Saturday, May 16, 2020

Bloomberg: China Goes After U.S. Over More Than $1 Billion Owed to UN [feedly]

A  sign, IMO, that continued attempts to isolate China, or suppress its growth and international roles, will leave it no alternative but to challenge the US directly for global leadership. Further, if trumps fascist nationalism persists in angering Europe, AND Asia, China will succeed.

China Goes After U.S. Over More Than $1 Billion Owed to UN

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-05-16/china-goes-after-us-over-more-than-1-billion-owed-to-the-un

text only:

United Nations (AP) -- China is going after the United States over more than $1 billion that the Trump administration owes the United Nations in unpaid dues for its regular operating budget and arrears for the separate budget for the U.N.'s far-flung peacekeeping operations.

The unusual singling out of the U.S. non-payment by China's U.N. mission comes as President Donald Trump continues to accuse Beijing of not being open about the coronavirus when cases were initially reported in December and early January.

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A U.S. Mission spokesperson said China "is eager to distract attention from its cover-up and mismanagement of the COVID-19 crisis, and this is yet another example."

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in early April that the United Nations faced a cash crisis because of non-payment of dues by member states, which has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.

He said in a letter to the U.N.'s 193 member nations that "unpredictable cash inflows, exacerbated by the global crisis posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, seriously threaten" the U.N.'s ability to do its work. He announced a temporary hiring freeze and urged all countries to pay their past and present dues.

China's U.N. Mission said its acting deputy ambassador, Yao Shaojun, spoke at a U.N. General Assembly's budget committee meeting Thursday titled "Improving the Financial Situation of the United Nations," and stressed the importance of all U.N. member nations fulfilling their financial obligations, citing the U.S. arrears.

"Facing tremendous economic and fiscal pressure from the COVID-19 outbreak, China, the second largest contributor to the UN regular budget and peacekeeping budget, has managed to pay all assessed contributions in full," the mission quoted Yao as saying. "It shows China's concrete support to the cause of the U.N. and the work of the secretary-general."

The United States fund 25% of the regular U.N. budget, while China pays 12%. Of the 193 member nations, 91 had paid their dues in full as of May 13. China paid $336.78 million for the regular budget on May 1

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Friday there is still $1.62 billion unpaid for the U.N.'s 2020 regular budget and $2.12 billion outstanding for the peacekeeping budget. He did not give the U.S. arrears.

China's Yao called the United States "the largest debtor," saying it owed about $1.16 billion to the regular budget and $1.3 billion to the peacekeeping budget.

The U.S. Mission spokesperson, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said the United States recently made a payment of $726 million toward its peacekeeping assessment "and per practice will pay the bulk of its assessment at the end of the calendar year."

Because the U.S. fiscal year runs from July to June, not January to December, it has always paid U.N. dues late in the year.

The U.S.-China dispute has been escalating over the pandemic, which has circled the globe causing over 300,000 deaths.

Trump suspended U.S. funding to the World Health Organization in early April, accusing the U.N. health agency of failing to stop the virus from spreading when it first surfaced in China. He said the agency "must be held accountable,'' accusing the WHO of parroting Beijing.

The U.S.-China dispute over the WHO has blocked the U.N. Security Council, the global organizations's most powerful body, from adopting any resolution on the pandemic.

China strongly supports the WHO and has insisted the agency's role in tackling the pandemic be included in any resolution. The U.S. insists on making no mention of the WHO and including a reference to "transparency" on the coronavirus outbreak, which China opposes.

China's U.N. Mission said Beijing has decided to donate $30 million more to the WHO in addition to the $20 million it already gave the agency to support its work on COVID-19.


 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Elise Gould: Latest JOLTS data further illustrates the catastrophic COVID-19 labor market [feedly]

Latest JOLTS data further illustrates the catastrophic COVID-19 labor market
https://www.epi.org/blog/latest-jolts-data-further-illustrates-the-catastrophic-covid-19-labor-market/

his morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released the latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) data for March, which further confirms what we already know: The labor market deteriorated quickly through the month of March. As a reminder, JOLTS data are for the whole month (not just mid-month, like the monthly employment numbers). JOLTS shows a net decline of 9.3 million jobs in March, while the monthly employment numbers showed a loss of 870,000. The difference is due to the labor market collapse in the last half of March.

