining the fiction that payroll taxes “pay for” Social Security only gives ammunition to the enemies for the reasons we discussed above — it makes it possible to calculate the program’s shortfall. Amazingly, Social Security’s “friends” (like President Clinton and Candidate Gore) accept those calculations! And just what do many “progressives” advocate to resolve the program’s projected financial shortfall? Raising the cap so that taxes can be increased on higher income people. That is supposed to be politically popular — a way to influence friends and convert enemies? Social Security is already a bad “money’s worth” deal for high income people, who would much rather pull out and invest their savings in Wall Street. Others want to means test the program — again, targeting the high income to reduce their benefits. To generate more support among high income employees and the self-employed? Talk about political naiveté. In case no one has been noticing over the past half century, high income people have influence in Washington and do not need Social Security. They would love to pull out or gut the program. By tying Social Security’s fate to the payroll tax, progressives commit themselves to battling over financial “sustainability” and to difficult political choices that come down to raising payroll taxes or cutting benefits. 11. Defending the Payroll Tax Plays Into the Hands of Social Security’s Foes . There is nothing more ironic and destructive than “progressives” refusing to give a payroll tax holiday to beleaguered workers. It plays right into neocons’ hands. Keeping payroll taxes far higher than necessary to match benefit payments was precisely Greenspan’s 1983 scheme to reduce popularity for the program. To some degree, it has been successful. Imagine a truly progressive strategy that promised to eliminate the payroll tax to help workers and their employers. How much goodwill would that produce for the progressive cause? And how much fiscal stimulus would that add? We would then move the focus to real issues: preparing our economy for a growing elderly population and for fewer workers per beneficiary. Education and training could increase future productivity. Policies that maintain high employment and minimize unemployment (both officially measured unemployment, as well as those counted as out of the labor force) are critical to maintaining a higher worker-to-retiree ratio. Policies can also encourage seniors of today and tomorrow to continue to participate in the labor force. The private sector will play a role in all of this, but there is also an important role to be played by the government. The broader point is that any reform that seeks to address growth in the context of Social Security’s “sustainability” ought to be made with a focus on increasing the economy’s capacity to produce real goods and services today and in the future, rather than on ensuring positive actuarial balances between payroll tax receipts and benefit payments through eternity. Unlike the case with individuals, social policy can provision for the future in real terms — by increasing productive capacity in the intervening years. For example, policies that might encourage long-lived public and private infrastructure investment could ease the future burden of providing for growing numbers of retirees by putting into place the infrastructure that will be needed in an aging society: nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, independent living communities, aged-friendly public transportation systems, and senior citizen centers. 12. Americans Want a Better Life for Future Generations . Throughout our history, Americans have always been willing to sacrifice to make our nation stronger over the long haul. That’s America’s promise: to give our children and grandchildren a better life. And if we succumb to the maniacal protests of the deficit reduction fetishists and cut back net public spending now and drive millions more workers out of jobs, then we will be guilty of crimes against our children and grandchildren. That’s the real “inter-generational theft” that ought to concern us, not a reduction in the payroll tax. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 .

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Samuel H. Williamson: What Kind of Compromise?

November 29, 2010

It appears that President Obama is willing to accept a compromise in the Senate to extend the tax cut to all but the top two percent of income earners. Some compromises are better than others. Senator Mark Warner suggests, “other short-term incentives that promote additional hiring, such as a temporary reduction in the payroll taxes paid by employers who hire new workers I am for this kind of tax credit IF it is designed correctly. Last March we got a “job-creation bill” that, as far as I can tell, has had hardly any impact on employment. This does not surprise — it was poorly designed. The bill attempted to get jobs only for those who had been unemployed for more than 60 days instead of trying to increase employment altogether. We need a credit that rewards employers who increase their employment regardless where the new workers come from. We need a credit that is easy to administer. And what is most needed is a credit that helps reduce the cost of low wageworkers. A Payroll Tax Holiday is a bad idea . Many people have mentioned a payroll tax “holiday” as one proposal. This would mean that employers and employees would not have to pay their FICA tax. This is a bad idea for two reasons. First, while it would be great to remove this regressive tax from all employees, how would it be reinstated after a year? Since this is the worker’s contribution to Social Security and Medicare, such a “holiday” would create a fear among many of them, as well as current retirees, that this is the first step to abolishing these programs. Also, without these contributions, Social Security and Medicare will be “broke” much sooner. Second, while suspending the contributions of employers would reduce their labor costs, it would have little impact on hiring, because the payroll tax cost of new employees is a small percent of the total wage bill. A one-year FUTA (Federal Unemployment Tax Act ) Holiday with a marginal refund would be better. At the federal level employers pay 6.2% of the first $7,000 of income paid to each worker. Individual states may require additional payments and it also varies by the layoff history of the employer. I propose that all employers be exempt of all federal or state unemployment taxes for one year regardless of their layoff history. In addition, for every dollar that an employer’s FUTA base increases, they would receive a dollar tax credit. An employer with 10 workers (earning over $7,000) would have a FUTA base of $70,000 and would have a “tax cut” of $4,340 or more. If the business hires 10 more workers, it would receive a $4,340 tax credit as well. This way, all employers would get some help, but those who hire more workers would get a reward. The federal government would reimburse states their costs of this holiday from the increase tax revenue from high-income earners.

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Daniel Akerson, GM CEO: We Want To Beat BMW, Go Into ‘Attack Mode’

September 8, 2010

DETROIT — General Motors’ new CEO told employees that the automaker needs to make cars and trucks that are better than those of competitors such as BMW. Former telecommunications executive Daniel Akerson, in his first webcast to employees since taking over as CEO Sept. 1, said the company needs to go into “attack mode” to stay ahead of rivals, according to a worker who watched the speech on Wednesday. The speech comes just before GM’s board meets this week. Directors may set a date for the sale of GM stock to the public, perhaps in November. That sale would make GM a publicly traded company again after a radical overhaul in bankruptcy court. Akerson, 61, told employees that GM needs to keep competitors on their heels rather than responding to what they do, said the worker, who asked not to be identified because the webcast was not public. Akerson used BMW as an example, saying that GM’s Cadillac luxury brand has to make cars that are better than BMW’s 300, 500 and 700 series sedans. Through August, BMW has sold 139,236 vehicles, beating Cadillac by almost 47,000 cars and trucks, according to Autodata Corp. In his 40-minute address, Akerson, who has been on GM’s board for about a year, said he is learning quickly about the auto industry but faces a large amount of information. “He said he’s drinking from a fire hose right now,” the worker said. Akerson last week replaced Ed Whitacre, who was also known for an aggressive style. He fired ineffective executives, starred in GM commercials and led the company to two straight quarterly profits after years of losses. Akerson, GM’s fourth CEO in less than two years, was introduced by Whitacre, who told employees that he stepped down because the company needed a CEO who would be in charge long after the stock sale. Whitacre, 68, a retired CEO of telecommunications giant AT&T Inc., said he didn’t want to stay too long after the sale, which is called an initial public offering. Like Whitacre, Akerson has worked as a top executive at major telecommunications companies, holding leadership posts at both MCI and Nextel. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, Akerson was appointed to GM’s board by the government in July of last year after GM emerged from bankruptcy protection. He also led global buyouts for The Carlyle Group, a private equity firm. Whitacre will stay on as GM chairman through the end of the year, and no replacement has been named for that position. GM is 61 percent owned by the federal government, but the company hopes to shed that majority control with the IPO.

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Wyatt Closs: Worker Worthy Standouts: The Best Films About Work for Labor Day 2010

August 29, 2010

There’s a blog to be written about Greatest Films of All-Time about Workers and work themes but for now, lets look at those made or released in the last year. Whether set in a grocery store, amusement park or airplanes, there’s a DVD for everyone to watch this Labor Day weekend. In terms of feature films, there are 5 standouts. They are The Maid, Humble Pie, Adventureland, Extract, and Up in the Air. Of these, Up in the Air is the best known given its star George Clooney and its box-office receipts and Oscar run. And it is arguably the best in this particularly specific category of Best Worker Voice Film, due in part to its uncanny timing connected to today’s economy. And its use of actual people who had been laid off playing people who had been laid off was original, poignant, and sad all at once. But there’s more. While the Chilean film, The Maid centers on the story of a maid trying to hold on to her position after having served a family for 23 years, it also shows the level of dependence that family has relied on her “work” which goes much beyond daily domestic chores. You might say for Humble Pie , with the leading man at 400 pounds and set in a grocery store, that “if you like Little Miss Sunshine, Juno, and Napoleon Dynamite, you’ll love this” but only if you had a 30-second elevator pitch to make. Or in this case, a short blog. You could also try the same cheap trick about Adventureland by calling it a Judd Apatow-esque film set in an amusement park but that would undercut the originality of this story, the workers, and the unique workplace where they find themselves. And I don’t want Martin Starr to cringe. If you like good, entertaining documentary, there are lots of good choices from the last year. Capitalism: A Love Story, Yes Men Fix the World, The Philospher Kings, Parking Lot Movie, and Floored all do a great job of either reflecting workers voices and experiences or channeling them with the equivalent of a 2-ton, 20,000 watt megaphone. Like Up in the Air, Michael Moore’s Capitalism: A Love Story was the heavyweight in this category, clearly the favorite of a loose-knit jury I polled, and worth seeing to get your juices flowing about the state we’re in and some idea about getting out of it. But some space is needed to highlight Yes Men Fix the World . Not only is it entertaining and daring as the Yes Men go undercover, including on BBC, goofing on all manner of corporations. But they also manage to champion some genuine causes like Bhopal, post-Katrina New Orleans and more. And perhaps most importantly, they give its audience the sense that “maybe I could go do something like that too”. And what better inspiration for the masses of unemployed and stomped-on workers than that. As a special mention, notice should be given to a film project that was not quite a film or a TV show: The People Speak. Based on the book by Howard Zinn, and eventually developed into a docu-mini series on the History Channel, it features a large and diverse number of actors from Matt Damon to Marisa Tomei, Kerry Washington, Josh Brolin and Danny Glover. With producer Chris Moore, I’ve tracked its development over the years into the product that aired back in January 2010 (now on DVD as well). The reading by Marisa Tomei of Harriet Hanson Robinson’s recound of the Lowell, MA factory strike is worth the price alone for thoughtful reflection about why we have Labor Day in the first place.

