Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Repeal of pay transparency rule will make it easier to discriminate against women and people of color [feedly]

Repeal of pay transparency rule will make it easier to discriminate against women and people of color
http://www.epi.org/blog/repeal-of-pay-transparency-rule-will-make-it-easier-to-discriminate-against-women-and-people-of-color/

On Tuesday, the Trump administration announced a "review and immediate stay" of the EEO-1 pay data collection rule, which was an Obama-era rule issued by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). The rule would have required large companies (with 100 or more employees) to confidentially report to the EEOC information about what they pay their employees by job category, sex, race, and ethnicity. Pay transparency is key in leveling the playing field in order to eliminate employer discrimination.

This move is just another example of how the Trump administration's campaign rhetoric on supporting working people has been followed by actions that hurt them at every turn. Further, this decision runs counter to what the research shows—inequities have gotten worse, not better. Even among workers with the same level of education and work experience, black-white wage gaps are larger today than nearly 40 years ago and gender pay disparities have remained essentially unchanged for at least 15 years. In both cases, discrimination has been shown to be a major factor in the persistence of those gaps.

As my colleague Marni von Wilpert notes, by staying the equal pay data rule, the Trump administration is making it harder for employers and federal agencies to identify pay disparities and root out employment discrimination—and it will make it more difficult for working people to know when they are being discriminated against. When this rule was first announced, former EEOC Chair Jenny R. Yang stated, "Collecting pay data is a significant step forward in addressing discriminatory pay practices. This information will assist employers in evaluating their pay practices to prevent pay discrimination and strengthen enforcement of our federal anti-discrimination laws." By staying this rule, the Trump administration has shown that it does not value equal pay for equal work.


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Monday, September 4, 2017

Enlighten Radio Podcasts:Podcast: The Labor Day Poetry Show -- 2017

John Case has sent you a link to a blog:



Blog: Enlighten Radio Podcasts
Post: Podcast: The Labor Day Poetry Show -- 2017
Link: http://podcasts.enlightenradio.org/2017/09/podcast-labor-day-poetry-show-2017.html

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Sunday, September 3, 2017

UN Role in Reforming International Finance for Development [feedly]

UN Role in Reforming International Finance for Development
http://triplecrisis.com/un-role-in-reforming-international-finance-for-development/

Jomo Kwame Sundaram

Growing global interdependence poses greater challenges to policy makers on a wide range of issues and for countries at all levels of development. Yet, the new mechanisms and arrangements put in place over the past four decades have not been adequate to the growing challenges of coherence and coordination of global economic policy making. Recent financial crises have exposed some such gaps and weaknesses.

Multilateral UN inclusive

Although sometimes seemingly slow, the United Nations (UN) has long had a clear advantage in driving legitimate discussion on reform because of its more inclusive and open governance. Lop-sided influence in the current international financial system is a principal reason why many countries lack confidence in existing arrangements. Rebuilding confidence in such arrangements will require that all parties feel they have a stake in the reform agenda.

But the UN is also suited to drive the discussion because of its long tradition of reliable work on international economic issues. The UN secretariat has developed and maintained a coherent and integrated approach to trade, finance and sustainable development, with due attention to equity and social justice issues.

The ongoing 'secular stagnation' has again highlighted the interdependence of global economic relations, exposing a series of myths and half-truths about the global economy. These include the idea that the developing world has become "decoupled" from the developed world; that unregulated financial markets and the new financial instruments had ushered in a new era of "great moderation" and "stability"; and that macroeconomic imbalances — due to decisions made in the household, corporate and financial sectors — were less dangerous than those involving the public sector.

UN Secretariat different, but competent

The UN secretariat has long doubted such arguments, and warned that any unravelling of global macroeconomic imbalances would be unruly. Also, persistent asymmetries and biases in global economic relations have particularly hit developing countries, both emerging markets and the least developed countries.

Not surprisingly, the UN Secretariat also drew attention to the close links between the financial crisis and the food and energy crises of recent years. A more integrated approach to handling these threats is needed, particularly to alleviate the downside risks for the poorest and most vulnerable communities.