Total separations hit an all-time high of 14.5 million in March. The increase from February of 8.9 million was nearly 13 times faster than any other point in the history of the survey, which dates back to 2000. Separations occurred across nearly all sectors of the economy, but the largest losses were found in leisure and hospitality, other services, retail trade, and education and health services.

The number of layoffs more than account for the total number of separations. Between February and March, layoffs increased by 9.5 million, hitting 11.4 million in March. In April 2009—the worst month of the Great Recession for layoffs—there were nearly 2.7 million layoffs, or 2% of the workforce. Layoffs in March were more than four times larger than the worst month in the Great Recession.

The layoffs rate—the number of layoffs during the entire month as a percent of total employment—hit 7.5%, more than three times larger than the series high. As with separations, the largest numbers of layoffs occurred in the service sectors. There were nearly 4.9 million layoffs in leisure and hospitality, almost all in accommodation and food services. There were more than 1.1 million layoffs in retail trade and 1.2 million layoffs in education and health services.

JOLTS

On the flip side, workers are quitting their jobs at much lower rates than in the pre-pandemic economy: quits dropped by 20% in March, from 3.4 million to 2.8 million. This is not a good sign—a large number of quits signifies a healthy labor market where people can leave their job to find one that is better for them. One likely reason quits didn't drop even further is because people had to, for example, leave a job to take care of a child whose school closed as a result of the virus.

Job openings fell precipitously from 7.0 million on the last business day of February down to 6.2 million on the last business day of March. While this drop of -813,000 was the largest one-month drop in the history of the survey, it's a bit surprising it didn't fall further given other labor market indicators. Hires also fell in March from 5.9 million to 5.2 million, again the largest drop on record. Nearly all sectors experienced a drop in hires, with the exception of construction.


 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Friday, May 15, 2020

Economic Update - 2020 May Day Protests and Demands [feedly]

Economic Update - 2020 May Day Protests and Demands
https://economicupdate.podbean.com

A special program: interview with Kali Akuno, leader of Cooperation Jackson in Mississippi. As a leader of national May Day actions, he discusses their size, diversity, motivations and goals (including planned monthly national actions). He analyzes organizational challenges and prospects. Finally, he explains why he believes this May Day was a major strengthening of the US left.  

 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Seven states saw increases in unemployment claims last week: Many workers who are not usually eligible have filed for unemployment [feedly]

Seven states saw increases in unemployment claims last week: Many workers who are not usually eligible have filed for unemployment
https://www.epi.org/blog/seven-states-saw-increases-in-unemployment-claims-last-week-many-workers-who-are-not-usually-eligible-have-filed-for-unemployment/

Another 2.6 million people filed for unemployment insurance (UI) benefits last week (not seasonally adjusted), bringing the total to more than 33 million workers filing for UI benefits in the past eight weeks during the coronavirus pandemic.

While most states saw a decline in UI claims filed relative to the prior week, seven states saw increases in UI claims. Connecticut saw, by far, the largest percent increase in claims (726.5%) compared with the prior week, followed by South Dakota (30.6%), Florida (26.9%), Washington (13.7%), Georgia (5.7%), New York (2.7%), and Wisconsin (1.8%).

Connecticut had a record-high 298,680 initial UI claims last week—more than any other state—followed by Georgia (241,387) and Florida (221,905). This comes after several states, including Florida and Georgia, have allowed restaurants and similar businesses to reopen, indicating that state policymakers are risking a greater outbreak with very little of the economic benefits they had expected.

Figure A and Table 1 below compare UI claims filed last week with the prior week and the pre-virus period, in both level and percent terms. It also shows the cumulative number of unemployment claims since March 7 and that number as a share of each state's labor force. In three states, over a third of the workforce filed an initial claim during the past two months: Georgia (35.8%), Kentucky (35.8%), and Hawaii (33.4%).

Figure A

Every state, especially many in the South, is continuing to see astonishingly high numbers of claims relative to the pre-virus period. Last week, Connecticut saw the largest percent increase in claims (11,471%) compared with the pre-virus period, followed by Georgia (4,409%). Eight of the 10 states that had the highest percent change in initial UI claims relative to the pre-virus period are in the South: Georgia, Florida, Kentucky, Mississippi, Louisiana, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Virginia.