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Samuel H. Williamson: The Macro Economics Social Security – Part Two

August 22, 2010

How someone views Social Security is often based on what they think it is. How many times have you seen the quote “social security was never intended to be…”? And then the writer puts in what they do not like about it today. I am not sure that it matters what it was intended to be, but it does matter what its impact has been on individuals and the economy for the last 75 years and how that impact has affected us today. Most individuals consider Social Security as a saving program or as a “welfare program for seniors and the disabled. Either choice gives them a reason to criticize as discussed in the next two sections. I will offer an alternative view in the following section. Is it a Saving Program? If Social Security is a saving program then we think that we are paying in contributions while working and then received benefits when we retire. We have paid for our benefits. A problem with this at the individual level is that it has not been equitable. For example, the generations who retired 40 to 50 years ago put little in and received benefits in far greater than the amounts they contributed. Also those who live long lives do better than those who die at age 62. By contrast, today’s workers will probably receive a small return on their contributions to the program and lots of them do not even believe it will be there when they retire. They think that if they could opt out, they could do better on their own. Economists such as Martin Feldstein have another criticism of Social Security as a saving program. They say that Social Security created less private saving and thus the economy grew slower than it would have without Social Security. Without making contributions to Social Security, they feel that the workers would have invested this money in the private sector. I think they are wrong as I explain below. Is it a “Welfare” Program? If Social Security is a welfare program then we think it is designed to help the elderly and disabled. This is particularly true for the depression of the 1930s when this program began since the highest level of poverty was among the elderly. I do not imagine anyone wants to return to seeing masses of senior citizens begging on the streets or living in almshouses. Whatever the intent was at that time, the program is no longer well designed for this purpose either. The benefits are paid even if the recipient is wealthy and not in need. If this program were truly aimed at helping lower income participants, it would not be financed by a payroll tax that is regressive to workers and a burden for employers to pay. It would make more sense to finance the program with an income tax. It is an intergenerational “Insurance” Program The best way to see Social Security is not as a saving or welfare program, but as an intergenerational insurance program. Social Security is actually called “old age and survivors insurance.” But the insurance should be thought of as for the children against their parents living too long. Social Security is a way for the working population to pay into a fund that relieves them the burden of using their own money to pay for their parent’s (and even grandparent’s) needs if those parents became old and dependent. Whether the worker’s parents live until they are 63 or 93, their benefits will be covered by this insurance. Instead of having to house their parents in the spare room and buy groceries for them, workers pay part of their own wage to a fund that gives their parents enough to do these things on their own. Under this interpretation, Social Security did not crowd out private saving; it was a public substitute for interfamily transfers. It is not a saving plan that gives you a return, but an insurance plan that pays off well if your parents are survivors. When you retire, your (or at least someone’s) children will pay for this insurance on you. This has been going on for three generations, so the current workers are providing benefits for their parents who in turn had provided benefits for their parents. Workers cannot opt out of the program, because they are (collectively) obligated to pay for their parent’s benefits now and in the future. Under this interpretation, it also makes more sense that benefits are the same for all retirees regardless of their income. We do not say that when we have a car accident that the amount get from the insurance company will be dependent on our income. We get what we insured it for. Conclusion Once we view Social Security as an intergenerational insurance program, we can see why many of the current criticisms are no longer valid. Workers should stop thinking that they should be able to opt out because they incorrectly think it is only about them. Critics of the way benefits are determined should not complain either. Since they are taxable, it is not necessary to means test these benefits when they are received. We can change the income tax rates if we choose if you want to reduce net benefits. Finally, since all workers had parents, but many workers do not pay income taxes, the payroll tax is a more inclusive way to collect the “insurance” premiums. Under this interpretation, the system first put in place for our parents and grandparents 75 years ago was a contract that has been passed on to the current generations whether we like it or not. It is a small price to support these previous generations given all they have done for us by first winning WWI and then building the schools and universities that we attended and which enabled us to earn the incomes we have.

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401(k) Hardship Withdrawals, Loans SOAR

August 20, 2010

In the wake of news about a spike in new applications for unemployment benefits comes another potentially troubling sign: A record number of workers made hardship withdrawals from their retirement accounts in the second quarter. What’s more, the number of workers borrowing from their accounts reached a 10-year high, according to a report issued Friday by Fidelity Investments. The trends reflect the financial stress many workers find themselves in as the economy struggles to find sure footing, said Beth McHugh, Fidelity’s vice president of marketing insight. High unemployment and companies cutting back on overtime or overall hours have reduced the take-home pay of many workers. “People tend to be taking home less,” she said. “As a result the percentage of individuals initiating hardship distributions is one of the things we’re concerned about.” Fidelity administers 17,000 plans, which represents 11 million participants. In the second quarter, some 62,000 workers initiated a hardship withdrawal. That’s compared with 45,000 in the same period a year ago. What’s also eye-opening is that 45 percent of participants who took a hardship withdrawal a year ago, took another one this year, McHugh said. To be eligible for a 401(k) hardship withdrawal, individuals must demonstrate an immediate and heavy financial need, according to IRS regulations. Certain medical expenses; costs relating to the purchase of a primary home; tuition and education expenses; payments to prevent eviction or foreclosure on a primary home; burial or funeral expenses; and repair of damage to a primary home meet the IRS definition and are permitted by most 401(k) plans. A key concern is that these withdrawals are just that, they are not loans. As a result there can be a significant impact on someone’s overall retirement savings. If the worker is younger than 59 1/2, they’ll pay a 10 percent penalty for early withdrawal in addition to taxes. The average age of the workers taking hardship withdrawals is between 35 and 55, their peak earning years. It’s also often a time when competing financial challenges emerge, McHugh said. The good news in the report was that the average 401(k) account balance as of the end of the second quarter was $61,800; up 15 percent from the same time last year, but down from the end of the first quarter of 2010.

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Sheila Shayon: Nike Bows to Labor Activists

July 27, 2010

In a landmark, unprecedented win, students and human rights activists have forced the hand of retail giant Nike to pay $1.54 million to compensate 1,800 laid off workers in Honduras. The workers were subcontractors who lost their jobs with the closing of two Nike factories (Hugger and Vision Tex) in 2009. It’s a stunning reversal from Nike’s claims a few months ago that it didn’t owe the workers a cent. But the “Just Pay It!” campaign against Nike, led by United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS), was unstoppable. American college students rallied on more than 40 campuses with two of the dismissed workers, holding massive demonstrations to raise awareness about the workers’ plight. When Cornell University and the University of Wisconsin made commitments to end licensing contracts with the largest sportswear company in the world, the victory was achieved. USAS also used flooded Nike’s Twitter and Facebook pages to “publicly shame the company.” It worked. Nike yesterday agreed to establish a workers’ relief fund of $1.5 million to be administered jointly by CGT (Central General de Trabajadores de Honduras, which represents the laid off workers), the Solidarity Center, and the Worker Rights Consortium. It will be supervised by professor Lance Compa of Cornell University. In addition to the compensation fund, Nike also vowed to “work with its Honduran suppliers to offer vocational training programs and to prioritize hiring of former Hugger and Vision Tex workers as jobs become available over the next two years. Nike will also cover worker’s enrollment in the Honduran Institute of Social Security (IHSS) to obtain health care coverage for a year or until they find new employment, whichever comes first.” “This is a watershed moment for the student anti-sweatshop movement. Our university officials told us contract cuts wouldn’t work, but we’ve proven twice in less than a year that the only way these brands take responsibility is when universities cut their business – money talks,” stated Linda Gomaa, USAS International Campaigns Coordinator. This is the first time a U.S. university has severed a contract with Nike over labor infringements. The USAS has a track record with Nike — forcing them a decade ago to divulge sweatshop locations and allow garment worker unions. “I am very happy that the workers are finally getting some sort of justice. But this only came from a concerted national effort by a lot of people. We were hitting them where it hurts,” commented Alex Bores, president of local chapter Cornell Students Against Sweatshops. Brands, beware: when college kids become activists and put their heart and voice ahead of their sweatshirts, even the largest global brands have to take notice. Originally published on brandchannel.com

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David Jones Chief Quits After &lsquoUnbecoming&rsquo Behavior

June 18, 2010

By Robert Fenner and Angus Whitley June 18 (Bloomberg) — Mark McInnes resigned as chief executive officer of David Jones Ltd. , Australia’s second- largest department store chain, apologizing for “unbecoming” behavior toward a female colleague. McInnes, 45, quit after the worker complained about his behavior at two company events. Paul Zahra , general manager of the retailer’s 37 stores , will succeed him, David Jones said in a statement. The company’s shares fell 0.44 percent in Sydney trading today after earlier dropping the most in four months. Since assuming the top job in 2003, McInnes entered into agreements with companies including Polo Ralph Lauren Corp. and French Connection Group Plc to attract affluent shoppers. He shut the unprofitable gourmet food business and cut costs for getting goods into the stores. The stock surged fourfold, making it the best performing retailer in the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 . “He was rated as one of the top business leaders in the country and was seen as having done a really great job with David Jones,” said Cameron Peacock , markets analyst at IG Markets in Melbourne. “He was popular and he did a good job but it’s more than one man that makes a company.” David Jones declined 2 Australian cents to close at A$4.49 in Sydney trading, after earlier sliding as much as 4.7 percent, the biggest intraday drop since Feb. 5. Larger rival Myer Holdings Ltd. rose 0.6 percent to A$3.19. The female employee’s complaint stems from McInnes’s behavior at two company events since late May, said Chairman Robert Savage , describing the incidents as “regrettable.” Brand Will Suffer “Clearly, our brand suffers as a result of this,” Savage told reporters in Sydney.” From the beginning, Mark said to me how extremely sorry he was about this happening. From very early in the process he offered his resignation.” Savage said he learned of the complaint last week, and told McInnes to take leave from Monday. There were no previous complaints about his behavior, Savage said. McInnes, who emulated the success overseas chains such as Bloomingdale’s and Nordstrom had with international designer brands, said he “committed serious errors of judgment.” “At two recent company functions I behaved in a manner unbecoming of the high standard expected of a chief executive officer,” he said in a statement. He said he has “inexcusably let down the female staff member. I have also let down my partner, my family, all my staff, the board and our shareholders.” McInnes won’t receive any of his contracted incentive payments, the company said, a sum that Savage said was worth “several million dollars.” He’ll receive a settlement of A$1.5 million ($1.3 million) and statutory entitlements, such as accumulated annual leave, worth A$445,000. Short-Term Issue “This is a bit of an issue short term,” said Paul Xiradis , chief executive officer of Ausbil Dexia Ltd., David Jones ’s biggest shareholder with an 8 percent stake. “The transformation of the David Jones brand was something that McInnes was very involved in.” Still, Xiradis said “fundamentally nothing has changed.” McInnes oversaw an effort to attract richer customers to David Jones . At store openings, promotions and Sydney horse races, he was often photographed next to celebrities including singers Delta Goodrem and Natalie Imbruglia , and model Megan Gale , the face of the retailer’s sales campaigns. Miranda Kerr, the partner of actor Orlando Bloom also models for the chain, appearing in catalogs, fashion shows and television advertisements. Formal Complaint The female staff member, who David Jones didn’t identify, made a formal complaint to the board about McInnes’s conduct through a lawyer. “The board has taken and will continue to take steps to ensure that this complaint is appropriately addressed,” Savage said in the statement. Zahra, who as the new chief executive will also join the board, has 28 years experience in retail, including the past 12 as part of David Jones ’s management team. Speaking to reporters, Zahra described the circumstances of his appointment as “fairly difficult” but said “it’s business as usual” at the retailer. The company affirmed its forecast for second-half earnings to rise as much as 10 percent and said the first two weeks of its clearance sales have been “pleasing.” McInnes, who worked at David Jones for six years before becoming chief executive, said he and his partner will be overseas “for the foreseeable future.” To contact the reporters on this story: Robert Fenner in Wellington rfenner@bloomberg.net ; Angus Whitley in Sydney at awhitley1@bloomberg.net

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King Inherits UAW Pushing for Payback After Cuts of Up to $30,000 a Worker

