Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Paid sick leave provides economic and health security to over a million federal contract workers [feedly]

Paid sick leave provides economic and health security to over a million federal contract workers
http://www.epi.org/blog/paid-sick-leave-provides-economic-and-health-security-to-over-a-million-federal-contract-workers/

Due to an executive order by President Obama, all federal contractors with new contracts (or renewals) after January 1, 2017 are required to provide paid sick leave to theirs employees. The Department of Labor estimates that this final rule will provide paid sick leave to about 1.15 million workers employed by federal contractors. Similar in magnitude to the DOL estimates, our research indicates that paid sick leave for federal contractors will improve job quality for many hundreds of thousands of workers across the country. As the rule reaches all federal contractors, our estimates suggest that between 694,000 and 1,053,000 employees of federal contractors will directly benefit by receiving additional paid sick leave, including an estimated 450,000 to 775,000 who would receive no paid sick leave without it.

The rule on paid sick days helps protect employees of federal contractors by giving them the ability to earn paid sick time to care for their own medical needs, a family member's medical needs, or for purposes related to domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking. Evidence from the private sector and the states and cities with paid sick leave laws demonstrates that paid sick days improve employee retention, reduce workplace contagion and injury, and increase productivity. The cost savings associated with paid sick days serve the purpose of the final rule to promote economy and efficiency in federal contracting. Furthermore, as with existing state and local paid sick leave laws that are very similar to the final rule, the proposed rule will benefit workers, their families, and public health.

Figure A

Paid sick days for federal contract workers will also help level the playing field between those fortunate enough to have such benefits and those who aren't so lucky. According to the latest data, 36 percent of private sector workers do not have access to paid sick leave. Fortunately, state and local public policies continue to make a difference for working families, and the rate of coverage has increased over the last year, from 61 to 64 percent of private sector workers. Particularly of note is the rate of increase for low-wage workers who increased their coverage from 31 to 39 percent. Unfortunately, access to paid sick leave remains vastly unequal, as shown in the figure below. Only 27 percent of the lowest wage workers (the bottom 10 percent) have the ability to earn paid sick time to care for themselves and their family as opposed to 87 percent of the highest wage workers (the highest 10 percent).

Because there are federal contractors across the economy, workers in certain sectors are likely to see the biggest boost in their sick time coverage. While the order will be executed uniformly, those sectors with lower rates of coverage are most likely to see a greater change in benefits for their workers. We estimate that over half of federal contract workers in accommodation and food services; administrative and support and waste management; arts, entertainment, and recreation; and retail trade will gain coverage.

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Monday, January 16, 2017

At this Time of Challenge and Controversy, We Need Solidarity [feedly]

At this Time of Challenge and Controversy, We Need Solidarity
http://www.aflcio.org/Blog/Political-Action-Legislation/At-this-Time-of-Challenge-and-Controversy-We-Need-Solidarity

"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of convenience and comfort, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy." — Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
          

We're coming off of an election that reminded us we still have considerable work ahead in the struggle for freedom and civil rights, and on Martin Luther King Jr. remembrance day, Dr. King's quote is deeply relevant.


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A World in Shambles: An Interview With C.J. Polychroniou [feedly]

A World in Shambles: An Interview With C.J. Polychroniou
http://www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/03/01/2017/world-shambles-interview-cj-polychroniou

A World in Shambles: An Interview With C.J. Polychroniou

Interviewed by Marcus Rolle and Alexandra Boutros - 3rd January 2017
A World in Shambles: An Interview With C.J. Polychroniou

"We live in ominously dangerous times" stated the opening line of an article by C.J. Polychroniou (with Lily Sage) titled "A New Economic System for a World in Rapid Disintegration," which was recently published in Truthout. And while the aforementioned piece was mainly a scathing critique of global neoliberal capitalism and a call for a new system of economic and social organization, its underlying thesis was that the world system is breaking down and that contemporary societies are in disarray.

Is the (Western) world in shambles? We interviewed C.J. Polychroniou about the current world situation, with emphasis on developments in Europe and the United States, and sought his views on a host of pertinent political, economic and social issues, including the rise of the far right and the capitulation of the left.