The data we have provided so far has not included people who applied for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA)—the new federal program that extend unemployment compensation to workers who are not eligible for regular UI but are out of work due to the pandemic, such as gig workers and people who left their jobs to care for a child. Today's news release from the Department of Labor (DOL) provided our first look at the number of workers who have applied for PUA in each state. In the last two weeks alone, more than 1.8 million workers in 29 states have filed for PUA. Table 2 displays the limited information we have so far on initial state-level PUA claims. In the last two weeks, California reported the most PUA claims (434,397), followed by Michigan (224,057), North Carolina (142,302), Massachusetts (139,290), and New Jersey (127,334).

To mitigate the economic harm to workers, the next federal relief and recovery package should extend the across-the-board $600 increase in weekly unemployment benefits well past its expiration at the end of July. The package should also include substantial aid to state and local governments, worker protections, investments in our democracy, and resources for coronavirus testing and contact tracing, which is necessary to reopen the economy. The Heroes Act, introduced by Democrats in the House of Representatives on Tuesday, would provide critical relief and recovery measures for U.S. workers and is an essential step forward.

Table 1
Table 2

 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Thursday, May 14, 2020

“People Ain’t Gonna Come to Work if They Don’t Feel Safe” [feedly]

"People Ain't Gonna Come to Work if They Don't Feel Safe"
https://workingclassstudies.wordpress.com/2020/05/11/people-aint-gonna-come-to-work-if-they-dont-feel-safe/

If you live in Iowa, you get to see a little bit of how the sausage is made, so to speak, especially if it's pork. It's a common occurrence to see long semi-truck trailers on the highways, with round pink hog noses poking out through the metal slots, three levels of about 175 hogs. You can smell the truck before you see it.

In northeast Iowa, the full trucks are all en route to the Tyson plant in Waterloo. Tyson has six pork plants (in addition to beef and chicken facilities) in the U.S. Collectively, they process 461,000 hogs per week. That's nearly 24 million hogs a year.

In Black Hawk County, Iowa, Tyson is the second leading employer(after John Deere), with about 2,800 jobs. The plant has long drawn Latino, Bosnian, Congolese, Burmese, and Pacific Islander immigrant workers, making Waterloo (along with other meatpacking towns) one of the most diverse cities in the Midwest. Students in Waterloo schools speak 45 different languages.

Triumph Foods pork processing facility in St. Joseph, MO. Photo by Preston Keres, USDA.

The work is hard. Meat cutters often work shoulder to shoulder cutting and packaging meat, on their feet the entire time. A current job description notes "heavy/detailed knife work, stunning, and/or saw operation. May require climbing stairs/ladders. Must be able to lift up to 150 lbs (2 people) and push/pull up to 280 lbs." — all while working in rooms that can be wet and slippery, with temperatures in some rooms as low as 35-40 degrees or over 90 degrees in others. The average hourly rate is $14.96. Shifts can run 10-12 hours, six days a week.

Large institutions with thousands of people in close quarters are perfect places to spread coronavirus. When COVID-19 hit Iowa in mid-March, I was sent home from my university to teach my classes online. On the other side of the county, Tyson workers carried on, in person at the factory. The situation mirrors the COVID-19 class divisions across the country: many middle-class people get to work from the safety of their own homes, while working-class "essential" workers risk coronavirus exposure daily as a condition of their labor.

The work of meatpacking is rarely in the news nationally, or even locally in the Midwest. Although the top four meatpacking companies employ nearly a half million people, in an industry that generates over $231 billion a year, but their difficult work is nearly invisible, off of the radar of the middle-class-targeted news audience. Stories like the Department of Agriculture's speed-up of pork processing lines last fall are covered as policy debates and rarely include workers' voices.

The coronavirus has changed that.

A quick review illustrates how the number of stories about meatpacking has skyrocketed. I searched the Nexis News database for the first four months of this year, using the search terms "meatpacker" and "worker." There were 718 news stories, and the monthly count grew exponentially during the first part of the year, almost like the virus itself:

Jan. 2020:        14 stories

Feb. 2020:       33 stories

Mar. 2020:      59 stories

April 2020:     612 stories

The framing of the stories has changed, too, as a deep concern about workers and communities spread.