June 15, 2010

By Keith Naughton and Jeff Green June 15 (Bloomberg) — Bob King , the next United Auto Workers leader, inherits a union that gave up thousands of jobs and billions in benefits to save the U.S. auto industry. His legacy will rest on how workers are rewarded in the recovery. King, 63, the nominee of the UAW bloc that has controlled the Detroit-based union since 1946, is slated to succeed two- term President Ron Gettelfinger , 65, in an election tomorrow. The electrician with a law degree, who rose through the ranks in 40 years at the UAW, is set to take over a union that has declined to 355,000 members from 1.5 million in 1979. The UAW shift coincides with signs of recovery in the industry. General Motors Co. posted a net profit and Chrysler Group LLC made money on an operating basis in the first quarter, less than a year after each emerged from bankruptcy. The union helped convince President Barack Obama to provide an $85 billion taxpayer bailout to those automakers, taking concessions to put their labor costs on par with foreign automakers’ U.S. plants. “Bob is facing a very, very difficult job because there will be tremendous pressure on him to roll back the concessions,” said Gary Chaison , a labor professor at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. “He’s got to walk a very fine line to reverse some of what was lost and keep some in place for the promise of a brighter future.” UAW workers have each given up $7,000 to $30,000 in concessions in the last five years, King said last month. The union surrendered raises, bonuses, cost-of-living adjustments and agreed to a two-tier wage system where new hires make about $14 an hour, half what hourly production workers are now paid. Returning Benefits As head of the union’s bargaining with Ford Motor Co., King filed a grievance in January after the automaker reinstated raises, 401(k) matches and tuition assistance for salaried workers. Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford has since restored tuition benefits for its 41,000 hourly workers and King is pressing for more. “UAW members at GM, Ford and Chrysler and throughout the supplier sector have made the sacrifices to keep these companies viable,” King said at a Ford factory in Ypsilanti, Michigan, on May 24. He declined to be interviewed for this story. UAW labor costs, including wages and benefits, have fallen from $75 an hour to about $55, equal to Toyota Motor Corp. ’s U.S. workers. The union has about 113,000 members at Detroit- based GM, Ford and Chrysler, which is based in Auburn Hills, Michigan. “Bob’s going to make sure our members are not forgotten as these companies rebound,” said UAW director Rory Gamble, who runs King’s former Detroit region and has known him 25 years. “But we’ve got to make sure these companies are viable, so there’s going to be a lot of caution in how we go after this.” ‘Vilified’ Union Part of the caution will stem from managing the UAW’s public standing. “The current perception of the UAW is one of the lowest of any union in America,” said analyst David Cole of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Michigan. A so-called jobs bank in which auto workers received almost full pay while on indefinite layoff “became the flag by which the union was vilified,” Cole said. The union doesn’t receive credit for giving up that jobs bank or other reforms, he said. “Bob has to get out front and tell the world it’s a different union than it used to be,” Cole said. “Otherwise, it will continue to decay.” King, the son of a former Ford industrial relations director, has been painted by challengers in the union as going too easy on the company. More than 70 percent of Ford workers rejected additional concessions in November that King endorsed. Ford earned $2.7 billion last year after three years of losses. Critics in Union “We can’t just take at face value when these companies cry poverty,” said Gary Walkowicz , a UAW official from King’s home factory in Dearborn, who is making a self-described symbolic run against him for president. “Workers really disagreed with giving up those concessions when Bob King asked them. It showed there’s a disconnect between the membership and the leadership.” In the next round of contract bargaining in 2011, King has to work toward restoring raises while ensuring the automakers put new models into U.S. factories, said Sean McAlinden , economist at the Center for Automotive Research. “As the market comes back, the automakers will be adding workers by the thousands,” McAlinden said. “If he holds the line on canceling too many concessions, he’ll get growth. Otherwise, the companies will say, ‘We’ll build up Mexico like you wouldn’t believe.’” Business Case King prepares business cases to show managers that hiring more workers at UAW plants can be profitable, said Bernie Ricke, president of UAW Local 600 in Dearborn, who has been at the Ford bargaining table beside King since 2003. “He’s usually very measured, though I’ve seen him pound the table a few times.” Billionaire investor Wilbur Ross negotiated against King on a contract for his International Automotive Components Group, the world’s largest automotive carpet supplier. King studied IAC’s books and discussed findings with managers before bringing the information to union leaders and rank and file members. The new contract, which cut pay and benefits, passed by 80 percent. “He’s the prototype for the kind of labor leader who is needed in this modern world,” Ross said in an interview. “His challenge is to preserve manufacturing in the United States at the same time maintaining a standard of living for the worker. It’s a delicate balance.” King last year approached Ross for help in organizing auto suppliers to support the U.S. cash for clunkers program that funded government subsidies for vehicle trade-ins. They built a coalition of about 50 suppliers across the U.S., and the program eventually helped sell 677,081 cars. From the Sickbed King comes to the table with an “intense” work ethic, Gamble said. He’s been seen working two mobile phones at a time in Ann Arbor, where he lives with his wife and three children. (He also has two adult daughters from his first marriage). The night before stomach surgery last year, King called Gamble from his hospital bed at 11:30 p.m. to check on Ford’s plans to transfer workers among plants. After surgery King was right back on the phone, hoarse from a tube in his trachea, Gamble said. “He could barely talk and I said, ‘Bob you need to get well, man,’” Gamble said. “He was relentless.” He took a similar approach to his schooling. After studying religion and philosophy at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, King graduated from the University of Michigan in 1968 with a degree in political science. He did a two-year tour in Korea with the U.S. Army and then went to work for Ford in 1970 at the Rouge factory complex in Dearborn that Henry Ford built in the 1920s. In 1972, King began an electrician apprenticeship while earning a law degree in his off-hours. Rapid Rise “While he was still an apprentice, the journeyman skilled tradesmen elected him as their union committeeman, which was unheard of,” Ricke said. “He had to work weekends to finish his apprenticeship.” Raised Catholic, King draws a link between the labor movement’s mission and social justice. At a UAW convention in California in 1989, he bused reporters to a shanty town in Tijuana, Mexico, to show them the squalor surrounding U.S. companies’ border factories. He took a group of labor leaders to El Salvador in 1990 to monitor union elections. King’s greatest challenge may be finding a way to build on his earlier efforts to increase the UAW’s ranks . While leading bargaining efforts a decade ago, he helped diversify the membership by organizing graduate students and casino workers. Johnson Controls King also led a strike at Johnson Controls Inc. in 2002 where he convinced the supplier to sign a neutrality agreement allowing the union to organize its other U.S. plants. Ford, one of JCI’s largest customers, also said it wouldn’t object to the UAW representing workers at the auto supplier. That set a precedent that enabled the UAW to sign up 25,000 auto parts workers that year, according to labor professor Harley Shaiken of the University of California at Berkeley. “Bob King leveraged the good relationship the UAW had with Ford into a broader reach with its suppliers,” Shaiken said. “It was innovative and strategic.” King also reaches out to other unions seeking new strategies for signing up members. “He actually believes in grassroots organizing, which I think came from our organizing backgrounds,” said Leo Gerard , president of the United Steelworkers union, who consults with King on strategies for boosting membership and considers him soft-spoken but “tough as nails.” About 350,000 of the 850,000 Steelworkers in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean work on products that end up in autos. The UAW can’t keep shrinking and expect to hold the clout that moved a president to rescue GM and Chrysler, Shaiken said. “He’s facing an unprecedented crisis; the status quo is not tenable,” Shaiken said. “To survive the union has to go forward, and Bob needs to be a transformational leader.” To contact the reporters on this story: Keith Naughton in Detroit at Knaughton3@bloomberg.net ; Jeff Green in Southfield, Michigan, at jgreen16@bloomberg.net

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Les Leopold: Is there a Global War Between Financial Theocracy and Democracy?

June 11, 2010

Senate and House conferees are about to reconcile a financial reform bill that is virtually designed to institutionalize “too big to fail.” And when they do we’ll lose another battle in the ongoing war between global financial markets and democratic nation-states. This war has been going on for decades — but democracy hasn’t always been in full retreat. The New Deal Conquest : During the Great Depression democratic forces gained the upper hand in the war. We realized that financial markets, which are driven by the largest banks and financiers, had to be tightly controlled. We knew that global speculation on currencies only deepened the Depression and had to be strictly limited. We knew that an iron curtain was needed between commercial and investment banking to protect Main Street depositors from market madness (that was the Glass-Steagall Act). And most importantly we knew that the key to preventing economic upheaval was to limit the wealth of the super-rich and to increase the wealth of working people through progressive taxes, Social Security, wage and hour laws, and the promotion of unionization. The Bretton Woods agreements forged by the Allies during WWII set up strict rules for global finance, rules that kept financiers in check for more than a quarter century. And it worked pretty damn well. As economist Joseph Stiglitz points out, this era saw only one financial crisis (Brazil, 1964), and working people in western democracies made huge gains. Since the era of deregulation took hold in the late 1970s, the world has suffered over a hundred financial crises and middle-class incomes have stagnated. The Deregulatory Counter-Offensive : By the late 1970s, bankers regained the advantage through the spread of a new faith in self-regulated markets. The economic apostles of unfettered markets lobbied against progressive taxes, unions, and social welfare programs. The new orthodoxy was: Let the elites collect the money–they’ll invest wisely (instead of consuming), and all boats will rise. This near-religious revolution rapidly spread through the economic and policy establishment. Regulations were dismantled right and left, and the revolving door between government and Wall Street started spinning. The American financial catechism ruled the world. And on Wall Street, the money tap was open. It did not trickle down. Then, suddenly, in 2008, the market gods destroyed themselves as the unregulated financial casinos crashed and burned, just like they did in 1929. For a few months, it seemed like the deregulatory theology become a global heresy. It was obvious that Wall Street’s reckless speculation and its bold new wave of financial engineering had caused the Great Recession. (See The Looting of America for an accessible account.). It was also clear that if government didn’t come to the rescue, Wall Street would lay in ruins, along with the rest of the economy. This was the perfect moment for democracy reassert democratic control on financial markets, just as we did during the New Deal. We blew it. The Victory at Too Big to Fail : At the moment when Wall Street was on its knees, we decided to bypass serious reform. Instead, we rebuilt Wall Street, using taxpayer money and guarantees – more than $10 trillion worth. We let bankers use our bailout money to pay themselves $150 billion in bonuses — at a moment when over 29 million Americans were jobless or forced into part-time jobs. We allowed the top hedge fund managers to walk off with over $900,000 an hour (not a typo) in 2009. Windfall profits taxes? No. In fact we let hedge fund honchos pay an extra-low tax rate by calling their income “capital gains.” We didn’t restore Glass-Steagall, we didn’t break up “too big to fail” financial institutions. In fact the biggest banks became even bigger, courtesy of the U.S. government. The Invasion against Democracy : The war is escalating. Right now, financial elites aren’t just fighting a defensive battle against new regulations. They’re playing offense: They’re whipping up deficit hysteria around the globe and calling for drastic cuts in middle class programs. Why? They want to ensure that their loans to governments aren’t threatened by rising public debt. Ironically, the public debt they’re so worried about was created in large part by them — the result of huge bailouts and other expenses stemming from the crash they caused. Although the bankers want us to dismantle what remains of our worker-oriented policies, welfare for the financial elites is still fine and dandy. This is the most dangerous counter attack in the history of finance. We had better know a great deal more about the attackers. Who makes up this shadowy force called “global markets”? Who fights their battles? Do they have a high command? Not really. There is no executive committee of financial elites. There’s no international conspiracy, no Elders of Zion. Instead these markets are pulled and pushed by about 50 very large banks and financial institutions. This is where much of the nation’s $2 trillion in hedge fund money roams. This is where the top six US banks frolic. They don’t have to sit around a table strategizing. They instantly sense threats to their power. They instantly smell profitable openings and they’re poised to grab what they can, whenever they can. They thrive on turmoil, which gives them new “proprietary” trading opportunities to exploit. Volatility means big bucks, especially now that the largest players know that the government will back up even their wildest gambles. History has just proven that they are way too big to fail. Of course they still have to lobby government officials–many of whom either were bankers, or will be once they leave office. But their most powerful lever on government is through the market itself: Here, by moving vast quantities of money around, they can instantly veto policies they don’t like. If the EU talks seriously about financial transaction taxes, the markets go down the Euro grows weaker, and interest rates rise–making it more expensive for governments to borrow the money they need to operate. Politicians have learned to “listen” to the markets and are conditioned to placate them. Should a nation state get out of line (Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal, etc), the markets slap them silly. Politicians rush to the scene and start slicing social spending. If instead they demand new taxes on financial elites to reduce public debt, the markets respond with even more fury. Money flees. All the external machinery of democracy still clanks along. We still pull the levers in the voting booth. But the decisions that affect us the most are made in a profoundly undemocratic way. Faceless financial markets exercise far more control over politicians than the voters who elected them. So the problem isn’t just the corporate campaign contributions, or corporate media control or the academic consensus supporting our financial theocracy. It’s the raw power of the markets. They’ve been roaming free and virtually unregulated for more than a generation, and now their power is unparalleled. Just months after they brought our economy crashing down, they’re right back to their old tricks, setting the stage for the next crash and the next bailout while getting filthy rich along the way. Bill Clinton nailed it on the head when he reportedly said: “You mean to tell me that the success of the economic program and my reelection hinges on the Federal Reserve and a bunch of fxxxing bond traders?” (See Agenda by Bob Woodward) No Retreat, No Surrender? There’s no room for pacifists in this war. Clearly, Wall Street and its global minions are not seeking a truce. Instead, they’re coming after our Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid programs. They want us to work longer before we retire and get less when we do. They want us to pay more for health care and get less of it. They want less public money to go to schools, teachers and public infrastructures. And they want us to get used to a jobless recovery with double digit unemployment rates. (And when millions and millions of people are unemployed, we can’t maintain high labor standards, and our wages and benefits erode.) In short, they want to undermine all the policies and programs that have built and sustained middle class life. Already government officials in the UK, Germany and here are telling us we must endure austerity for “decades to come.” As Fed Chair Ben Bernanke candidly put it : “We can see what problems can arise in a country if investors lose confidence in the fiscal position of that country, so it is very important that we address this problem.” Of course, he’s not going to point out that this austerity is only for the masses, definitely not for the financial elites. Or that the underlying cause of the debt investors are so worried about is the giant economic crater caused by the very same financial elites who now might “lose confidence” in financing a middle class society. We shouldn’t kid ourselves about the pitched battles ahead. Fighting back won’t be easy, and winning will be even harder. People in country after country will have to mobilize themselves in defense of real democracy, in defense of each nation’s right to provide its people with a decent quality of life. In my opinion, that includes sustainable jobs with decent benefits and a solid public infrastructure that promotes equity, protects the vulnerable and enriches the environment. Unfortunately, no one can guarantee that democracy will prevail in the war against financial theocracy — just recall the totalitarian chaos in Europe during the Great Depression. But don’t count it out, either. It’s true that many of us regular folks have been diverted by the media, distracted by the Internet or lulled into a stupor by pharmaceuticals. But when we realize that we’ve been shoved into a corner with no way out, we’ll act. A popular struggle will begin. And when it does, we’ll at least have a fighting chance to recapture our democratic souls. Les Leopold is the author of The Looting of America: How Wall Street’s Game of Fantasy Finance destroyed our Jobs, Pensions and Prosperity, and What We Can Do About It Chelsea Green Publishing, June 2009.