The UN Secretariat has a strong track record of identifying systemic threats from unregulated finance, warning against a misplaced faith in self-regulating markets and offering viable solutions to gaps and weaknesses in the international financial system. Special drawing rights (SDRs), the 0.7 per cent aid target and debt relief, for example, were all conceived within the UN system during the 1960s and 1970s.

From the 1980s, the UN secretariat – both in New York and Geneva — has consistently warned against the excessive conditionalities attached to multilateral lending, promoted the idea of rules for sovereign debt restructuring, and cautioned that the international financial institutions were moving away from their traditional mandates of guaranteeing financial stability and providing long-term development finance.

UN has more than earned leadership role

During the 1990s, UN agencies warned against the dangers to economic stability, particularly in developing countries, from volatile private capital flows and the speculative behaviour associated with unregulated financial markets. The UN was among the very few warning Mexico in 1994, the East Asian countries in 1997 and the world in 2008 that excessive liberalization threatened crisis. The UN system was also almost alone among international institutions to identify growing inequality as a threat to economic, political and social stability, and insisted early on measures for a fairer globalisation.

Many of these concerns culminated in the 2002 Financing for Development Conference in Monterrey, Mexico. More recently, the UN has insisted on the importance of policy space for effective development strategies and particularly on the need for macroeconomic policies to support long-term growth, technological upgrading and diversification.

The combination of a strong track record and a core secretariat steeped in its tradition of an integrated multilateral approach to policy-oriented research places the UN in the best position to advance discussions to reform the international financial architecture if given the chance to do so.


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Why Brexit has led to falling real wages [feedly]

Why Brexit has led to falling real wages
http://mainlymacro.blogspot.com/2017/08/why-brexit-has-led-to-falling-real-wages.html

This might seem easy. The depreciation immediately after Brexit, plus subsequent declines in the number of Euros you can buy with a £, are pushing up import prices which feed into consumer prices (with a lag) which reduce real wages. But real wages depend on nominal wages as well as prices. So why are nominal wages staying unchanged in response to this increase in prices?

Before answering that, let me ask a second question. Why hasn't the depreciation led to a fall in the trade deficit? Below are the contributions to UK GDP from the national accounts data. Net exports are very erratic, but averaging this out they have contributed nothing to economic growth since the Brexit depreciation.


The belief that the depreciation should benefit UK exports is based partly on the idea that exporters will cut their prices in overseas currency terms, making them more competitive. Yet at the moment UK the majority of exporters seem to be responding to the depreciation not by cutting prices but by taking extra profits. If they keep their prices constant in overseas currency terms (from currency denominationdata almost as many exports are priced in overseas currency as imports), sales will stay the same but profits in sterling will rise.

While this helps account for the lack of improvement in net trade, it increases the puzzle over why nominal wages are not responding to higher import prices. If exporting firms profits are rising because of the depreciation, why not pass some of that on to their workers?

One perfectly good answer is that the labour market is weak, and what has stopped real wages falling further is that firms do not like to cut nominal wages. In these circumstances there would be no reason for exporters to share their higher profits with their workforce. So the immediate impact of the depreciation has not been a decline in the terms of trade (export prices/import prices), but instead a shift in the distribution between wages and profits. But many people believe that, with unemployment falling rapidly, the labour market is not weak.

There is another reason why exporters might be increasing profits but not sales, and not passing higher profits on to higher wages, which goes back to a point I have stressed before. We need to ask why the depreciation happened in the first place. To some extent the markets were responding to lower anticipated interest rates set by the Bank of England, but there is more to it than that. Brexit, by making trade with the EU more difficult, will reduce the extent of UK-EU trade. Furthermore there are two reasons why Brexit is likely to reduce UK exports by more than UK imports.

The first is specialisation. Because countries tend to specialise in what they produce, they may not have firms that produce alternatives to many imports, making substitution more difficult. The EU produces many more varieties of goods than the UK, so they are more likely to be able to substitute their own goods to replace UK exports. The second is the importance for UK exports of services, and the key role that the Single Market has in enabling that. On both counts, to offset exports falling by more than imports after Brexit we need a real depreciation in sterling. Exporters will have to cut their prices in overseas currency terms, and a depreciation allows them to do this.