The story of coronavirus in Iowa meatpacking plants blew up in the second week of April, as Tyson suspended production at its Columbus Junction, Iowa facility, with at least two dozen workers infected with COVID-19. Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds said Tyson would make the decision on when the plant would reopen, and that "they are doing everything they can, not just to protect the employees but to continue a really critical part of our food supply chain." Meanwhile, in Black Hawk County, at Tyson's largest pork processing operation, workers who have no paid sick days written into their UFCW union contract began a sickout in mid-April, refusing to work in an environment they called dangerous.

On April 18, fearing an enormous outbreak at the Waterloo plant, 20 elected officials from the area pleaded with Tyson to close the plant until all mitigation efforts could be completed. Tyson did not respond, and Reynolds refused to close the plant, lamenting that shutting down the factory might result in hogs being euthanized.

Finally, on April 22, after worker sickouts, community criticism, and more than 180 Waterloo worker COVID-19 cases and one worker death, Tyson closed the plant. That week, Iowa won the ignominious honor of having the fastest virus spread of any state in the U.S.

Hopes to get ahead of the virus lasted only a few days. On April 26, Reynolds announced her first steps to reopen businesses across the state, dismissing a report by University of Iowa researchers that "a second wave of infections is likely" if prevention measures weren't kept in place until at least mid-May.

This isn't just a political story. Local news media across the state are bringing workers' voices into the mix. Like most news organizations across the country, the Waterloo Courier doesn't have a regular workplace beat reporter. But Courier multimedia reporter Amie Rivers listened to what people were saying in the community and broke the story of the sickout at Tyson in Waterloo. Iowa AP correspondent Ryan Foley wrote moving stories about people who worked at Tyson plants and died from COVID-19. IowaStartingLine, an online publication, interviewed young Latinos and Latinas deeply worried about their parents who worked in meatpacking plants. Local TV stations and Iowa Public Radio featured stories of workers and meatpacking, too, as did CBS, CNN, NBC, and MSNBC. The New York Times podcast "The Daily" featured a heartbreaking half-hour interview with Achut Deng, a single mother, UFCW member, and Sudanese refugee who contracted COVID-19 at the Smithfield factory in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Iowa's meatpacking plants are only part of the story. Mike Elk, a labor reporter and founder of Payday Report, has literally connected the dots by mapping all of the instances of worker resistance. On his COVID-19 Strike Wave Interactive Map, he has recorded 184 wildcat strikes that happened since the beginning of March. The actions, all pandemic related, include Amazon fulfillment workers walking out in Tracy, California; fast food workers striking at 50 stores in Central Florida; and Richmond, Virginia bus drivers conducting a sickout.

On May 5, Reynolds finally released data showing almost 1,400 coronavirus cases at three Tyson plants: 221 in Columbus Junction, 444 in Waterloo, and 730 in Perry, the latest outbreak. The local newspaper headline in Perry read "Jaw-dropping 58% of Perry Tyson workers test positive." Two days later, the Tyson pork plant in Waterloo reopened with plastic shields spacing workers six feet apart. The day after reopening, Black Hawk County health officials reported that 1,031 Waterloo Tyson plant workers had COVID-19, more than 2.3 times the number of the state's undercount.

I talked with Samuel Stokes, the UFCW Local 431 union representative/organizer in Waterloo, about how the workers felt about going back. "People ain't gonna come to work if they don't feel safe. They don't care about being fired. They care about their lives and their family's lives." He said about half of the workers want to return, and about half don't. "They just pray that Tyson has their back. If they go back and Tyson is not safe, it will be the same thing all over again. They will voice their opinions."

It is hard to believe that it has been only about two months since the WHO called COVID-19 a global pandemic. Workers face the double threat of a deadly virus and long-term unemployment that increasingly rivals the Great Depression. There is no magical cure (sorry hydroxychloroquine, UV rays, and bleach), so we may well see more examples of workers and citizens forming a mutual solidarity for their own and their community's survival for months or years to come.

