Wednesday, December 29, 2010

ORGANIZER'S DIGEST - Stiglitz - Freefall (2010)

Freefall (2010)
by Joseph Stiglitz
condensed for TUSG.ORG

The only surprise about the economic crisis of 2008 was that it came as a surprise to so many. What was different about this crisis from the multltude that had preceded it during the past quarter century was that this crisis bore a "Made in the USA" label.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Conversation with Atlas

Original comment by AtlasHBS in response to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ONv-xrjC9Qg

----

I have 3 jobs in Omaha NE. I am an employer. Every dollar I spend on my workers is a dollar I CANT spend on my children, so I am looking for workers that won't cost a ton of money. Every one of those people looks expensive. I heard multiple times it said "good pay rate", and to me that is code for "expensive"

everyone in that vid, and on this board (me included) needs to wake up to one fact. YOU DON"T DESERVE MIDDLE CLASS, get over yourself.

Collect cans, beg, pick crops START OVER.

AtlasHBS 2 months ago

----

@AtlasHBS OK- you've raised my curiosity. If I may ask: what industry do you work in?

Just wondering, cause you seem like quite a hard-ass, which I respect in a man of business, but...

I guess it's interesting that you consider yourself judge of those who "deserve middle class"? AND don't view yourself as worthy?

samcalvin47 2 months ago

Thursday, December 9, 2010

UI and job-seeking behavior

In response to: http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2010124907/nothing-99ers-and-not-much-anyone-else#comment-13378

In part informed by: http://www.philadelphiafed.org/research-and-data/economists/fujita/economic-effects-of-unemployment-insurance.pdf

I think you're missing the key point here- "99ers" do not collect benefits. That's the whole point of the term! So when you say 99ers are unemployed by choice because they're getting benefits you're confounding the issue.

You are right, however, that we have to be careful not to be "blind" in the way we look at this issue. Many folks on both left and right form their opinions by either extrapolating from anecdotes or inventing from whole cloth on the basis of axiomatic certainties.

There are three distinct effects of UI benefits on job-seeking- and job-taking- behavior, roughly divided into different phases of unemployment. These need to be examined and dealt with separately and not lumped together.

First is the effect on those in short stints of unemployment. Might someone who can collect benefits "coast" for a month or two before seriously setting themselves to find a job? Certainly. If they are fairly certain they can find work, might they be overly "choosy" and reject jobs that contain an element of difficult compromise? Of course.

This effect is limited, however. With average benefits of $300/week, most people run through discretionary cash reserves within a few months. For people with very few obligations (no children, no mortgage, etc) or larger-than-average savings, this period might be longer.

This type of pay-out is good for the economy in the short term (ie keeps people spending), but does involve a moral hazard. Still, thought the amount of UI which goes towards this kind of "hand-out" is not insignificant, it is nowhere near the majority of UI, and is less and less of the total as a joblessness crisis lengthens and deepens. Still, there may be ways to effectively "weed out" these payments- such as means-testing benefits. In terms of actual savings, however, the cost of installing a system to means-test probably doesn't make sense. If it would be reassuring in terms of the moral hazard, however, by definition it doesn’t do any real harm to the unemployed.

The second effect of UI benefits is the "hold-out" effect- the refusal of job-seekers to take jobs which would substantially lower standards of wages/salary or make difficult transitions (eg moving, splitting up a family, changing to a new field of work). Even once a job-seeker is “seriously” looking for work, UI benefits allow job-seekers to resist taking "bad deals." The benefits to society of such choices are mixed- and there is legitimate room for disagreement. On the one hand, liberals may overly “coddle” those people who have difficulty making hard choices or needed changes. At the same time, conservatives tend to underestimate the value to society of protecting established ways of life and higher-productivity jobs. Not all disruptions are productive- keeping a community intact through a “job drought” does have benefits. I’m suspicious of people who take too much pleasure in contemplating the pain being inflicted on “comfortable” middle-class folks by forced adaptation to “the market.” There is also a more-or-less acknowledged favoritism towards employers over employees - high unemployment allows employers to lower pay for the same job, with dubious benefits to society. Allowing people to “hold out” against such devaluations may be an additional positive benefit. (Note, too, that the hold-out effects overlap with the moral hazard effect in a non-mutually-exclusive way- that turning down job offers in a way which might be regarded as personally irresponsible could also benefit society).