 

Marcus Rolle and Alexandra Boutri: Let's start by asking -- what exactly do you have in mind when you say, "We live in ominously dangerous times?"

C.J. Polychroniou: We live in a period of great global complexity, confusion and uncertainty. It should be beyond dispute that we are in the midst of a whirlpool of events and developments that are eroding our capability to manage human affairs in a way that is conducive to the attainment of a political and economic order based on stability, justice and sustainability. Indeed, the contemporary world is fraught with perils and challenges that will test severely humanity's ability to maintain a steady course towards anything resembling a civilized life.

For starters, we have been witnessing the gradual erosion of socio-economic gains in much of the advanced industrialized world since at least the early 1980s, along with the rollback of the social state, while a tiny percentage of the population is amazingly wealthy beyond imagination that compromises democracy, subverts the "common good" and promotes a culture of dog-eat-dog world.

The pitfalls of massive economic inequality were identified even by ancient scholars, such as Aristotle, and yet we are still allowing the rich and powerful not only to dictate the nature of society we live in but also to impose conditions that make it seem as if there is no alternative to the dominance of a system in which the interests of big business have primacy over social needs.

In this context, the political system known as representative democracy has fallen completely into the hands of a moneyed oligarchy which controls humanity's future. Democracy no longer exists. The main function of the citizenry in so-called "democratic" societies is to elect periodically the officials who are going to manage a system designed to serve the interests of a plutocracy and of global capitalism. The "common good" is dead, and in its place we have atomized, segmented societies in which the weak, the poor and powerless are left at the mercy of the gods.

I contend that the above features capture rather accurately the political culture and socio-economic landscape of "late capitalism." Nonetheless, the prospects for radical social change do not appear promising in light of the huge absence of unified ideological gestalts guiding social and political action. What we may see emerge in the years ahead is an even harsher and more authoritarian form of capitalism.

Then, there is the global warming phenomenon, which threatens to lead to the collapse of much of civilized life if it continues unabated. The extent to which the contemporary world is capable of addressing the effects of global climate change -- frequent wildfires, longer periods of drought, rising sea levels, waves of mass migration -- is indeed very much in doubt. Moreover, it is also unclear if a transition to clean energy sources suffices at this point in order to contain the further rising of temperatures. To be sure, global climate change will produce in the not-too-distant future major economic disasters, social upheavals and political instability.

If the climate change crisis is not enough to make one convinced that we live in ominously dangerous times, add to the above picture the ever-present threat of nuclear weapons. In fact, the threat of a nuclear war or the possibility of nuclear attacks is more pronounced in today's global environment than any other time since the dawn of the atomic age. A multi-polar world with nuclear weapons is a far more unstable environment than a bipolar world with nuclear weapons, particularly if we take into account the growing presence and influence of non-state actors, such as extreme terrorist organizations, and the spread of irrational and/or fundamentalist thinking, which has emerged as the new plague in many countries around the world, including first and foremost the United States.

What is the state of the Left in today's Europe?

Since the collapse of Soviet communism, the European Left has been in a state of complete disarray, although the crisis of Europe's Left dates back to the 1970s -- i.e., long before the collapse of "actually existing socialism."  But let's be clear. What do we mean today by the term European Left? The European Socialist and Social Democratic parties abandoned long ago any pretext to being "socialistic" and, in fact, have become advocates of austerity and staunch supporters of free-market capitalism. There are some communist parties still around, but most of them are completely marginalized and lack political influence.

Only in Greece do you have a communist party that still carries some influence inside the labor movement, but it is essentially a Stalinist party and has actually worked hard to maintain political stability and thus the status quo. Nonetheless, until very recently, the Greek Communist Party was far more popular than the Coalition of the Radical Left, popularly known as Syriza, which has been in government since January 2015, thanks to the terrible financial and economic crisis that broke out in early 2010 and has since converted the country to a German/European protectorate.