Christopher R. Martin, University of Northern Iowa


 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Fed Chair Warns the Economy May Need More as Congress Hesitates [feedly]

Fed Chair Warns the Economy May Need More as Congress Hesitates
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/13/business/economy/fed-chair-powell-economy-virus-support.html

text only:

The Federal Reserve chair, Jerome H. Powell, delivered a stark warning on Wednesday that the United States was experiencing an economic hit "without modern precedent," one that could permanently damage the economy if Congress and the White House did not provide sufficient financial support to prevent a wave of bankruptcies and prolonged joblessness.

Mr. Powell's blunt diagnosis was the latest indication that the trillions of dollars that policymakers have already funneled into the economy may not be enough to forestall lasting damage from a virus that has already shuttered businesses and thrown more than 20 million people out of work.

Yet the warning comes as discussions of additional rescue measures have run aground, with Democrats proposing sweeping new programs and Republicans voicing concerns over the swelling federal budget deficit, which is projected to hit $3.7 trillion this year. President Trump and his economic advisers have pressed the pause button on negotiations for additional spending, waiting to see how much the economy rebounds as states begin lifting restrictions on business activity.

Mr. Powell lauded Congress for the more than $2 trillion relief effort it had already funded, but he made clear that a rebound could take months to materialize, requiring more support.



"The recovery may take some time to gather momentum," Mr. Powell said at a Peterson Institute for International Economics virtual event. "Additional fiscal support could be costly, but worth it if it helps avoid long-term economic damage and leaves us with a stronger recovery."

Stock markets swooned after Mr. Powell's comments, as investors digested the likelihood of a sluggish recovery. The S&P 500 index closed down 1.75 percent.

As the virus persists and the number of unemployed grows, Mr. Powell and his central bank colleagues have begun trying to prod Congress and the White House into action by reminding them that the Fed alone cannot carry the burden of digging the economy out of its deep hole.

Fed officials have slashed interest rates to zero, purchased bonds at a record pace to restore order to roiled government bond markets and unveiled nine emergency lending programs in partnership with the Treasury Department. But Mr. Powell reiterated on Wednesday that the Fed's programs, which will buy bonds from companies and local governments and make loans to midsize businesses, can only temporarily supply credit. The Fed lacks spending powers, which are reserved to Congress.

Mr. Powell characterized the Fed's ability to help as a "bridge across temporary interruptions," while suggesting that more may be needed as huge uncertainties confront the economy, from the speed of reopening to the scope of testing and the timing of a vaccine.



"There is a sense, a growing sense I think, that the recovery will come more slowly than we would like," he said, after highlighting that "the scope and speed of this downturn are without modern precedent, significantly worse than any recession since World War II."



Fed officials have increasingly cautioned that the recovery remains highly uncertain and that if the policy response proves inadequate, the consequences could be long-lasting and painful, particularly for the most disadvantaged.

Loretta Mester, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, has urged more fiscal help to fend off "dire" economic scenarios. Robert S. Kaplan, the Dallas Fed president, said on Tuesday that the economy "may well" need more government help if the unemployment rate continues to rise, and Neel Kashkari, the president of the Minneapolis Fed, has said the fallout could last for years and displaced workers will probably need more aid to make it through.

Coronavirus lockdowns have left tens of millions unemployed, disproportionately hitting service sector workers, many of them low income and without savings. Mr. Powell said a Fed survey set for release on Thursday would show that almost 40 percent of people who were working in February and were members of households making less than $40,000 a year had lost their jobs in March.

"While the economic response has been both timely and appropriately large, it may not be the final chapter, given that the path ahead is both highly uncertain and subject to significant downside risks," Mr. Powell said.

"Since the answers are currently unknowable, policies will need to be ready to address a range of possible outcomes."

Whether Mr. Powell can push lawmakers into action remains to be seen. The Fed chair has cultivated solid relationships with key congressional Republicans and has a history of influencing economic thinking on Capitol Hill. Yet many Republicans, urged on by Mr. Trump, have begun trying to shift the conversation from federal spending support toward efforts to help the economy rebound as quickly as possible. They have largely stopped conveying the sense of urgency that Mr. Powell voiced on Wednesday.