The third effect is that UI benefits keep the unemployed in the labor force. This is the primary consideration which needs to be weighed when looking at the long-term unemployed. Studies which claim to show a large “moral hazard” effect on extending long-term benefits typically measure “exit” from unemployment in the period after benefit exhaustion- but this “exit” includes people who simply drop out of the labor force! On the other hand, studies which analyze whether or not UI benefits meaningfully change the rate of job-taking for the long-term unemployed find that they do not. Keeping people in the labor force is a major good for society, both because drop-outs have a good chance end up on government rolls anyway through either disability, welfare, etc payments, and because any reduction in the labor force constrains future economic growth.

Next up: Where does all this leave the 99ers?

Thursday, November 18, 2010

FBook recap: "a decade of decline"

Sam Calvin Good Analysis of new census figures: "Our new century has begun, as Harvard economist Lawrence Katz noted
after the new Census figures appeared, with a 'decade of decline.'
And this decade of decline comes after a generation
of income stagnation."

Home Feature Box: The 21st century has opened with a decade that has seen the vast majority of Americans go backwards economically. Just-released Census stats tell that tale — but not the whole income story. The 21st century has opened

Sam Calvin

According to the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are nearly 31 million people currently unemployed -- that's including those involuntarily working parttime and those who want a job, but have given up on trying to find one. In the face of the worst economic upheaval since...

Sam Calvin Fascinating chart- the top bar is the actual wealth distribution by quintile (the wealthiest 20% hold more than 80% of the wealth while the bottom 40% hold nothing), the middle bar is what people estimate the distribution is, and the bottom is what people believe a just society would look like (the wealthiest hold just over 30%). Even those IN THE TOP income groups think society's wealth is far more equally distributed than it actually is, and believe that society should RIGHTLY be even fairer than that!

shar.es
I've been meaning to get to this chart for some time, so I am glad Good reminded me to: The actual United States wealth distribution plotted against the

Monday, November 15, 2010

Civil Disobedience by the Unemployed

Sam Calvin

“A job is a right, fight, fight, fight!” was the protest call offered by a group of 20 NY/NJ 99ers who are seeking passage of jobs and Tier 5 unemployment ben...
Sam Calvin

Sam Calvin via FlashMobs4Jobs: Excellent coverage of Friday's 99er civil disobedience on Spanish language television!

Share

Sam Calvin

Sam Calvin Including 90,000 New York City residents....

These are the facts: Without federal legislation to extend Unemployment Insurance benefits past November 28, some 200,000 New Yorkers will prematurely exhaust their extended UI benefits by the end of the year.
Share

FlashMobs4Jobs

FlashMobs4Jobs ‎99er activist talks about doing civil disobedience in New York City! :)

You, Rhonda Taylor and Edrie Irvine like this.
FlashMobs4Jobs

FlashMobs4Jobs Video taken by flashmobs4jobs activists at the demonstration! THIS IS WHAT DEMOCRACY LOOKS LIKE!!!!

FlashMobs4Jobs

FlashMobs4Jobs In NYC, 4 protesters volunteered to get arrested to highlight the situation that the 99ers are in. Let's thank these brave and selfless folks!

Edrie Irvine likes this.
FlashMobs4Jobs

FlashMobs4Jobs Flashmobs action alert! If we want action on unemployment, we need to get out in the streets! Those in the NYC area, please get on over to the rally at the Department of Labor (75 Varick) tomorrow at 12 noon!

Unemployed New Yorkers will stage a rally in lower Manhattan on Friday to press Congress to extend Unemployment Insurance for millions of Americans. Sponsore
You and Rhonda Taylor like this.

Latest on Fed $600 billion "Quantitative Easing"

Sam Calvin Stiglitz on Fed move...

online.wsj.com
In The Wall Street Journal, Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, writes that the Federal Reserve's next round of quantitative easing risks fueling a destructive bond market bubble, while any gains from a weaker dollar will come at the expense of those to whom we hope to export.