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Foxconn to Raise Wages in China by 30% After Suicides of Factory Workers

June 2, 2010

By Weiyi Lim June 2 (Bloomberg) — Hon Hai Group, the assembler of Apple Inc. ’s iPhones, will raise workers’ salaries by at least 30 percent, more than indicated earlier, after a series of suicides at the world’s largest contract manufacturer of electronics. Workers with a monthly wage of 900 yuan ($131.77) will be paid 1,200 yuan effective immediately, said Edmund Ding , a spokesman at the Taipei-based flagship company Hon Hai Precision Industry Co . The increase was reported earlier by the Economic Daily News. Hon Hai said on May 28 it might raise pay in China by 20 percent. “It’s been a while since we increased wages, hence the decision,” Ding said today by phone. “Raising pay and the suicide issues are two separate matters,” he said when asked if the move will reduce suicides at Hon Hai. Higher wages may help Hon Hai offset negative publicity generated after the worker deaths at its China factories this year, according to Steven Tseng , an analyst at RBS Asia Ltd. Rights group China Labor Watch said wages that are too low to cover the cost of living have put pressure on Hon Hai factory workers, who are “exhausted.” Hon Hai chairman Terry Gou has rejected allegations the company is a sweatshop. “It’s hard to assess if the wage rise will stop the suicides, maybe it will help get rid of this negative publicity,” Taipei-based Tseng, who rates Hon Hai Precision “buy,” said by phone today. The increase, which is higher than Tseng expected, could cut net income this year by up to 6 percent, he said. “They may be able to pass on some of the costs to clients.” ‘Worst-Case Scenario’ Morgan Stanley analyst Jasmine Lu wrote in a report yesterday that Hon Hai Precision’s net income for this year may be cut by 7 percent under a “worse-case scenario” if the company increased workers’ salaries by 20 percent. Citigroup Inc. in a May 27 report estimated a 20 percent rise may erode operating profit by 10 percent to 11 percent, and reduced its 2010 earnings estimate for Hon Hai by 11 percent. Hon Hai dropped to its lowest level in more than eight months in Taipei trading. The stock was 0.8 percent lower at NT$123.5 as of 10:30 a.m. local time. The shares have declined 17 percent since May 1, compared with a 9.3 percent slump in the benchmark Taiex index . Five of the 10 deaths at the company occurred during May. ‘Great Pressure’ At least 10 people have died this year at Hon Hai’s manufacturing complex in Shenzhen and police are treating the deaths as suicides, prompting Gou to recruit counselors and install nets on dormitory buildings. The minimum monthly wage in Shenzhen is between 900 yuan and 1,000 yuan, according to the city government. Hon Hai “workers have no choice but to work massive amounts of overtime to support themselves and their families, and are always, as workers in the computer production department stated, ‘extremely exhausted,’ and under ‘great pressure,’” Li Qiang , founder and executive director of New York-based China Labor Watch said last week. Hon Hai’s pay raise follows Honda Motor Co., Japan’s second largest carmaker, resuming production at a parts plant after workers walked out last week demanding higher wages. Most of the parts factory’s 1,900 workers accepted a pay offer of up to 1,910 yuan a month, according to Honda. The employees had demanded between 2,000 yuan and 2,500 yuan. “It’s not just Hon Hai’s problem — it’s everyone’s problems,” Calvin Huang , an analyst at Daiwa Securities Group Ltd., said by phone. “If others don’t follow suit and raise wages, they will face suicides or strikes like that at Honda.” Apple, Hewlett-Packard Co. and Dell Inc. said last week they are probing Hon Hai following the deaths. Apple has a team evaluating Hon Hai’s countermeasures, it said. The Shenzhen police are examining the suicides, Li Ping, a spokesman for the municipal government in the southern Chinese city, said May 27. Wang Rong, Communist Party secretary of Shenzhen Municipal Committee, other city officials and labor union officials went to the plant on May 26 to investigate, the government said in a statement on its website May 27. To contact the reporter on this story: Weiyi Lim in Taipei at Wlim26@bloomberg.net

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Gilbert B. Kaplan: Let’s Move the iPad Back to America

May 28, 2010

Corporate citizens like Apple have a greater responsibility than just making money for their shareholders. They have a responsibility to the future of this country. Given the problems that are occurring at the Foxconn plant where they have been subcontracting iPad production, they should fulfill their responsibilities and move the production of the iPad back to the United States. Let’s first look at what’s gone wrong at Foxconn, the sprawling subcontracting plant where iPads and other high tech products are made in Shenzhen, north of Hong Kong. Let’s look at the most fundamental point first, at least as it relates to the United States. That is that the workers at Foxconn’s plant are paid $130 a month. Assuming that they work four fifty hour weeks a month, this translates to a wage of 65 cents an hour. That is basically a slave labor wage, at least as compared to the wages in western markets where the iPad is sold. How can we continue to tolerate a trading system that not only allows this, but in fact encourages it? It is true that workers in China seem to want these jobs because the alternative is even worse, but even that conclusion has now been thrown into doubt. If it’s such an ideal career path, why have ten workers thrown themselves off buildings at the Foxconn plant (nine died and the other suffered severe injuries), why have their been reports of security guards abusing workers, and why has the work been described as relentless, as “making people numb,” as turning them into machines? It is a scandal that this is where the high tech goods that people across America are enjoying are being made. And Apple does not need to make them there. The classic economic argument that the very low wages are economically necessary for a product like the iPad simply makes no sense at all. iSuppli, a well respected international economics firm, estimates that the cost of manufacturing including labor in the iPad, is about $10 in a product that retails for about $600, in other words less than 2% of the price. And the profit Apple makes on the iPad is over $300 an item. Even if this $10 manufacturing cost (which includes such other things as factory overhead and energy costs) were doubled or tripled or quadrupled by paying a U.S. worker a reasonable wage and helping restore the U.S. economy, Apple’s profits would still be enormous. About 100 years ago Henry Ford realized you cannot have a sustained industrial economy if the people who make goods don’t have enough money to buy them. So he paid his workers enough money that over time they could buy his cars, buy their homes and move into the middle class. Apple, now the largest technology company in America, is trying to squeeze every penny it can out of the U.S. consumers, and give nothing back, not even a manufacturing job in Silicon Valley or somewhere else in the United States for people making the iPad. 65 cents an hour is a better wage from their point of view. I’m a lawyer and I like to make a good income. I guess I should try and figure out how to pay my employees 65 cents an hour too. One of the saddest footnotes, to me, in the whole Foxconn suicide story came from a nonchalant comment made by one of the Foxconn employees who an AP reporter interviewed next to the company swimming pool. The pool was supposedly built for the workers. But the worker commented that the pool closes at 9 pm, and she gets off too late to ever use it. It was sad both because this is just part of the whole Foxconn picture, unending routine, depersonalization, and migrant workers coming to Shenzhen with no way out. But it was also sad because it appears that Foxconn has built a Potemkin village, a fake façade, to appeal to U. S. outsourcers and U. S. journalists, and until recently, we all bought it.