There are, of course, grassroots movements and parties of the radical Left to be found in virtually every European country, but they lack mass popular support. The rise of Syriza in Greece was seen as representing a new dawn for the European Left, but its complete sellout to the euro masters and its actual conversion to a neoliberal and thoroughly corrupt political party has actually been one of the biggest setbacks for progressive forces throughout the continent.

You were expressing strong reservations about Syriza, in fact through these pages, long before its rise to power. What actually went wrong with the Greek Radical Left?

Syriza was a loose organization of various leftist groups (old-fashioned euro communists, anarcho-communists, Maoists and even social democrats), and its appeal was confined mainly to the intellectual class. It lacked a cohesive ideological worldview and, in fact, [it] was difficult to pinpoint its stance on a variety of crucial issues due to the many political factions that it represented.

Naturally, the great majority of the Greek voters saw Syriza as being nothing more than a movement of political clowns, with Alexis Tsipras at its helm. However, a close look around Syriza's core leadership would have revealed a group of people who were simply political opportunists, people hungry for power. To me, therefore, it was obvious that, in the event that Syriza came to power, two things would happen: first, a split between radicals and opportunists, and second, the capitulation of the opportunists (Alexis Tsipras and his gang) to the domestic economic elite and the euromasters. And this is precisely what has happened.

After five years of brutal austerity and the sharpest decline of the standard of living in any postwar European country, the Greek people voted into power Syriza, believing that its leader, Alexis Tsipras, would carry through with his pre-election promises of ending austerity and subsequently re-boosting the economy, tearing into pieces the EU/IMF bailout agreements, and forc[ing] the cancellation of a major portion of the debt. But shortly after coming to power, the opportunists realized that the option was either complete surrender to the capitalist forces or stepping down from power. They opted for the former, just so they could stay in power, even if it meant completing the carry out of the neoliberal agenda of the European Union and the IMF as part of the financial bailout of the country.

Syriza has been in power for nearly two years now, and, during this time, it has shoved the neoliberal agenda down the throat of the Greek people with more forcefulness and determination than any previous government. It agreed to a new, far more brutal and humiliating bailout plan, and is now overseeing the complete privatization of the economy and the further deterioration of the standard of living, thereby fulfilling the long-held view of the European neoliberal masters that Greek wages and the nation's standard of living should not be above those found in nearby Balkan countries like Bulgaria and Romania. Any public official or government minister standing in the way to the implementation of the neoliberal agenda was either isolated or pushed out of the government. Indeed, one of Tsipras' most pronounced traits as prime minister of Greece is the ease with which he is selling out his former comrades.

To secure his goals and aims, i.e., the sellout of the country, he even ended up recruiting as his lackeys academics from abroad, such as the president of the (allegedly progressive) Levy Institute, Dimitri Papadimitriou, and his wife, Rania Antonopoulos, who is currently serving as the Greek Alternate Minister for Combatting Unemployment. Shortly after having accepted the position of Minister of Economy and Development as a result of a recent cabinet reshuffle, Papadimitriou -- when asked about his research as an economist in which he challenged the European dogmas of austerity and neoliberalism and advocated the introduction of a "parallel" currency for the deeply ailing Greek economy -- replied by saying that, "until last week I was an academic, and academics may say ... things. But when the time comes to implement a program, then they realize that some things may have been wrong!"

Of course, the Greek media had a feast over the amazing opportunism and the hypocrisy of this man, but his reaction has been rather typical among pseudo-progressives and social democrats all throughout modern history. Unsurprisingly, Papadimitriou also went on to say that Greeks, Spaniards and Italians live beyond their means, thereby displaying his obedience to the EU and IMF masters, and that one of the major comparative advantages that Greece now enjoys is that it is a country with "cheap labor."

What has been happening in Greece may represent an extreme example because of the actual state of the economy, but it is quite representative of the state of politics of contemporary European Left. That is, a Left without political convictions and values, a Machiavellian Left that prefers to serve the Masters of Mankind than seek to reorganize society from below.

What is your explanation for the rise of Donald Trump, and do you actually see a future in "Trumpism"?