Sam Calvin Republicans buying ads to attack the latest Fed moves.

online.wsj.com
The Federal Reserve's latest attempt to boost the U.S. economy is coming under fire from Republican economists and politicians, threatening to yank the central bank deeper into partisan politics.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Tax System Favors Wealth Over Work

from Trouthout.org:

The major vehicle is George W. Bush’s 15 percent levy on long-term capital gains - the lowest since FDR’s first term - and on corporate dividends. The top 1 percent of US households owns nearly 40 percent of all privately held stock, from which the dividends flow. Similarly, the super-rich get more than half their income from capital gains, as documented by tax expert David Cay Johnston in his book “Perfectly Legal.” In the meantime, for the working middle-class, the tax rate on wages is 25 percent.
...
There are six today, with the top four taxed at 25, 28, 33 and 35 percent - a narrow spread, easily offset by provisions like the capital gains rate. The top rate kicks in at about $400,000 of taxable income, a practice Johnston told Truthout he finds “bizarre.” It’s a long way, he argued in a recent email, from $400,000 to $1 million, $5 million, $100 million and hedge-fund billions: “Why don’t we have higher rates for those incomes?” he asked.
Even the bottom marginal rates help top earners. A millionaire, filing singly, pays the same 10 percent on the first $8,375 of taxable income as the working poor, and so on, up the income scale. As the Center on Budget and
Policy Priorities notes
, the real winners from extending Bush’s middle-class tax cuts wouldn’t be middle class: “In fact, a family making more than $1 million will receive more than five times the tax cut benefit, in dollar terms, as a middle-class family making $50,000 to $75,000 … ”
The tax code is also loaded with deductions that effectively rain down dollars on the rich. The code doesn’t overtly discriminate, but it’s hardwired to make every tax break worth more at the top.
...
It’s taken a fortune in lobbying and campaign contributions, but America’s tax system is bearing golden fruit. As even a conservative can see, it’s shifting income to the wealthy.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

AFL-CIO President Trumka - 2010 Election Results and Labor

Wednesday Afternoon Orgdown: Nov 3, 2010

It's been a while, I know, I know, but there are still organizations to cover!


Recently learned of this NYC public-union-centered publication.

A sampling of today's headlines:
Say Unions Can Ride Out Assault on Jobs, Benefits
TWU Secretary-Treasurer Ousted Over Improprieties
As Governor Readies 898 Layoffs, Fired DEC Head Raps Plan

Blue Dog Coalition Crushed By GOP Wave Election


Let's paint targets on their backs!



BLUE DOGS WHO STAYED (23)

Jason Altmire (PA)

Joe Baca (CA)

John Barrow (GA)

Dan Boren (OK)

Leonard Boswell (IA)

Dennis Cardoza (CA)

Ben Chandler (KY)

Jim Cooper (TN)

Henry Cuellar (TX)

Joe Donnelly (IN)

Jane Harman (CA)

Tim Holden (PA)

Mike McIntyre (NC)

Jim Matheson (UT)

Mike Michaud (ME)

Collin Peterson (MN)

Mike Ross (AR)

Loretta Sanchez (CA)

Adam Schiff (CA)

Kurt Schrader (OR)

David Scott (GA)

Heath Shuler (NC)

Mike Thompson (CA)
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Unemployment Insurance Gap

One of the difficulties of the present unemployment crisis is that the usual statistical measures do not adequately show all measurements relevant to the present.

In particular, the number of "99ers"- unemployment insurance exhaustees- is not counted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It is, in fact, quite difficult to compute- given that the much of the data resides at the state level.