"I'm not sure I agree with that," Senator Patrick J. Toomey, Republican of Pennsylvania, said when asked about Mr. Powell's remarks. "Not sure that pumping more money out of Washington is going to do more good than harm at this point. I think we have to think that through very carefully."

On Tuesday, House Democrats released a multitrillion-dollar, 1,800-page proposal that includes hundreds of billions of dollars for state and local governments to shore up holes in their budgets and additional direct payments and tax credits for low- and middle-income Americans. But the proposal also contains a wide range of provisions that Republicans dismissed immediately as not directly linked to those struggling amid the pandemic, including bailouts for troubled pension plans and lifting a cap on state and local tax deductions.

Republicans are working on their own proposals that Democrats have similarly said should be off the table, including shielding businesses from virus-related legal liabilities. Lawmakers and the White House have also begun pushing for additional individual and business tax cuts.

Senator Kevin Cramer, Republican of North Dakota, did not seem spurred to action by Mr. Powell's warnings, noting that "it's one person's voice — a smart person, that I tend to agree with a lot — but it is just one person."

"I think we have to be very targeted about the next few weeks," he said.

Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, expressed some openness to more financial relief, provided that the spending was temporary and dealt with the pandemic as opposed to creating new permanent programs that would balloon the deficit.

"I'm not insensitive to the debt issue nor do I believe we can government-spend our way out of this forever. Government cannot replace the private economy," he said, adding that "at some point, we need economic activity to come back."

Early indications suggest that activity is only returning slowly to states that have moved to reopen businesses, as many would-be consumers and workers continue to stay home out of fear of contracting the virus. Total hours worked by employees of small businesses that use the human resource firm Homebase remain down by a third from pre-crisis levels in South Carolina and by two-fifths in Texas and Georgia, even after governors eased many restrictions in those states.


With little evidence that Republicans and Democrats are willing to work together to continue helping businesses through a protracted slump, there is growing concern that the trillions already spent may have been too limited.

The economic stimulus payments that many Americans received remain, at least for now, a one-time payout. Expanded aid to the unemployed is set to expire at the end of July.

The government's main vehicle for helping small businesses — the Paycheck Protection Program — has nearly exhausted its $660 billion in funds, and many companies are beginning to worry that the loans, which cover just eight weeks of payroll, will not be enough as the virus persists.

Economists and business advocates say now is not the time to abandon efforts that could determine whether a company comes through the crisis bruised but alive or is forced into bankruptcy.

"They have yet to solve for the fundamental problem," said John Lettieri, the president of the Economic Innovation Group, a Washington think tank that has pushed Congress and the Trump administration to spend more on the payroll program and loosen restrictions. "The program as implemented simply doesn't do enough to help deeply affected businesses survive the crisis."

If the current recession is drawn out, Mr. Powell said, it could inflict "lasting damage" on the economy's productive capacity, with "avoidable" business insolvencies weighing on growth for years to come. He also cautioned that long stretches of unemployment could erode worker skills and leave families struggling with huge debt loads.

"We ought to do what we can to avoid these outcomes, and that may require additional policy measures," Mr. Powell said.



While congressional Republicans are worried that the packages will significantly add to the federal deficit, Mr. Powell said this was not the moment to fret over government spending.

"Now, when we are facing the biggest shock that the economy has had in modern times, is, for me, not the time to prioritize considerations like that," he said. That time will come "a few years down the road, when the economy is well and truly recovered, or at least mostly recovering."

Mr. Trump, who has been consistently critical of Mr. Powell and accused him of putting the United States at a disadvantage by keeping interest rates too high, said on Wednesday night that the Fed chair was the government's "most improved player."

While noting that he still wanted the central bank to try out negative interest rates, Mr. Trump said Mr. Powell had been doing a "great job." Mr. Powell on Wednesday ruled out lowering rates below zero, saying evidence about the effectiveness of negative interest rates had been "mixed."