Understanding the phenomenon of Donald Trump demands that we look beyond the individual himself and, instead, into the way US society has evolved over the last few decades. Millions of Americans have seen their livelihoods either entirely collapse or be threatened by economic forces which they neither understand or control. For example, they (and Donald Trump) blame Mexico and China for the loss of American jobs, but no one is taking the trouble to point out to them that the bulk of the products that China, for example, exports to the United States are being produced by US or multinational corporations who opted to move their operations outside the US in order to take advantage of cheap labor opportunities. In the meantime, wages in the US have remained stagnant over the course of the last 25 years for the great majority of the population, while the economy has grown considerably. But the economic gains end up almost exclusively in the hands of a tiny corporate and financial elite, which also controls the political agenda.

"Trumpism" and disingenuous populism represent the future of American politics, especially since the economic policies that the Trump administration will implement will surely further deteriorate the state of inequality in this country and thus do nothing to ameliorate anger and anxiety about the future, which were the driving forces that sent so many people into Donald Trump's arms.

 


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The Distribution of Wealth- Growing Inequality? [feedly]

The Distribution of Wealth- Growing Inequality?
http://www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/04/01/2017/distribution-wealth-growing-inequality

The Distribution of Wealth- Growing Inequality?

Michael Schneider - 4th January 2017
The Distribution of Wealth- Growing Inequality?

Michael Schneider examines the distribution of wealth, the way that it has changed over time, and its potential to affect politics and economies. 

In Capital in the Twenty-First Century Thomas Piketty among other things traced the history of the distribution of income between those whose income is derived from capital and those whose income is derived from other sources, notably labour, and forecast that in the absence of shocks such as world war or economic depression this distribution was likely to become more and more unequal in the future.

Unless all individuals derive their income from capital and labour in equal proportions, which in practice is never the case, this implies that the distribution of income between individuals too will become more and more unequal. This in turn implies that the distribution of wealth between individuals will become more and more unequal, unless those whose income is derived from capital as opposed to other sources save a lower proportion of it, which is hardly ever the case.

Such evidence as is available, and there is a lot more than there was even as short a time ago as ten years, suggests that in most countries the distribution of wealth between individuals became more and more unequal between the eighteenth century and 1913 and less and less unequal between 1913 and the 1970s, and that it has become more and more unequal between the 1970s and the present time.

The distribution of wealth between individuals is everywhere much more unequal than the distribution of income, with a Gini coefficient in the countries for which it has been calculated currently averaging about 0.65. Is such a high and currently increasing inequality in the distribution of wealth sustainable?

It is commonly believed that there is a positive correlation between inequality and economic growth, a belief exemplified in the title of Arthur Okun's book Equality and Efficiency: The Big Trade-Off. The basis of this belief is the view that a greater degree of inequality provides a greater incentive for those responsible for economic growth to exert themselves.

Since it is conceivable that people are more interested in their absolute income and wealth than in their relative income and wealth, it could be argued that they will accept increasing inequality provided that economic growth is fast enough for their absolute income and wealth to grow.

However, the belief that at there is a positive correlation between inequality and economic growth is misguided. There are both theoretical and empirical reasons for rejecting it.

It is true that here are a number of theoretical reasons for thinking that more inequality promotes economic growth. For example, where there is relatively great inequality large set-up costs will be easier to meet, the savings of the rich will provide more funds for investment, and the poor will lack the resources, such as education, needed to disrupt economic activity effectively, even if they wished to do so.

However, there are also a number of theoretical reasons for thinking that more inequality hampers economic growth. For example, credit market imperfections particularly affecting the poor will reduce their ability to contribute to economic growth, remedial transfer payments and the associated tax finance will distort economic decisions, as will lobbying activities by the rich to prevent such redistribution, and socio-political unrest will reduce productivity.

There is no a priori reason to believe that either one of these sets of influences dominates the other.

Quite a number of empirical studies have sought to determine whether or not there is a correlation between inequality and economic growth. Most of these studies have come to the conclusion that the answer depends on circumstances, such as whether the country is rich, middle-income or poor, or within a country, whether the question relates to high income people or to low income people. On balance, the empirical evidence suggests that if anything the correlation between inequality and economic growth is negative.