Of course Brexit has not happened yet. We still get a depreciation because otherwise holders of sterling currency would make a loss. So firms do not need to cut their prices in overseas currency yet, allowing them to make higher profits. But these higher profits will be temporary, disappearing once Brexit happens. It would therefore be foolish to raise wages now only to have to cut them later when Brexit happens (no one likes nominal wage cuts). To restate this in more technical language, when Brexit does happen the UK's terms of trade will deteriorate as a response to export volumes falling by more than import volumes. Firms are in a sense anticipating that decline in the terms of trade by not allowing nominal wages to rise to compensate for higher import prices.

So before Brexit happens we are seeing a distributional shiftbetween wages and profits, but once Brexit happens profits will fall back and we will all be worse off. For Leave voters who think this is all still just 'Project Fear', have a look at the national accounts data releasethat the chart above came from. It shows clearly that UK growth in the first half of this year has been slower than that in the US, Germany, France, Italy and Japan by a wide margin. What Leave campaigners called Project Fear is real and it is happening right now, but do not expect your government or some of your newspapers to tell you that. 

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Jobs report comes in slightly weaker than expected, but the real problem is slow wage growth [feedly]

Jobs report comes in slightly weaker than expected, but the real problem is slow wage growth
http://jaredbernsteinblog.com/jobs-report-comes-in-slightly-weaker-than-expect-but-the-real-problem-is-slow-wage-growth/

The nation's payrolls climbed 156,000 last month and the unemployment rate ticked up slightly to 4.4 percent, in a slightly weaker-than-expected jobs report. Wage growth is still stuck at an annual growth rate of 2.5%, the length of the average work week ticked down slightly, and payroll gains for June and July were revised down 41,000. (Note: Hurricane Harvey's impact is NOT present in today's jobs numbers, as the storm struck well after the survey date. See comments below.)

Though the report on job growth in August comes in below expectations, the labor market continues to tighten at a good clip, generating job, wage, and income growth that will continue to support the expansion. However, there are soft spots, most notably the fact that wage growth has been uncharacteristically unresponsive to persistently low unemployment.

Smoothing out the statistical noise from the monthly data is a useful way to get a clearer signal as to the trend of employment growth. JB's monthly smoother shows that over the past three months, monthly gains averaged 185,000, a slight acceleration over the longer-term trends, and a number that's thoroughly consistent with continued improvement and tightening in the job market.

And yet, hourly wages can't catch a buzz. As the figures below show, for all private-sector workers, nominal wage growth was stuck at 2% throughout much of the recovery, before taking off about two years ago, climbing to 2.5%, where it has been stuck, if not decelerating a bit (as per the smoother, a 6-month rolling average). For lower-paid workers (bottom figure: the 80% of the workforce that's blue-collar production workers and non-managers in services), the pattern is similar, though the recent deceleration looks a bit clearer.

Given that inflation is still on the low side—prices rose 1.7% in the most recent CPI report—these growth rates still imply rising real earnings, though less than 1%, year-over-year. In other words, most workers simply are not sharing in as much of the economy's growth as would be expected given the apparent tightness of the labor market. Why that is the case remains among the most important economic questions of the moment.

One cogent explanation is that while the job market is unquestionably tightening, it is not yet at full employment and there's more "room-to-run" than the 4.4% unemployment rate implies. The most telling indicator for this argument (along with the wage results) is the employment rate for prime-age workers. It fell three-tenths of a percentage point last month, though it's 3.6, 4.5, and 3.4 percentage points above its trough value for all, men, and women, respectively. Yet, it still remains 1.9, 3.1, and 0.7 points below its pre-recession peak.

Other explanations include slow productivity growth, which restrains average wage gains, and, even at low unemployment, weak worker bargaining power.

These indicators, in tandem with notably weak price pressures, should definitely lead the Federal Reserve to question the necessity of tapping the economic brakes by continuing their "normalization" of interest rates, i.e., their series of planned rate hikes.

As today marks the start of the Labor Day weekend, this last point is worth digging into a bit. As I stress here, unionization remains at historically low levels, in no small part due to aggressive anti-union activities. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has consistently been pursuing anti-worker measures, such as failing to raise the salary threshold for overtime work or the minimum wage, while deregulating labor standards and worker protections.