Here is the most suggestive best dataset I've found so far:

National Unemployment Measures
Seasonally Adjusted
Data from 2007 to 2010

The total and insured rates of unemployment are graphed to illustrate how they track. The two measures correlate well. However, over time, the difference between them, also shown and sometimes referred to as the gap, has risen. This has been of concern as it underscores the problem of fewer of the unemployed collecting UI benefits.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

ILWU shuts down Northern California ports



On October 23, 2010, the ILWU shut down Northern California ports to support a rally for justice for Oscar Grant. Grant was murdered by BART policeman Johannes Mehserle and the ILWU and other unions are demanding that the killer get a full sentence of 14 years. This was the first labor action to protest the growing repression of Black and Latino youth by police forces. Other unions joining the ILWU included the Oakland Education Association, SEIU 1021, CUE-IBT UCB, UBC 713 and rank and file members of BART ATU 1555. For copies contact Labor Video Project (415)282-1908 (415)282-1908 Produced by Labor Video Project laborvideo.blip.tv www.laborvideo.org

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Underclass

In response to: http://www.workingamerica.org/blog/2010/09/20/which-way-for-the-working-class/

Comment:
Interesting that there is a resurgence of discussions of “class” which has been taboo (except as an accusation by business elite) for so many years.

I’m afraid that it is a little premature. There are many difficulties standing in the way of a “class-wide” solidarity for labor and the left, and a number of issues that are still being ducked.

I’m thinking particularly of the relationship between: 1) the low-wage economy and the mid-wage economy; 2) immigrants and native-born; 3) employed and un-employed; 4) North/South U.S.; 5) U.S. and the world.

The “truest” mention of class that I’ve heard recently is in the notion of an “underclass.” As diluted as this may seem to some, I believe that it is an opening to a conversation that needs to happen.

What does an “underclass” mean? Most importantly, it goes straight to the heart of the employed/unemployed, low-wage/mid-wage, immigrant/native-born discussion.

Which is the underclass- someone who cannot find employment, or someone who is working in “sub-human” conditions?

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Neo-Pinkertons

This is an excellent article, particularly the expose of the neo-Pinkerton techniques on display in radical forums. Pinkertons in the 20s and 30s were paid to infiltrate and disrupt the unions, Pinktertons today are hired by "think-tanks" to crap all over the web.

When estimates were finally put together the amount that was being paid to the Pinkertons by the major industrial companies came out it was truly staggering. I am sure the same will be found true of the neo-Pinkertons.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Mott's Strike

UPDATE: STRIKE IS OVER http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/14/business/14mott.html?src=busln

UPDATE TO THE UPDATE: A MUCH BETTER ARTICLE ON THE CONCLUSION OF THE STRIKE http://www.waynepost.com/latestnews/x907388753/Mott-s-strike-ends (hat-tip @banditelli)

Original post written in response to: http://www.workers.org/2010/us/mott_0909/

To the editor:

I am very glad to see you highlighting the strike at Mott's in Williamson on the front page of your newspaper! I wanted to add a couple of points, however.

First, while I agree completely that the Mott's workers are "defending the rights of all working people," I think it is justified to go one step further in this characterization: the Mott's struggle is one of the key struggles being waged over the future of the U.S. working class. The strike is being used as a test case by corporations, who want to see whether worker solidarity will hold firm. If support for the striking workers crumbles, it will be a clear signal to other employers that they can proceed apace with direct attacks on wages.

Second, a broad-scale movement towards wage-cutting is virtually assured by the latest economic data. Second quarter productivity figures from the BLS released in August showed a sharp decline of 1.8%. This is widely taken by the business class to mean that we have reached the limits of profit growth attainable by speedups. A second avenue of profit growth- capital investment in technology- is also ruled out by the current "slackness of demand," that is, we are already producing more than people can afford to buy. This leaves only one clear avenue for growing profits- a direct attack on wages, bolstered by maintaining high unemployment.

What does this mean for workers? We must aggressively assert class-wide solidarity with the Mott's workers. The three most important ways we can do this are: organize support for the Mott's picket line, contribute to the Mott's hardship fund, and build the boycott of Mott's products. Even small contributions make a great difference in this key struggle!

You can learn more about these actions at www.mottsworkers.com .

If we can defend the wholesale savaging of wages, we force the crisis back out into the open- in the form of a "double-dip" recession which must be acknowledged by the business class. If we cannot, it will only be a crisis for workers, borne in the silence and shame of personalized hardship, belt-tightening, and the desperate "race to the bottom."

Thank you again for bringing needed attention to this important struggle.

In solidarity,
Sam, NYC

Friday, September 10, 2010

Union members' questions

It's easy to feel really jaded about the politics of unions in the U.S.