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Real Men in Maine Have a Wife Who’s a Teacher: Amity Shlaes

March 2, 2010

Commentary by Amity Shlaes March 2 (Bloomberg) — Last November, bosses at a certain company in Marlboro, New Jersey, went to employees asking for help. It was a tough stretch, and the unemployment rate had just exceeded 10 percent for the first time since April 1983. Management told the staff it just couldn’t pay rising health-care costs without some financial give from the workers. The employees refused to help. In the end it was the employer that gave ground, committing to a raise of 23 percent over five years. The Newark Star-Ledger, which reported the story of this surrender in detail, noted that the company even promised to spend more on health-care benefits by extending family coverage. Employers at other, similar offices throughout the Garden State caved as well. How could this happen? It happened because the workers were teachers, public-sector employees, not workers in the private sector. Well, duh, would have been the typical response until recently. Police, firefighters, and teachers are holy. So until now, even if you wanted to complain about what was going on in a place like prosperous Marlboro, you couldn’t. There was nothing you could do to alter the situation, so why even raise the issue? But that’s changing, as evidenced by the Star-Ledger’s decision to shame the Marlboro educators. The public is beginning to question the legitimacy of public unions’ power because taxpayers know that commitments for worker health care and pensions are busting state budgets all over the country. For those who recoil at these unions and their entrenched power, it is perhaps useful to go back to their history. It reveals that there was nothing inevitable about strong unions in the American public sector. Firework Envy At the end of World War I, workers in the U.S. watched the fireworks in the new Soviet Union with envy. They too wanted big unions, both in the private and public sectors. The Boston police were most hopeful. After all, the working conditions for these men were terrible. An author who toured a police station behind City Hall noted that “the bugs were so voracious that they ate the leather on the police helmets and belts.” The policemen joined a union and went on strike. The Massachusetts governor, Calvin Coolidge , was slow to respond, deeming strike management the job of police Commissioner Edwin Curtis. Curtis fired the men. Afterward, Coolidge weighed in with a line that inspired Ronald Reagan : “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any time.” The policemen never got their jobs back. Coolidge’s declaration catapulted him to national fame and a slot as vice presidential candidate on the 1920 Republican ticket. Workers’ Champion What about Franklin Roosevelt , that champion of the worker? FDR, after all, was the president who signed the Wagner Act of 1935, which gave us modern collective bargaining in private industry. But when it came to the public employees, FDR stayed close to Coolidge. In 1937, a year when industrial unions were striking furiously, FDR penned a letter to the head of the National Federation of Federal Employees, arguing that when the question regarded pay, hours and grievances, civil servants ought to be no different from those in the private sector. But collective bargaining, FDR wrote, was an exception. It couldn’t, he said, “be transplanted into the public service.” He particularly disapproved of “militant tactics” and reminded Luther Steward, president of the organization, that his own association’s charter banned strikes. The president who finally did give public unions their modern powers was John F. Kennedy . In 1962, Kennedy signed Executive Order 10988 , which allowed collective bargaining and gave unions other powers. Union Tool The same year Kennedy also gave public-sector unions a tool to justify higher wages by signing the Salary Reform Act of 1962, which established that there be “comparability” of public-sector pay to pay in the private sector. One senses that even Kennedy wasn’t sure he was right. The executive order, for example, excluded the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Central Intelligence Agency, and any other office performing security functions should its head deem that collective bargaining would endanger national security. One of the slowest federal agencies to obey the order and extend recognition to unions was the Justice Department, headed by President Kennedy’s brother Robert. Observers understood what Kennedy had done. Later presidents might move against public unions — as Reagan did against PATCO, the air traffic controllers’ union. But they couldn’t stop the growth. Airport Security This reluctance to allow union bargaining in sensitive areas is germane now because the American Federation of Government Employees is petitioning for the right to organize the 40,000 airport-security workers across the country. The public-sector unions recently surpassed private-sector unions in membership. And the lengths to which Americans have gone to accommodate public-sector unions is extensive and artful. In rural New England, a joke circulates about one such accommodation. “What makes a real man?” the joke starts. “Well, a real man is independent. A real man has a pickup,” goes the next line. And the joke proceeds: “A real man has a dog. A real man has a rifle. A real man has a pickup, a dog, a rifle, and — a wife who’s a teacher.” This may work for some, but the more general marriage between the country’s public-sector workers and the private economy isn’t a good deal for the economy. Pretty soon we will see states rewriting contracts with employees, dialing down pensions and pay so they line up with the rest of us. The process will feel nasty, but the states have to do it — even when it involves a teacher. ( Amity Shlaes , senior fellow in economic history at the Council on Foreign Relations, is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: Amity Shlaes at amityshlaes@hotmail.com

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Stimulus Tab of $41,800 Waits for Wall Streeters: Kevin Hassett

February 22, 2010

Commentary by Kevin Hassett Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) — While President Barack Obama goes on about the success of his economic stimulus, the latest policy developments suggest Democrats are finally backing away from his radical Keynesianism. Even Democrats, it seems, have concluded that the stimulus of 2009 was a big waste of money, and that better approaches exist that can do more and cost less. The truth is, economic stimulus is like a very expensive box of chocolates. You get a sugar high, and a caffeine rush, but when the chocolates are gone, you have nothing but fat to show for it. You are worse off than you were before and still need to find real nutrition. According to the latest estimate by the Congressional Budget Office, the U.S. stimulus sugar high will cost $862 billion by 2019. The excessively optimistic administration estimate is that the stimulus created 2 million jobs last year. If we take that high number at face value — there are plenty of reasons not to — and given that roughly one-quarter of the stimulus funds have been exhausted, then each job has cost about $100,000. To put that in perspective, if instead the government had used the stimulus to hire individuals at the going median wage of $37,115, it could have created more than 23 million new jobs. So much for the supposed Keynesian multiplier effect. From now on, it should be called the Keynesian divisor. Paying the Bill Ultimately, American taxpayers are going to have to pay the bill for the stimulus, and it is a steep one. For the average taxpayer, the bill is $7,798. Of course, the final bill will not be spread evenly across taxpayers, because the rich pay a disproportionate share. Assume the burden is distributed the same as the current income tax. If your income is between $40,000 and $50,000, you will pay about $2,600 for the stimulus. If your income is between $75,000 and $100,000, you will pay $6,500. If you are lucky enough to have an income of between $200,000 and $500,000, your bill will be $41,800. Small wonder that Democrats are so unpopular right now, and that they are looking for a better way. A New York Times/CBS News Poll this month found that only 6 percent of Americans believe that the year-old stimulus package has created any jobs. (A remarkably patient 41 percent said it hasn’t created jobs, but still will.) Meantime, policy makers are still looking at a catastrophically bad labor market that needs all the help it can get. Brown’s Message The message of Republican Senator Scott Brown’s victory in Massachusetts is clear: Voters don’t want to waste our last pennies on another expensive sugar high. They are crying out for bipartisan support for fixes that work, at a reasonable price. The good news is that even Democrats now recognize this. There has been progress behind the scenes looking for sensible alternatives to expense-account Keynesianism. A middle-of-the- road consensus is beginning to form around pragmatic approaches to the jobs crisis that cost a lot less and carry a big bang for the buck. My favorite example is a little-known program folded into last year’s stimulus package that is targeted for a big expansion because it actually has worked. It is based on the observation that it is cheaper to create jobs directly. The Emergency Contingency Fund , amended to the federal program called Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, provides funding for states to temporarily cover a portion of workers’ wages in both public and private jobs. The federal program reimburses states 80 cents for each additional dollar they spend getting a person back to work. Over time, as the worker’s reattachment to the labor force becomes stronger, the federal money is taken away. Private Is Best As many as 29 states have or are developing employment programs funded through this program, and some estimates show as many as 120,000 subsidized jobs could be created, at a cost of only $10,000 to $20,000 each. At that rate, the government could create 2 million jobs — the amount Obama asserts were created by the stimulus — for somewhere in the range of $30 billion. And the best part is that many of these jobs will likely be in the private sector. A strong sign of how much things have changed for the better is the focus of House Democrats on this limited but powerful measure. A bill sponsored by representatives Jim McDermott of Washington and Judy Chu of California would make funds available for an additional year. Given the state of the labor market, it is hard to imagine how any sensible person could oppose such a move. It is a shame that such common sense was absent last year. If they are to be more than the party of no, Republicans need to rally around the Democrats who have shown such reserved pragmatism. While they do, Obama can continue to crow about his amazing stimulus, but fewer and fewer people will notice. ( Kevin Hassett , director of economic-policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: Kevin Hassett at khassett@bloomberg.net

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Greece Strikes Paralyze Athens as Papandreou’s Deficit Drive Is Challenged

February 10, 2010

By Natalie Weeks and Maria Petrakis Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) — Prime Minister George Papandreou ’s drive to get Greece’s ballooning budget under control is being challenged in the streets today as striking labor unions shut down schools, hospitals and flights. Air-traffic controllers and civil-aviation workers are effectively closing down Greek airspace as part of the 24-hour work stoppage by ADEDY, the umbrella group representing about 600,000 civil servants. Some 483 international and domestic flights have been cancelled, a spokeswoman for Athens International Airport , Greece’s biggest, said by telephone. Protests against Papandreou’s plans to freeze wages and reduce benefits come after European Union leaders, set to meet at a summit in Brussels tomorrow, signaled they may aid the country if progress in cutting the deficit is made. Bonds have slumped in Greece and in the euro area’s southern edge as investors examine budget shortfalls across the 16-nation bloc. “The concern is whether the strike will be a one-off or the first of a long series of street demonstrations involving other parts of the economy,” said Giada Giani , an economist at Citigroup Global Markets in London. “We need to see a prolonged period of strikes before we know whether the government’s willingness will be affected.” ADEDY opposes Papandreou ’s program and plans to call out its workers again on Feb. 24, when the biggest private-sector group, GSEE, holds its own 24-hour strike. Today’s walkout, with rallies in Athens and other cities and towns, is organized labor’s first major challenge since the Oct. 4 election of Papandreou, a socialist whom unions backed in the vote. Union Threats “People are out expressing their rage,” said Yiannis Kelekis, 68, who said he gets a 470-euro ($646) monthly pension. “They are absolutely right. The people that caused this crisis are now asking for others to make sacrifices.” Protesters marched through the center of rainy Athens carrying signs that read “No to the speculators” and “Overturn the Growth and Stability Pact.” “Cutting public-sector salaries is an easy political choice,” Spyros Papaspyros , chairman of the ADEDY civil servants union, said this week. “Attacks that start on the public sector will lead to attacks on all.” The unions are contesting measures demanded by the EU and investors to reduce a deficit of 12.7 percent of gross domestic product last year to within the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2012. Greece’s fiscal woes have stoked concerns that it may need a bailout and helped spark a rout in global stocks . Market Selloff Spain and Portugal, also suffering from gaping deficits after the worst recession since World War II, have been sucked into a market selloff that has seen the euro fall to a nine- month low against the dollar on concern that swelling shortfalls will stifle Europe’s recovery. Moody’s Investors Service said today that Greece shouldn’t be grouped with Spain and Portugal and that Greece faces “material challenges.” “The Greek government’s plans are very ambitious, although if implemented exactly as promised, the rating could stabilize at A2,” according to the Moody’s report. “If the implementation falls just short of the execution promised by the Greek authorities, then we may adjust the rating to A3 in the coming months.” “However, if only partial implementation is achieved, then we may downgrade Greece’s rating to Baa1,” Moody’s said. Bonds Jump Greek, Spanish and Portuguese bonds jumped yesterday after the EU signaled it may aid Greece. The euro rose the most in more than five months and the Greek 10-year bond yield dropped the most since at least 1998. The premium investors demand to buy Greek debt over comparable German bonds ballooned on Jan. 28 to the highest since 1998 amid concern that Papandreou’s deficit plan relied too much on one-off measures for revenue and not enough on spending cuts. Greek 10-year yields fell 33 basis points to 6.06 percent. The Greek-German 10-year yield spread narrowed 36 basis points to 288 basis points. The benchmark Athens stock index rose 3.2 percent to 1,956.44 at 3:50 p.m. in Athens, spurred by a 5.8 percent gain in National Bank of Greece SA , the country’s largest lender. Olli Rehn , who today takes over as European economic affairs commissioner, said the EU may offer Greece “support in the broad sense of the word.” In Paris, after meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy , Papandreou said Greece was ready to take any measures to meet its deficit goals. Hiring Freeze Hours before the strike, Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou reiterated a hiring freeze for civil servants. He also said the government will offer a tax amnesty on funds held abroad in a bid to boost revenue. While forbidden by law to take part, police, fireman and coast guard workers said they will also join the rallies. “This game of speculation is being played out at the expense of the worker,” said Yiannis Grivas, the head of the union of tax collectors, which held a 48-hour strike last week and will rally again on Feb. 17. Still, not all public workers are striking. More than 64 percent of 2,299 people polled in the two days after Papandreou announced additional deficit-cutting measures believe his government is moving in the right direction and the measures are necessary, according to a Kappa Research poll for To Vima newspaper on Feb. 7. “Why should I strike and lose 50 euros?” said Effie Strati, a childcare worker at a state-run nursery. She said all her colleagues will be at work. To contact the reporters on this story: Maria Petrakis in Athens at mpetrakis@bloomberg.net ; Natalie Weeks in Athens nweeks2@bloomberg.net .