Note this timely comment from the president in a speech from earlier this week selling his tax cut plan (which does not yet exist); he asserted that "It's time to give American workers the pay raise that they've been looking for, for many, many years." I agree. Yet, none of the components of the plan that have been floated thus far—eliminating the estate tax (!!) and the alternative minimum tax (measures that would help those like Trump and his heirs), cutting corporate taxes, zeroing out taxes on foreign earnings of US multinationals—come anywhere close to helping families that depend on paychecks as opposed to stock portfolios.

What's needed are measures that will boost the bargaining power of many in the workforce, not tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy.

The impact of Hurricane Harvey

The disastrous flooding in Texas comes at great human cost, of course. But its impact on the economy in general, and the jobs data, is likely to be more nuanced. Here are some key points on Harvey's data impact:

–The impact of the hurricane is not present in today's numbers. The employment surveys take place in the week that includes the 12th of the month – in this case, well before the storm hit.

–Large storms like Harvey typically show up first in weekly unemployment claims, which are likely to spike in coming weeks.

–September's jobs report (released on October 6th) may reflect some impacts of the storm, though they could be offsetting. That is, employment in the affected areas will be disrupted, of course, which could show up in slightly reduced payrolls or fewer hours worked per week. Conversely, by the September survey week, some clean-up efforts will be underway, and those could create perhaps 10,000-20,000 temporary jobs. All told, I doubt that Harvey will be a significant, direct factor in forthcoming jobs reports.

–There could, however, be indirect economic impacts from the storm, though these too could be offsetting. First, the temporary loss of a third of the nation's refining capacity has led to a spike in gas prices, which hit a two-year high yesterday, up 14 cents from a week ago, to a national average of $2.49. Higher gas prices cut into disposable income and could temporarily dent consumer spending. Conversely, rebuilding and replacing damaged cars, structures, roads, etc. will boost economic activity in coming months. Harvey could shave maybe 20 basis points off of Q3 GDP, which would later be made up in future growth numbers.

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Enlighten Radio:Labor Day 2017 Special Poetry Show -- Monday, 9/4

John Case has sent you a link to a blog:



Blog: Enlighten Radio
Post: Labor Day 2017 Special Poetry Show -- Monday, 9/4
Link: http://www.enlightenradio.org/2017/09/labor-day-2017-special-poetry-show.html

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Saturday, September 2, 2017

Trump administration and congressional GOP will return to a packed schedule, but maintain attack on working people [feedly]

Trump administration and congressional GOP will return to a packed schedule, but maintain attack on working people
http://www.epi.org/blog/trump-administration-and-congressional-gop-will-return-to-a-packed-schedule-but-maintain-attack-on-working-people/

Congress returns from a month-long recess next week to a packed agenda. Lawmakers must pass a government spending bill by September 30 in order to avert a federal government shutdown.  They must also increase the debt ceiling or risk defaulting on the national debt. In spite of Republican control in both chambers of Congress, action on these critical measures is complicated by divisions within the party over whether to tie the debt limit vote to spending cuts. Funding for President Trump's border wall and the need to consider disaster relief funding for those areas impacted by Hurricane Harvey loom over any government spending measure. One thing is clear—September is likely to be filled with congressional chaos. In the midst of that chaos, the Trump administration and congressional Republicans will continue to advance the anti-worker agenda they have been working to carry-out since taking office. While those actions may not get attention proportional to their impact, EPI will continue to monitor and report on these important issues. Here are some critical actions to look out for this month:

Trump continues to attack workers' retirement, costing them billions in retirement savings

Just this week, the Department of Labor (DOL) published a proposal to delay full implementation of the fiduciary rule (the rule that requires financial advisers to act in the best interest of their clients) for another 18 months. This delay would cost retirement-savers 10.9 billion over the next 30 years. Public comments on the proposal are due September 15. It is expected that DOL will quickly finalize this delay. Workers should be able to invest for retirement without worrying about their financial advisers steering them toward investments that pay a lower rate of return for the saver, but offer a higher commission to the adviser. The only people who will benefit from the Trump administration's DOL actions here are unscrupulous financial advisers and financial services companies.

Trump continues efforts to take away the rights of millions of workers to get paid for working overtime  Read more


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