As institutions, U.S. unions are expected to do a whole lot with very little, and are under near-constant attack. As a result, their politics are extremely defensive, and their policies are often confused.

Moreover, in order to defend their leadership roles (ie not get voted out), union leaders are forced to soft-sell their policies, cloaking them in soft-focus, feel-good rhetoric. Their politics are often difficult for rank-and-file members to discern, even more difficult than the "insider" politics of Washington (which, after all, considerable ink is devoted to analyzing for a popular audience).

With all that in mind, this is really rather touching- a genuine list of member concerns, addressing most of the important issues facing unions. I can only hope that Dick Trumka will work as hard on his answers as these folks collectively worked on their questions, and sound a note as true.

UPDATE: I want to add emphasis to this post...this is exactly the type of conversation that needs to be happening, and should be happening online. The fact that it is tucked away so deep in the AFL-CIO website is perhaps a problem, but maybe also why the seed that is growing here is so inspiring (and safe from right-wing hacks who would spam the sh!t out of any more public forum).

I strongly encourage all active unionists to look seriously at this list of questions and think hard about how you would answer them- there is a space in the forum for comments on each question, but please please be respectful of what is going on here and by g*d don't just piss some political boilerplate onto these thoughtful posters.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

NELP report on low-wage job growth

NELP has released a preliminary report on recent job growth. From their press release:

While the recession depleted jobs in every field in 2008-2009, private industry growth since then has been disproportionately driven by industries that pay median wages below $15.00 an hour.
The best chart from the report:
(note that job losses on the lest measure a full year while job gains on the right measure 7 months- they are not meant to be directly measured against each other, just to show the difference in proportion)

Their conclusion:

The analyses presented in this data...reiterate the continuing crisis of weak job growth, one that is stalling economic recovery in communities across the country.

[They also document] a second trend that could be equally challenging to hopes for a broadly shared recovery: the disproportionate growth in mid- and especially lower-wage industries on the one hand, and the weak growth and even continued losses in higher-wage industries on the other.
...
[H]ow much of this unbalanced growth is permanent?...[W]hile we can expect some improvement in the wage profile of previously-temp jobs when permanent hiring picks up, it is difficult to predict whether there will be a significant impact on aggregate wage outcomes.

Monday, September 6, 2010

A primer on Immigration in the U.S.

General Summary

As of January 1, 2009, there were approximately 31 million immigrants in the United States. According to the Department of Homeland Security, slightly more than half of them are naturalized citizens, and approximately one-third lack proper authorization.

Immigration, taken as a whole, is an enormous contributor to the wealth of our society. According to a 2007 report by President Bush’s Council of Economic Advisors (CEA), U.S. natives gain an estimated $37 billion a year from the presence of immigrants.

The CEA also reported that immigrants to the U.S.:
• contribute more to productivity and less to crime than the native-born
• tend to complement rather than replace U.S.-born workers, and
• have a long-term positive impact on public budgets

Unauthorized Immigrants

The basic problem with the way the debate is framed by anti-immigrant groups is that “legal” and “illegal” immigration are supposed to be different, unrelated phenomena. Numerous studies of immigrant populations have determined that unauthorized immigrants share many, if not most, characteristics with authorized immigrants. In fact, the Pew Hispanic Center estimates that half of all unauthorized immigrants were authorized to enter the country, and only became classified as unauthorized after they either failed to renew or violated the terms of their visas.

There are commonly estimated to be about 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the United States, although the highest estimates put the number closer to 20 million. This group, by its very nature, tends to represent the poorest, least educated, and least well-connected of the foreign-born workers. Yet even within this skewed category, studies have failed to demonstrate that the net economic impact of undocumented immigrants is anything other than positive for the US economy. While they are among the lowest paid workers in the country, they receive significantly less in services and support from the government than other comparable groups.


Fiscal Impact of the Undocumented

Contrary to right-wing rhetoric, unauthorized immigrants pay taxes: state and federal payroll taxes as well as local sales, excise and property taxes. At the federal level, the fiscal impact of unauthorized immigrants is both positive and significant, particularly for the finances of the Social Security system. This is a notable example, because while many of the contributions of unauthorized immigrants go unrecorded, the accounting method of the Social Security Trust Fund clearly registers the overpayment of the undocumented, which amounts to an annual surplus of $7-8 billion. Since the 1980s, this fund has grown to over $500 billion, and represents a significant portion of the total social security trust of about $2.5 trillion (New York Times).