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Greece Strikes Paralyze Athens as Papandreou’s Deficit Drive Is Challenged

February 10, 2010

By Natalie Weeks and Maria Petrakis Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) — Prime Minister George Papandreou ’s drive to get Greece’s ballooning budget under control is being challenged in the streets today as striking labor unions shut down schools, hospitals and flights. Air-traffic controllers and civil-aviation workers are effectively closing down Greek airspace as part of the 24-hour work stoppage by ADEDY, the umbrella group representing about 600,000 civil servants. Some 483 international and domestic flights have been cancelled, a spokeswoman for Athens International Airport , Greece’s biggest, said by telephone. Protests against Papandreou’s plans to freeze wages and reduce benefits come after European Union leaders, set to meet at a summit in Brussels tomorrow, signaled they may aid the country if progress in cutting the deficit is made. Bonds have slumped in Greece and in the euro area’s southern edge as investors examine budget shortfalls across the 16-nation bloc. “The concern is whether the strike will be a one-off or the first of a long series of street demonstrations involving other parts of the economy,” said Giada Giani , an economist at Citigroup Global Markets in London. “We need to see a prolonged period of strikes before we know whether the government’s willingness will be affected.” ADEDY opposes Papandreou ’s program and plans to call out its workers again on Feb. 24, when the biggest private-sector group, GSEE, holds its own 24-hour strike. Today’s walkout, with rallies in Athens and other cities and towns, is organized labor’s first major challenge since the Oct. 4 election of Papandreou, a socialist whom unions backed in the vote. Union Threats “People are out expressing their rage,” said Yiannis Kelekis, 68, who said he gets a 470-euro ($646) monthly pension. “They are absolutely right. The people that caused this crisis are now asking for others to make sacrifices.” Protesters marched through the center of rainy Athens carrying signs that read “No to the speculators” and “Overturn the Growth and Stability Pact.” “Cutting public-sector salaries is an easy political choice,” Spyros Papaspyros , chairman of the ADEDY civil servants union, said this week. “Attacks that start on the public sector will lead to attacks on all.” The unions are contesting measures demanded by the EU and investors to reduce a deficit of 12.7 percent of gross domestic product last year to within the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2012. Greece’s fiscal woes have stoked concerns that it may need a bailout and helped spark a rout in global stocks . Market Selloff Spain and Portugal, also suffering from gaping deficits after the worst recession since World War II, have been sucked into a market selloff that has seen the euro fall to a nine- month low against the dollar on concern that swelling shortfalls will stifle Europe’s recovery. Moody’s Investors Service said today that Greece shouldn’t be grouped with Spain and Portugal and that Greece faces “material challenges.” “The Greek government’s plans are very ambitious, although if implemented exactly as promised, the rating could stabilize at A2,” according to the Moody’s report. “If the implementation falls just short of the execution promised by the Greek authorities, then we may adjust the rating to A3 in the coming months.” “However, if only partial implementation is achieved, then we may downgrade Greece’s rating to Baa1,” Moody’s said. Bonds Jump Greek, Spanish and Portuguese bonds jumped yesterday after the EU signaled it may aid Greece. The euro rose the most in more than five months and the Greek 10-year bond yield dropped the most since at least 1998. The premium investors demand to buy Greek debt over comparable German bonds ballooned on Jan. 28 to the highest since 1998 amid concern that Papandreou’s deficit plan relied too much on one-off measures for revenue and not enough on spending cuts. Greek 10-year yields fell 33 basis points to 6.06 percent. The Greek-German 10-year yield spread narrowed 36 basis points to 288 basis points. The benchmark Athens stock index rose 3.2 percent to 1,956.44 at 3:50 p.m. in Athens, spurred by a 5.8 percent gain in National Bank of Greece SA , the country’s largest lender. Olli Rehn , who today takes over as European economic affairs commissioner, said the EU may offer Greece “support in the broad sense of the word.” In Paris, after meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy , Papandreou said Greece was ready to take any measures to meet its deficit goals. Hiring Freeze Hours before the strike, Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou reiterated a hiring freeze for civil servants. He also said the government will offer a tax amnesty on funds held abroad in a bid to boost revenue. While forbidden by law to take part, police, fireman and coast guard workers said they will also join the rallies. “This game of speculation is being played out at the expense of the worker,” said Yiannis Grivas, the head of the union of tax collectors, which held a 48-hour strike last week and will rally again on Feb. 17. Still, not all public workers are striking. More than 64 percent of 2,299 people polled in the two days after Papandreou announced additional deficit-cutting measures believe his government is moving in the right direction and the measures are necessary, according to a Kappa Research poll for To Vima newspaper on Feb. 7. “Why should I strike and lose 50 euros?” said Effie Strati, a childcare worker at a state-run nursery. She said all her colleagues will be at work. To contact the reporters on this story: Maria Petrakis in Athens at mpetrakis@bloomberg.net ; Natalie Weeks in Athens nweeks2@bloomberg.net .

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Greek Strikes to Paralyze Athens as Papandreou’s Deficit Drive Challenged

February 9, 2010

By Maria Petrakis and Natalie Weeks Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) — Prime Minister George Papandreou ’s drive to get Greece’s ballooning budget under control will be challenged in the streets today as striking labor unions shut down schools, hospitals and flights. Air-traffic controllers and civil-aviation workers are effectively closing down Greek air space as part of the 24-hour work stoppage by ADEDY, the umbrella group representing about 600,000 civil servants. Some 483 international and domestic flights have been cancelled, a spokeswoman for Athens International Airport , Greece’s biggest, said by phone. Protests against Papandreou’s plans to freeze wages and reduce benefits come after European Union leaders, set to meet at a summit in Brussels tomorrow, signaled they may aid the country if progress in cutting the deficit is made. Bonds have slumped in Greece and in the euro area’s southern edge as investors examine budget shortfalls across the 16-nation bloc. “The concern is whether the strike will be a one-off or the first of a long series of street demonstrations involving other parts of the economy,” said economist Giada Giani of Citigroup Global Markets in London. “We need to see a prolonged period of strikes before we know whether the government’s willingness will be affected.” ADEDY opposes Papandreou ’s plans and may call out its workers again on Feb. 24, when the biggest private-sector group GSEE holds its own 24-hour strike. Today’s walkout, with rallies in Athens and other cities and towns, is organized labor’s first major challenge since the Oct. 4 election of Papandreou, a socialist that unions backed in the vote. Union Threats “Cutting public-sector salaries is an easy political choice,” Spyros Papaspyros , chairman of the ADEDY civil servants union, said this week. “Attacks that start on the public sector will lead to attacks on all.” The unions are contesting measures demanded by the EU and investors to reduce a deficit of 12.7 percent of gross domestic product last year to within the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2012. Greece’s fiscal woes have stoked concerns that it may need a bailout and helped spark a rout in global stocks . Spain and Portugal, also suffering from gaping deficits after the worst recession since World War II, have been sucked into a market selloff that has seen the euro fall to a nine- month low against the dollar on concern that swelling shortfalls will stifle Europe’s recovery. Bonds Jump Greek, Spanish and Portuguese bonds jumped yesterday after the EU signaled it may aid Greece. The euro rose the most in more than five months and the Greek 10-year bond yield fell the most since at least 1998. The premium investors demand to buy Greek debt over comparable German bonds ballooned on Jan. 28 to the highest since 1998 amid concern that Papandreou’s deficit plan relied too much on one-off measures for revenue and not enough on spending cuts. Olli Rehn , who today takes over as European economic affairs commissioner, said the EU could offer Greece “support in the broad sense of the word.” In Germany, Michael Meister , financial affairs spokesman of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, said “we are considering support.” Hours before the strike, Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou reiterated a hiring freeze for civil servants. He also said in Athens that the government will offer a tax amnesty on funds held abroad in a bid to boost revenue, While not allowed by law to take part, police, fireman and coast guard workers said they will also join the work stoppage. ‘Game of Speculation’ “This game of speculation is being played out at the expense of the worker,” said Yiannis Grivas, the head of the union of tax collectors, which held a 48-hour strike last week and will rally again on Feb. 17. Still, not all public workers are striking. More than 64 percent of 2,299 people polled after in the two days after Papandreou announced additional deficit-cutting measures believe his government is moving in the right direction and the measures are necessary, according to a Kappa Research poll for To Vima newspaper on Feb. 7. ““Why should I strike and lose 50 euros?” said Effie Strati, a childcare worker at a state-run nursery. She said all her colleagues will be at work. To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Petrakis in Athens at mpetrakis@bloomberg.net

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No Job Growth for Small Business Inspires Doubts Over Sustainable Recovery