Jeanna Smialek writes about the Federal Reserve and the economy for The New York Times. She previously covered economics at Bloomberg News, where she also wrote feature stories for Businessweek magazine.  @jeannasmialek

Jim Tankersley covers economic and tax policy. Over more than a decade covering politics and economics in Washington, he has written extensively about the stagnation of the American middle class and the decline of economic opportunity. @jimtankersley

Emily Cochrane is a reporter in the Washington bureau, covering Congress. She was raised in Miami and graduated from the University of Florida. @ESCochran


 -- via my feedly newsfeed

Trumka proposes universal federal jobs payments [feedly]

Trumka proposes universal federal jobs payments
https://www.peoplesworld.org/article/trumka-proposes-universal-federal-jobs-payments/

WASHINGTON —Sticking to a here-and-now solution to coronavirus-caused joblessness, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka proposed the federal government guarantee paid employment – by actually shelling out the money – for all workers. Employers would be a pass-through, nothing more.

In a 13-minute speech posted on the federation's Facebook page, Trumka said that with unemployment at highs unseen since the Great Depression and with the future clouded by millions of jobless people, now is not the time for partisan politics.

Instead he declared, lawmakers should unite, as some already have, behind federal subsidies straight into workers' pockets, and not to CEOs or Wall Street.

Trumka also warned, as public health specialists have, against reopening the economy too soon. Right-wing pressure has forced some states to yield and start reopening businesses, even without enough coronavirus testing, a lack Trumka pointed out. Doing so, he declared, could put us right back down again.

"If we reopen before we're ready, if we reopen because we're impatient, if you send workers into unsafe workplaces, if you send consumers into an unsafe community, we'll be reopening an economic wound that will make it much harder to heal down the road.

"Impatience and imprudence will create a catastrophe of sickness, of joblessness and of economic collapse."

Though Trumka did not say so, seven states – all "red" and GOP-run – never totally shut. At least one, South Dakota, already paid a jarring price at one of its biggest employers, the Smithfield pork plant in Sioux Falls: 900 workers are ill and two died so far.

And the economic collapse is already here. Trumka spoke the day before the Labor Department's release of the monthly jobs report for April. That report will showed one huge impact of the mass closures and shutdowns forced by the coronavirus pandemic – as many as 50 million workers are unemployed.

Coupled with the seven million jobless before April, and an estimated 10 million who have given up trying to seek benefits because they can't get through to antiquated and overburdened state jobless aid agencies, Trumka calculated there could be up to 50 million unemployed people overall.

Those are people who want to work and who, Trumka said, realize that we can't go back to "normal," because "workers realize the old normal wasn't working" for them.

Trumka didn't propose long-range "new normal" solutions. Those are posted on the federation's website. Others, in and out of Congress, have proposed drastic restructuring of the U.S. economy to make sure it works for workers, including stripping corporate executives of power, seating workers on boards, and confiscatory taxes on capital and wealth.

But Trumka said politicians ranging from conservative Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., to Congressional Progressive Caucus Co-Chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., all advocate the guaranteed pay. Others should follow their lead, he stated.

Jayapal and the rest of the 95-member caucus are trying to get her guaranteed income bill, which would subsidize pay of up to $100,000 per worker, plus health insurance coverage, into the next economic stimulus bill. With Hawley as a notable exception, the overwhelming majority of congressional Republicans detest and oppose the idea.

They prefer shoveling more money at business, or – in the case of powerful Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. — not acting at all. That won't work, Trumka said, calling out McConnell by name.

"Working people will suffer in a way we haven't seen in our lifetimes. Our economy will come apart because nothing works when people aren't working."

And "losing health care in the middle of a recession is bad enough. But losing it in the middle of a pandemic – with no end in sight? That's criminal," he said. He noted 12 million have already lost health care and predicted millions of others will follow.

McConnell also wants to let states and cities go broke, an idea Trumka denounced, calling out the Kentuckian's bias against "blue," Democratic-run, states. "That's not a solution. That's a scam," Trumka said.

"Forcing first responders" – like nurses – "and teachers and other public workers into unemployment is a drag on the economy and a danger to all of us. How on earth will we beat the virus without them?" he asked.

And individual workers and their families are suffering, he pointed out. And those workers aren't just numbers, he said, citing two workers, one a school custodian in Florida and the other a restaurant cook in Philadelphia. Both were laid off; both have dependents who rely on them. The cook hasn't gotten jobless benefits yet.

"No one should be living by a prayer," as she is, "and hanging by a thread," Trumka said.


 -- via my feedly newsfeed