At the state and local level the impact of undocumented residents is more mixed. The Congressional Budget Office, in its survey of the impact of unauthorized immigrants on state and local coffers, found the net effect to be minor. Furthermore, where certain localities are adversely affected, the economic effect is comparable to that which occurs in many low-income and rural areas regardless of their immigrant populations; i.e., economic costs are concentrated, while economic benefits are externalized.

Conclusions

So what is the take-away? The immigration system, except in specific localities, is not really “broken” in any way that negatively affects the native-born. Immigration continues to play an overwhelmingly positive role in America’s public life. Where reform is necessary is in the extension of the rights of the undocumented.

Moreover, the problems attributed to undocumented immigrants are the same problems faced by all working-class Americans: exploitation, poverty, lack of political rights, and discrimination. These problems are the result of disenfranchisement, and will not be solved by policies designed to increase the exclusion and isolation of immigrants.

What, then, is the road forward? It is the same for immigrants and non-immigrants, documented and undocumented: build the institutions of democracy and civil society- labor unions, voting blocs, political education societies, and direct action groups. History tells us that the native-born must not exclude immigrants from these political vehicles- the result is divided, uncoordinated action, and ultimately, a weaker society, a weaker democracy, and a weaker America.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Call it the liberal answer to the Laffer Curve:
But can the government afford this additional spending? The answer is yes. Despite the large federal deficit, global savers, including savings-hungry American households, are snapping up United States government securities at very low interest rates. And they will continue to do so as long as there is ample slack in the economy and inflation remains subdued. Over the next few years, there is little risk that federal deficits will crowd out private investment or precipitate a crisis of confidence in the American government, a spike in American interest rates or a sudden drop in the dollar.

On the other hand, as long as private demand remains weak, the risk is uncomfortably high that trying to reduce the deficit — by cutting spending or increasing taxes — will tip the economy back into recession or condemn it to years of faltering growth and debilitating unemployment. In fact, either outcome would depress tax revenue and could mean larger deficits.

UPDATE: Actually, we can take it even further. According to Laffer's logic, there is an optimal rate of taxation on the rich which will actually make them richer. This is the essential insight of Keynsianism: if the economy goes into protracted stagnation and retrenchment, corporate revenues cannot rise, or cannot rise as quickly as they might otherwise. Therefore, in order to continue to raise the after-tax income of the wealthy, it is imperative that we raise taxes on them now.

How's them apples?


Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Wednesday Afternoon Orgdown: Aug 25, 2010

Los Angeles County Federation of Labor @ http://www.launionaflcio.org/

The LA County Federation of Labor, or LA Fed, is highlighted as a union success story by Bill Fletcher and Fernando Gapasin, Kim Voss and Rick Fantasia, and many others on the left. Following the success of SEIU's Justice for Janitors campaign in L.A., the new influx of members played a significant role in rejuvenating the Federation, signaled in part by the election of its first Latino president.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Are the Rich going to "take their toys and go home"?

In response to Public to Lawmakers: End Tax Cuts for the Rich, sweartogod replies:
Who creates jobs? The poor do not. I am poor and cannot create any jobs. It seems to me that the people who have money create jobs. By taxing them is there no incentive to create jobs. Like Donald Trump says if they punish me I will sit and do nothing.
This is a common form of blackmail threat leveled by the rich- do what I say or I'll withdraw my investment from society. I need more "incentives" to invest.

I answered:
Those who possess money do not need "incentives" to create jobs- hiring workers and selling the products they produce is the only way that they can "make" money. This may be done by loaning their money to a bank, by loaning it to a corporation through the stock market, by loaning it to the government through buying bonds, or by direct investment.

In periods of crisis, they tend to become very conservative- settling for living off their riches and not making any money for a while. This is where the role of government as a "job creator" comes in. By spreading out the risk of the needed reinvestment (and by freeing up more money to those who must spend it on the things they need to live)- the government is able to soften the impact of the kind of devastating crises that existed before WWII.