So a capitalist economy is not faced with the dilemma that it must choose between inequality and low economic growth.

However, perceived inequality in the distribution of income and wealth may have been one of the reasons why in 2016 so many in two countries voted for radical political change, the British voting for 'Brexit' and the Americans voting for Donald Trump as President.

And if the distribution of income and wealth between individuals becomes more and more unequal in the future, as Piketty's analysis indirectly implies, the survival of capitalism is called into question.

Michael Schneider is Honorary Research Fellow at Federation University, Australia. This post is based on his recently published book 'The Distribution of Wealth- Growing Inequality?', and first appeared on the Edward Elgar Publishing blog


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The Real Dr. King

It is critically important in these days of struggle that will continue to intensify to recall that the real Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was not just a dreamer that so many in the corporate media would have you believe.

Dr. King was a nonviolent warrior for justice and freedom for everyone. Every where. Dr. King went he challenged the existing racist and repressive order. He led marches, demonstrations, rallies, picket lines, strikes. He preached in churches.

Dr. King went to jail for all of us.

Over and over again Dr. King fought for civil rights and economic rights and peace and justice.

Today let us remember that. Dr. King said it does no good to win the right to sit at a lunch counter if you can't afford Puzder's hamburger.

Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee as he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Hotel watching my dear Brother James. Orange wrestle with James Bevel in the parking lot.

Dr. King and James and the rest of the leadership team were in Memphis to support sanitation workers who were on strike for the right to have a union and the fundamental right to negotiate with management over wages, hours and conditions of work.

Dr. King literally gave his life for the working poor, for economic justice , for civil rights for a all, for our labor movement, for those Jesus once called "the least of these."

Sent from my iPhone

Fwd: Scribbler in Struggle



Sent from my iPhone

Begin forwarded message:

From: Stewart Acuff <acuff.stewart@gmail.com>
Date: January 16, 2017 at 11:15:02 AM EST
To: Stewart <acuff.stewart@gmail.com>
Subject: Scribbler in Struggle

This scribbler in struggle

Searches for words raw and strong

To call the soul to its human duty

To pull you and me

Into today's fray

For justice that we may

Join the long line of the many

Who made their sacrifice in their day

For life and liberty and Justice realized fully

Sent from my iPhone

State minimum wage increases helped 4.3 million workers, but federal inaction has left many more behind [feedly]

State minimum wage increases helped 4.3 million workers, but federal inaction has left many more behind
http://www.epi.org/publication/state-minimum-wage-increases-helped-4-3-million-workers-but-federal-inaction-has-left-many-more-behind/

On January 1, 19 states increased their minimum wage, lifting the pay of over 4.3 million workers. This is the largest number of states ever to increase their minimum wages without an increase in the federal minimum wage. In seven of these states (Alaska, Florida, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, Ohio, and South Dakota), the increases were due to inflation indexing, where the state minimum wage is automatically adjusted each year to match the growth in prices, thereby preventing any erosion in the real value of the minimum wage. The increases in the remaining 12 states were from legislation or ballot measures approved by voters.

The map shows the values of the minimum wage increases and the number of workers directly affected in each state.

Economic Snapshot

These increases will provide over $4.2 billion in additional wages to nearly 4.3 million affected workers in 2017 and will make a real, although modest, difference in the lives of workers and their families.

While there are 29 states (and DC) that have a minimum wage higher than the federal level, 21 states remain at $7.25 an hour. Workers in these states make up 39.2 percent of the nonfarm workforce. The average minimum wage among states above $7.25 is currently $8.90—meaning that minimum wage workers in the $7.25 states are being paid, on average, 18.5 percent less than their counterparts in states that have adopted minimum wages above $7.25. By November of 2020, as more planned increases go into effect, the average minimum wage in states above the federal level will reach $10.63. Without any change in either the federal or their state minimum wages, minimum-wage workers in the 21 states stuck at $7.25 will be paid 31.7 percent less than workers in states with higher minimum wages.


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