February 8, 2010

By Michael McKee Feb. 8 (Bloomberg) — Small businesses are becoming the Achilles heel of the U.S. recovery by limiting growth and job creation. Companies with fewer than 500 employees, such as Phoenix Technologies Ltd . and Sonic Corp. , helped lead the economy out of the four recessions since 1980. This time, they continue to cut capital spending and dismiss workers, eliminating 3,000 jobs in January, according to Roseland, New Jersey-based Automatic Data Processing Inc. , the world’s largest payroll processor. Improvement in the unemployment rate , which fell to 9.7 in January from 10 percent in December, may stall later this year if these firms aren’t hiring, and growth likely won’t meet the median 2.7 percent annual rate forecast for 2010 by 67 economists in a Jan. 14 Bloomberg News survey. “Will you have a sustainable recovery a few years down the road without getting some small-business spending? No,” Cary Leahey , senior managing director at Decision Economics Inc. in New York and a former White House economist, said in an interview. “Wall Street gets it.” The Russell 2000 Index of small-cap stocks has risen 4 percent in the past six months, lagging behind a 6 percent increase in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index . Coming out of previous recessions, shares of companies with market capitalization between $250 million and $1 billion generally led markets higher. Stock Performance The Russell Index gained 17 percent in the six months following the end of the 2001 recession, compared with 0.2 percent for the S&P 500. Futures on the S&P 500 were little changed today at 1,059.10 as of 11:09 a.m. Singapore time. The U.S. economy expanded at a 5.7 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, the fastest pace in six years, after a 2.2 percent increase in the third quarter, buoyed partly by capital expenditures for equipment and software by large companies such as Dallas-based Texas Instruments Inc. Growth may be difficult to sustain if smaller firms continue to pare spending and staff. “It suggests that a V-shaped economic rebound is even more unlikely than suggested by many standard economic indicators,” said Andrew Tilton , an economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York, which sees gross domestic product growing 2.3 percent this year. The National Federation of Independent Business’s index of small-business optimism has been near historic lows for 15 consecutive months, declining to 88 in December from 88.3 in November, the federation reported Jan. 12. During the four prior recessions, it dipped below 90 only once . Optimism ‘Stalled’ “It has been a very difficult year, and 2009 did not end on an uplifting note,” William Dunkelberg , chief economist for the federation in Philadelphia, said in the report. “Optimism has clearly stalled, in spite of the improvements in the economy.” Twenty-two percent of the group’s members reduced employment in December, while 10 percent added workers. The federation will release its January data tomorrow. Investors shouldn’t assume there’s value in small caps during this recovery, according to Robert Olstein , who manages the $14 million Purchase, New York-based Olstein Strategic Opportunities Fund , which focuses on small businesses. “Smaller startups are having a really hard time,” Olstein said in an interview. “We’re looking for companies that have great balance sheets that have run into some kind of temporary problems.” Portfolio Holdings His fund, which is up 61 percent in the past year, owns shares of Indianapolis, Indiana-based shoe retailer The Finish Line Inc. ; Nash Finch Co. , a Minneapolis, Minnesota-based food purveyor; and surgical-instrument maker Conmed Corp. of Utica, New York. Because few economic reports capture small-business statistics, some economists say investors are being misled about the strength of recovery from the longest, deepest recession since the Great Depression. Recent numbers suggest “the official data are too heavily weighted towards bigger companies, which are doing better than credit-constrained smaller firms,” said Ian Shepherdson , chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics Ltd. in Valhalla, New York. “The latter employ half the workforce.” The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing report and the index of leading economic indicators are two such measures, Shepherdson said. The Tempe, Arizona-based institute’s factory gauge rose to 58.4 in January from 54.9 the previous month, the fastest pace since August 2004. The New York-based Conference Board’s index of the outlook for the next three to six months gained 1.1 percent in December, the ninth consecutive increase. ‘Spot On’ The unexpected drop in the U.S. unemployment rate during January to 9.7 percent shows those indicators “have the direction of the recovery spot on,” Christopher Rupkey , chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ in New York, said in an interview. “The wheels of the economy are turning. The improvement in the employment data does match the increase in GDP the last two quarters, so it’s not a fluke.” Rupkey’s view is seconded by Dean Maki , chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York and the most accurate of 60 forecasters in the Bloomberg News ranking of GDP projections for the first three quarters of 2009. Maki sees unemployment falling to 9 percent by the end of 2010, because “business-equipment spending is bouncing, signaling an expansion in the corporate sector that is starting to turn the labor market,” he said in a Feb. 5 note to clients. Gains in Growth The economy still needs a contribution from small companies, or growth and employment gains won’t be as fast as they could be, Rupkey said. “ISM and leading indicators are probably overestimating the recovery speed.” The nation’s monthly payroll figures are inflated because the Labor Department model that estimates small-business hiring has overstated the number of jobs added during the recession, Shepherdson says. According to the model, small companies created an average of 113,000 jobs a month from February through December — a period when total employment fell by a nonseasonally adjusted 3.7 million, Labor Department statistics show. The model “is creating jobs out of thin air that are not actually being generated,” Joshua Shapiro , chief U.S. economist at MFR Inc., an economic-consulting firm in New York, said in a Feb. 4 note to clients. Payrolls would have contracted between 1980 and 2005 without the employment created by business startups, the Census Bureau reported this month. ‘Difficult Environment’ Small businesses “in many parts of the country, in many sectors of the economy, are still facing a very difficult environment,” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told reporters in a Feb. 2 conference call. President Barack Obama said the same day that he wants to create a Small Business Lending Fund with $30 billion transferred from the Troubled Asset Relief Program. He also has endorsed $33 billion in tax cuts for small companies and incentives for hiring and wage increases. Small businesses are “the places where most new jobs begin” and will be at the forefront of new hiring as the economy recovers, Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address on Feb. 6. Consumers are cautious, and that’s keeping owners of small firms on the sidelines, said Holly Wade, a National Federation of Independent Business policy analyst, in a telephone interview from Washington. ‘Still Apprehensive’ “They’re still apprehensive about hiring people, because they’re not seeing enough customers to translate into another worker,” Wade said. Revenue at Phoenix Technologies, a maker of computer- communications software, fell 10.3 percent to $15.6 million in the most recent quarter from the year-earlier period, the Milpitas, California-based firm reported Feb. 4. The company, which has a market value of $110 million, cut 9 percent, or about 45 people, from its workforce last year; it had 462 employees as of Sept. 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Shares are down 8 percent to $2.80 since August. Much of the U.S. economy’s improvement has been stimulated by government programs that have helped larger companies without trickling down to smaller ones, especially those in the housing and construction industries, said John Silvia , chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities, a unit of San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co. , the largest U.S. home lender. Traditional Recoveries “Given that we’re not getting the traditional housing recovery, maybe we’re not getting the traditional small-business recovery,” Silvia said in a telephone interview from Charlotte, North Carolina. New-home sales fell 7.6 percent in December, according to the Commerce Department. Red Bank, New Jersey home builder Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. , with a market capitalization of $301 million, cut about 1,000 workers, or 38 percent, of its employees in the past year. Shares have fallen 20 percent to $3.55 in the past six months. Hovnanian had 1,750 employees as of Oct. 31, Bloomberg data show. Lack of access to credit is also affecting small businesses disproportionately. The Federal Reserve reported Feb. 1 that banks were continuing to tighten standards for loans to small firms, while standards for large companies were unchanged. Growth in 2010 “is going to be a challenge if the credit markets stay tough” and potential licensees aren’t able to borrow funds to open new restaurants, Sonic’s Chief Financial Officer Stephen Vaughan told investors in a Jan. 11 conference call. Drive Ins Sales at the Oklahoma City-based operator and franchisor of more than 3,500 drive-in restaurants fell 26 percent to $136.5 million in the most recent quarter, compared with the same period a year ago. The company’s stock is down 28 percent to $8.19 in the past six months. Sonic had 350 employees as of Aug. 31, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. So far, there are few signs of improvement. PayNet Inc. ’s Small Business Loan Index, which tracks loans of $1 million or less, was 8.6 percent lower in December than a year ago. “In the first half of 2009, the average monthly decrease was about 20 to 25 percent, so it’s clearly a step in the right direction,” said William Phelan, president of the Skokie, Illinois-based company, which offers credit reports for banks that lend to smaller firms. Still, “demand for expansion loans for small businesses is 35 percent below its peak in 2006. That’s another indication of how far we have to go to climb out of this recession.” “Things don’t seem to be getting any worse, but they aren’t getting any better,” the NFIB’s Wade said. Small businesses “are in a kind of survival mode. We just haven’t seen anything indicating a change.” To contact the reporter on this story: Michael McKee in New York at mmckee@bloomberg.net

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Damien Hoffman: Outrageous, But Legal: Social Security Ponzi Scheme Needs a Bailout

February 5, 2010

This is the start of a new series, Outrageous But Legal . I encourage you to join in the fun and email me the link to anything you consider to be “outrageous, but legal.” Outrageous… Social Security is simply one big Ponzi Scheme. So long as the population is shaped like a triangle, the worker bees send money up the pyramid to the retired bees. Unfortunately, the age of populations does not always look like a perfect triangle where there are more young people to take care of the elders. Such is the case in the US with the Boomers reaching retirement age. The Congressional Budget Office has released a report showing that Social Security is spending more than it is taking in. Rather than deal with this inevitable issue years ago, lawmakers have chosen to kick the can down the road — and today is where that road ends. So, like every other Ponzi Scheme, Social Security is beginning to submerge underwater like the Titanic. Get ready for another bailout of government ineptitude. …But Legal!

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White Burger King Employee Accused Of Spitting In Black Man’s Food

February 2, 2010

ERIE, Pa. — A black Ohio man claims in a federal discrimination lawsuit that a white worker at a Pennsylvania Burger King spat on his food while a co-worker tried to obscure his view. A spokeswoman for Burger King’s Miami headquarters did not immediately respond to questions about the lawsuit, filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Erie. Glenn Goodwin, of Cleveland, says the worker spat in his food in November 2008 at a restaurant in Fairview, about 10 miles southwest of Erie. The lawsuit contends police found saliva in Goodwin’s food. His attorney, Jeff Yelsky, won’t say whether criminal charges resulted. Yelsky says the Burger King workers, who are not identified in the lawsuit, are both white.

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Fred Redmond: Taking a Stand Against Hate: Hotels Bar American Renaissance

February 2, 2010

A Washington, D.C. area hotel last week closed its doors to a racist convention that had booked rooms under the benign-sounding name “American Renaissance” conference. Now all American hotels and conference centers should follow that lead, because in the U.S. renaissance means overcoming bigotry. American Renaissance conducts a biannual conference that promotes racial and religious hatred. This year one of its guest speakers at the February conference is to be Nick Griffin , a convicted criminal who heads the British National Party, a white separatist group that contends immigrants are causing the “genocide” of “indigenous” white Britons. The hotel canceled the booking after several groups asked it not to serve as host to a hate hoedown. Those groups will monitor the organization’s attempts to secure another meeting place. They include the United Steelworkers; One People’s Project , which describes itself as a resource for those fighting fascism; and the Mormon Worker , a newspaper based in Provo, Utah. As a union that promotes diversity and inclusion, the United Steelworkers finds the doctrine and language of Griffin and American Renaissance reprehensible. The American Renaissance Web site contends, for example: “Virtually no whites anywhere are willing to break taboos about racial differences in IQ, the costs of ‘diversity,’ or the challenges of non-white immigration.” It specifies: “Gentlemen will wear jackets and ties to all conference events.” Apparently women are not invited. It also tacitly acknowledges the offensiveness of its message by offering attendees tags bearing false names, which it describes as “war names”: “We will prepare name tags in advance; please call us if you would like to use a nom de guerre. ” That link to violence is not accidental. By inviting Nick Griffin, the group embraced a criminal whose organization is connected to numerous violent — even deadly — acts. In 1998, Griffin was convicted of inciting racial hatred with articles that denied the Holocaust. He received a suspended nine-month prison term. At the trial he said, “I am well aware that the orthodox opinion is that six million Jews were gassed and cremated and turned into lampshades. Orthodox opinion also once held that the world is flat.” Griffin has cited neo-fascist Robert Fiore as a major BNP influence. Fiore is a convicted criminal and member of the Italian terrorist organization implicated in the 1980 Bologna bombing that killed 85 people. Among the criminals associated with the BNP are David Copeland, a former member sentenced to 50 years for setting off explosives that killed three people and injured 139; former BNP candidate Roderick Rowley, who was sentenced to prison on 14 charges of making and distributing obscene images of children, and BNP election agent Kevin Hughes who was sentenced to two years in prison for assaulting an Iraqi asylum seeker. Griffin and the BNP were admired by U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum shooter James W. von Brunn, who killed a security guard when he opened fire in the Washington museum lobby last year. Brunn, a white supremacist who was convicted and imprisoned earlier for an armed attempt to kidnap Federal Reserve Board members, went to see Griffin speak when the BNP leader lectured in the U.S. previously. Brunn wrote on his blog that although he had misgivings about Griffin allowing Jews to join the BNP: “My hat is off to this fighting white man, Nick Griffin, for the incredible victories for White Britain which his hard work, rhino-thick skin against [Jewish media] criticism, and inspired leadership have made possible. . . . Hail the white leader, Nick Griffin!” Brunn died in prison in January awaiting his murder trial. Griffin himself is again facing the potential of imprisonment, this time over the BNP’s racist constitution. A British court ordered him to change the document so that it no longer bars admission of Asians, blacks and members of other ethnic minorities. The BNP constitution also says: “The British National Party stands for the preservation of the national and ethnic character of the British people and is wholly opposed to any form of racial integration between British and non-European peoples. It is therefore committed to stemming and reversing the tide of non-white immigration and to restoring, by legal changes, negotiation and consent, the overwhelmingly white make-up of the British population that existed in Britain prior to 1948.” Griffin suggests non-whites be paid to leave Britain and return to their countries of origin. It’s not clear how that would work for minorities who’ve lived in Britain for generations. The court initially set the end of January as a deadline for the constitutional change, but has given Griffin two more weeks to comply. This convict connected to so many other criminals apparently received a visa to enter the U.S. How likely is it that he would he have gotten one if he were a Muslim endorsing the “cleansing” of Christians? Hotels and conference centers have every right to shun the likes of Griffin and American Renaissance. Refusing to provide a forum for hate is not a denial of First Amendment free speech rights. Griffin and the American Renaissance are free to spew their race- and religion-based venom in any public park or on any private property owned by a like-minded bigot.