Unfortunately, we live in a time when the sheer greed of the rich has blinded them to the entire progress of US governmental policy over the past 80 years. They have spent exorbitant amounts of money to fund thinly-veiled propaganda efforts around why they should not have to give even a small proportion of their money to the government- for their own good as much as anyone else's.

While these anti-tax policies might be good for the rich on an individual level, they spell disaster for society when implemented broadly, and the Trump quote is nothing more than an attempt at blackmail.

Please, Brother, study this issue carefully and with all the attention it deserves. You will find out that these lies are a dangerous poison.

Regards,
Sam

Are the Rich the best custodians of society?

In response to:
"Tax the Rich, Corporations, and..." You people always fall for that one. @ How Your Government Sees it... blog

While [what you say] sounds quite good- indeed, downright humanitarian- I'm afraid that you are being taken in by a well-funded group of hucksters. These are the very arguments by which the "super rich" wish to further reduce their tax burdens.

The single grain of truth to what you say lies in the downward definition of the "wealthy" that is pushed by Clinton-style democrats. In fact, the most lasting tax adjustment Clinton made was the expansion of the payroll tax, which increased the burden on hard-working people a great deal during his tenure (and has been retained since).

However, "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing." This fact, which might be used to reduce the redistribution of wealth from the poor to the wealthy (yes- did you know that this is the main "redistribution" which now occurs?), is used to give cover to shabby half-truths by bought-and-paid-for snake-oil salesman like Dr. Jorgan.

For instance, the argument against the alternative minimum tax- which provided "the people" a defense against the "loopholes" used by the rich- was defeated by the clever sophistry of such "thinkers."

In essence, the argument of Jorgan and his ilk boils down to this: being rich is evidence that you are better than everyone else, therefore the rich should be given as much money as possible. That this notion can still be believed after the massive scams that have been revealed over the last 10 years, from Enron and Worldcom to Madoff and Goldman, is evidence of just how powerful the hold of greed and deceit is over the minds of American.

I once was blind, but now I see. I hope the same may hold true for you.

Regards,
Sam

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Wednesday Afternoon Orgdown: Aug 18, 2010

Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York (ROC-NY) @ http://www.rocny.org/

Initially created as a support organization for the surviving workers from Windows on the World, a large restaurant at the top of the World Trade Center, following 9/11, the ROC has become a sort of laboratory of approaches to restaurant worker justice. It has spun off a cooperative restaurant, Colors, as well as other initiatives to bring forward the struggles of workers in the large, mostly non-union food sector of NYC. There are approximately 300,000 foodservice workers in the "Greater New York" megacity, with perhaps 10-20 thousand of them unionized. ROC-NY has also generated interest in foodservice worker justice in other cities, spawning CHI-ROC (Chicago) and others.

Domestic Workers United (DWU) @ http://www.domesticworkersunited.org/

DWU describes itself this way: "Founded in 2000, Domestic Workers United [DWU] is an organization of Caribbean, Latina and African nannies, housekeepers, and elderly caregivers in New York, organizing for power, respect, fair labor standards and to help build a movement to end exploitation and oppression for all."

As such, it represents another form of worker center, for another largely-unorganized sector of the economy, one with problems perhaps more severe than foodservice workers. Given the isolation of domestic workers, abuse (physical and sexual) and virtual slavery are not uncommon conditions. DWU is thus important as both advocate and support group.

Recently, DWU was able to pass through the NY legislature the first US law protecting domestic workers- who are excluded from the important labor-rights laws of the 1930s, the National Labor Relations Act and the Fair Labor Standards Act.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Correspondence with an international activist

Recently a labor activist in South Korea sent me a few questions about the state of US labor. Formulating a response to her gave me a bit of perspective on the present, so I thought I would post my response to her.

Hi w-s-

I think the current state of play is well indicated by this video


text of speech @ http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-afl-cio-executive-council

ie we get nothing but generalities and vagueness.


>>1. What would you say are major union’s (AFL-CIO, Change to Win, Unite Here, SEIU) main demands/platforms in relation to the economic crisis?