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Gretchen Morgenson: Lobbyists Win Again In Securing Tax Break For Home Builders

November 15, 2009

The New York Times ‘s Gretchen Morgenson points out that lobbyists have won another victory that will lead to billions in taxpayer dollars being handed over to firms that helped spur the economic crisis. The Worker, Homeownership and Business Assistance Act of 2009, which President Obama just signed into law, contains “a tax break that lets big companies offset losses incurred in 2008 and 2009 against profits booked as far back as 2004,” Morgenson reports. (Read the full story here .) The administration estimates that the tax breaks will be worth some $33 billion, and home builders — who analysts say were key players in the financial crisis by building and financing too many homes — stand to benefit enormously. One of the more shocking elements of Morgenson’s piece is just how large a rate of return these home builders got for the money they spent on lobbying for this tax break: Securing this tax break was a top priority for home builders, lobbying records show. The Center for Responsive Politics reports that through Oct. 26 of this year, home builders paid $6 million to their lobbyists. Last year, the industry spent $8.2 million lobbying… …Among individual companies, Lennar spent $240,000 lobbying while companies affiliated with Hovnanian Enterprises spent $222,000. Pulte Homes spent $210,000 this year. That’s some return on investment. After spending its $210,000, Pulte will receive $450 million in refunds. And Hovnanian, after spending its $222,000, will get as much as $275 million. Even as unemployment continues to rise and the Obama administration’s foreclosure plan appears to be failing , Congress and the White House are signing off on tax breaks that reward those who are partly responsible for our financial predicament. To follow more lobbying shenanigans, check out HuffPost’s LobbyBlog .

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Stimulus Expansion Sends Real Estate Lawyers Scrambling

November 9, 2009

of tax breaks for businesses operating at a loss set off a flurry of calls between lawyers and real estate clients at the end of last week. The Worker, Homeownership and Business Assistance Act of 2009, signed by President Obama on Friday, expands a

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U.S. Worker Output Surges, Jobless Claims Drop in Signs Hiring to Rebound

November 5, 2009

By Shobhana Chandra and Bob Willis Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — Worker productivity surged at the fastest pace in six years, labor costs fell and unemployment claims were lower than forecast, signaling companies may be preparing to start hiring again after cutting costs to the bone. Productivity, a measure of employee output per hour, jumped at a 9.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, exceeding the highest economist forecast, according to Labor Department figures released today in Washington. Initial jobless claims dropped by 20,000 to 512,000 in the week ended Oct. 31, the fewest since January. Stocks rose on signs the economic recovery is gaining strength while generating little inflation pressure, ratifying the Federal Reserve’s decision yesterday to keep interest rates near zero for an “extended period.” A report tomorrow may show that employers cut jobs at the slowest pace in more than a year as they begin to anticipate sales gains. The jump in productivity “tells the Fed it can be on hold for quite some time,” said Dean Maki , chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York, whose forecast was the highest among economists surveyed. “Business investment spending and employment will be pushed higher in the next few months.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose for a fourth day, adding 1.6 percent to 1,063.62 at 10:59 a.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 1.9 percent to 9,984.50. Economists had projected productivity would rise at a 6.5 percent annual pace, according to the median of 70 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey . Estimates ranged from gains of 3.8 percent to 8.5 percent. Unemployment claims were forecast to fall to 522,000 from an originally reported 530,000 a week earlier, according to the median of 42 estimates in a Bloomberg survey. Labor Costs Labor costs fell at a 5.2 percent rate, capping the biggest 12-month drop since records began in 1948 and exceeding the median forecast for a 4.2 percent decline projected by economists. Costs in the prior quarter fell 6.1 percent, more than previously estimated. Gains in productivity are boosting company earnings. For the July to September quarter, profits exceeded the consensus estimate of analysts for 81 percent of S&P 500 companies that have reported so far, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Johnson & Johnson, the world’s largest health-products company, said this week it plans to fire more than 7,000 workers. While the majority of cuts will occur outside the U.S., the New Brunswick, New Jersey-based company said within the country they’ll be across all businesses. “People just aren’t spending as much as they used to,” Chief Executive Officer Bill Weldon said in a telephone interview on Nov. 3. Back-to-Back Gains The third-quarter jump in productivity followed a revised 6.9 percent increase in the prior three months, marking the biggest back-to-back gain in productivity since 1961. “This should be a healthy development for corporate profits, but it also tells us that the economy cannot grow on productivity gains alone,” Joseph LaVorgna , chief economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York, said in a note to clients. “Hours worked must also rise, either through a longer workweek or increased hiring.” The productivity report showed hours worked declined at a 5 percent pace, while output climbed at a 4 percent rate. Compensation for each hour worked climbed at a 3.8 percent annual pace, up from a 0.3 percent rate the prior quarter. The year-over-year measure of hours worked dropped at the fastest pace since data began six decades ago, while the 12- month increase in hourly compensation at 0.5 percent was also the smallest on record. Fed Statement Fed policy makers yesterday signaled a return to economic growth alone won’t warrant higher interest rates, saying an increase will instead depend on when the labor market and inflation pick up. The central bank’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee said for the first time that its commitment to low borrowing costs depends on “low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends and stable inflation expectations.” The economy grew last quarter for the first time in more than a year, even as employers cut 768,000 workers from payrolls, indicating those Americans who still had jobs were more efficient. The third quarter’s 3.5 percent rate of expansion was the strongest in two years. Government stimulus measures such as the homebuyer tax credit are boosting consumer demand, helping to pull the economy out of its worst recession in seven decades. Tax-Credit Extension The U.S. Senate yesterday approved a $45 billion plan to expand a tax credit for first-time homebuyers, extend jobless benefits and provide tax refunds to money-losing companies. Lawmakers voted 98-0 for the measure, sending it to the House, where Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland said in a statement it will receive a vote as early as today. A Labor Department report tomorrow may show that payrolls fell by 175,000 in October, the smallest decline since August 2008, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 84 economists. The unemployment rate probably rose to 9.9 percent from 9.8 percent. The economy has lost 7.2 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007. To contact the reporters on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net ; Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

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Bill Fletcher Jr.: Workers of the World Unite on Labor Day

September 6, 2009

(4) Everyone has the right to form and join trade unions for the protection of his interests. [Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 23] Several years ago, during a social event, I had a frank discussion with a very wealthy businessman. In the course of the conversation he informed me, once he found out that I am a union activist, that if workers attempt to form a union at any of his factories, he simply closes down the factory and moves the work. This sort of cavalier activity, and more importantly, the threat of such actions is a critical image in the minds of workers, not just in the USA, but across the globe. The ability to shift production, brought about largely through technological changes, has resulted in what the late economist Bennett Harrison called a “credible threat” facing all workers. Irrespective of the rights that an individual may have in so-called civil society, when they enter the workplace many, if not most, of those rights evaporate at the door, as if the individual were shifting dimensions in some science fiction tale. A clear example of the cynical portrayal of economic injustices to serve political ends can be found if one reflects on the 1980s. The Reagan/Bush administration gave a considerable amount of attention to the rights of workers in Poland (and other parts of the then Soviet bloc) to form or join labor unions. Yet at the same time, here in the USA, this same administration was crushing the air traffic controllers and in the US sphere of influence in Latin America, was actively cooperating with Latin American dictatorships and quasi-dictatorships that undermined any and all efforts by workers to form workers’ organizations, all in the name of fighting communism. The right to join or form labor unions is so central but so often overlooked precisely because it goes to central questions regarding power in so-called free market [capitalist] societies. The power that employers enjoy emerges through their unbridled control over the workplace and, as a consequence, through the profits that they gain as a result of the worker’s daily labor. Efforts by workers at self-organization call into question such power and ultimately raise the issue as to whether the employer has a larger social responsibility, a question that most employers strenuously resist. Anti-worker efforts come in various forms. There are the more blatant and barbaric forms of repression such as the assassinations of pro-union activists. A case in point is Colombia which, per capita, has the highest number of union activists murdered in the world. Yet the repression is not always so blatant, and it is also not simply a problem that happens “…over there…” in some other country. The repression is very evident here in the USA. The notion, often advanced in business circles, that unionization will somehow hurt the economy or unbalance the playing field is myth. More importantly it asks the question of who should the economy serve. If the economic statistics indicate an expansion yet workers gain little, does that mean that the economy is really improving? The reality is that it does not. The economy improves when the living standard for working people improves as a result of them sharing in the social surplus. Such a result happens only through a combination of the self-organization of workers and their exercise of power both at the workplace and at the ballot box. The International Labor Rights Forum has been working to protect the right of workers to organize and bargain collectively through its Freedom at Work campaign. This Labor Day, they have released a new toolkit that explains further how workers’ freedom of association is violated around the world, but also how union rights connect to a range of other human rights and social justice issues. The toolkit also includes ideas for collective action to end union-busting. Workers of the world unite? The answer to this question, whether one is addressing it to workers in an individual workplace trying to form a union or workers across national boundaries confronting common transnational employers, was articulated more than forty years ago by the late Dr. Martin Luther King. He stated quite clearly: we either hang together or we will hang separately.

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Jill Schlesinger: Labor Day Employment Report: If It’s So Good, Why Do I Feel Bad?

September 4, 2009

Another Friday, another employment report . The results are in — and the Labor Department said that 216,000 were given the heave-ho last in August, bringing the total number of Americans out of work since the beginning of the recession to 6.9 million. Yes, that was good news. When I discussed the jobs report with my pals at WOOD radio in Grand Rapids, MI earlier this morning, Gary and Steve asked what most Americans want to know: when is it going to get better? OK, so you try telling folks in Michigan of all places, that during a recession, we call data that is “less bad,” good. You know Michigan, where the local unemployment rate leads the rest of the nation. In most recessions, the last thing to recover is jobs. They may be truer than ever in this whopper of a downturn. Earlier this week, the Labor Department reported that productivity grew at a 6.6% annual rate in the second quarter, the fastest pace in over five years. Investors cheered the news, because it meant that employees are working harder for the same amount of money, producing more stuff for the company. Conversely, from the point of view of the worker, she knows all-too-well that companies are pushing/demanding an increase in output in order to attempt to remain profitable during the recession. The worker needs the company to survive to keep the job, so she can’t complain too much, but at the end of last month, she knew that she worked harder for the same salary. All of this is expected in a recession, but as data is released, we need to boil down the facts to their logical conclusion: the improvement is important, but every economic report has a human being behind it. As we enter Labor Day weekend, the holiday that honors the social and economic achievements of American workers, try to take a minute to consider how others are affected during this recession and eventual recovery. Image by Flickr User bobster855 , CC 2.0

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`Cool Biz’ Leaves Japan’s Office Workers Sweltering, May Hurt the Economy

July 24, 2009

By Masatsugu Horie July 24 (Bloomberg) — Takashi Kadokura used to strip down to his underwear when working late because of the heat. “We couldn’t concentrate on our work,” said Kadokura, 37, then an economist for Dai-ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “The air conditioning was set at 28 degrees (82 degrees Fahrenheit) and we weren’t allowed to change it.” The experience led Kadokura to question the Japanese government’s “Cool Biz” policy, which recommends companies set air conditioners at 28 degrees to reduce carbon emissions

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