First of all, the AFL-CIO has no global analysis of the crisis. The cold war model of fighting for labor at home while making the world safe for capital flight abroad (which makes any coherent international position other than "anti-communism" impossible) was virtually hegemonic within the labor movement until AFL-CIO president Lane Kirkland stepped down in 1995, and his hand-picked successor was defeated by John Sweeney's "New Voice" Coalition.

Some time has passed since then, but the AFL-CIO has been very slow to adopt new policies. The schizoid nature of this process can be observed in the participation of the AFL-CIO in Seattle 1999 (a watershed event for labor participation in global politics), where the federation engaged in the protests a mere week after Sweeny endorsed the governments neoliberal global economic strategy. (see Fletcher & Gapasin, Solidarity Divided)

9/11, too, acted to conservatize the movement- I believe some within the federation hoped for a return to cold war capital-labor collaboration. This is the context for the rebuff Sweeny gave to the including the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions, the Brazilian Central Unica dos Trabalhadores (CUT), and the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU). (see excerpt from Fletcher & Gapasin)

In part, this hesitancy of the AFL-CIO stems from the weakness of its structure as a federation- it is very much akin politically to the declining monarchies of Europe, where not upsetting the various constituencies results largely in a policy of inaction verging on paralysis. (more on these constituencies in a moment)

Nationally, the AFL-CIO is equally hesitant in emerging from the shadow of Democratic party platform. This results in naive and frightfully half-baked positions, notably: Made in USA. Pity for the working man. Good Jobs Now. The recent "Banks are Bad" has somewhat more potential, but is largely a hand-me-down from the right; after all, most unions were begging for the "bail-out."

AFL-CIO took a relatively weak stance in the spending of the "stimulus," mostly just happy that consumer demand was being lifted.

Change to Win is somewhat bolder, as it represents the unions which are either independent of the Democrats, or in the sectors of the economy which are less vulnerable to trade policy. Andy Stern, for example, was a strong supporter of health care reform, and got at least some of the measure he asked for in the health care bill- mostly those which guaranteed continued growth of health-care as a sector.

More recently, both camps have usefully contributed to the push for extending unemployment benefits, and for federal monies for local governments to prevent cutbacks on their members (teachers, firemen, police, gov't employees).


>>2. What's your take on the UNITE HERE split and SEIU's intervention in it? What was the reason for the conflict in the first place?

The split in Unite-Here is basically an echo of the split in the AFL-CIO, and a re-negotiation of its terms. SEIU, HERE, UNITE and the UFCW were the four unions catalytic to the original split.

The four unions have worked together closely (at least in US Labor terms) since 2003, when Stern, Wilhelm, and Raynor offered support to the UFCW on a key strike. Stern proposed to "join forces" and incorporate UNITE and HERE directly into SEIU (he probably made the same offer to the UFCW, too). So the notion of SEIU "intervening" is sort of redundant.

Neither Raynor (UNITE) or Wilhelm (HERE) wanted to be swallowed by Stern. It seemed that a tactical alliance could have worked- maybe it would have with more deft leadership or better advice- but it didn't. The seperation, though it was messy, was ultimately reasonable balanced and more-or-less just. HERE, roughly intact (though now called "Unite Here")- went back to the AFL-CIO; and UNITE's assets, members, and Bank went to SEIU, minus lawyers' fees and a "settlement" check. This is essentially the framework that UFCW president Hansen proposed in early 2009 (and Wilhelm rejected), with a larger settlement for HERE.



>>3. What's the relationship between CTW and AFL-CIO right now? (You said CTW is pretty defunct.. How much so?)

In the wake of the split, CtW seems largely a spent force. The immediate cause of the split was the resistance of unions to the idea that unions should merge into a few large unions. The UNITE-HERE merger was supposed to be the example, which doesn't exactly recommend the formula!

More broadly, the split was based on the idea that "growth-oriented" unions would be able to organize more effectively without the drag of non-growth-oriented unions. I think that this idea, too, is faulty.

Moreover, Stern has stepped down. Obama has called for "reunification" of the labor movement, and it seems so it shall be.( see http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/08/us/08labor.html?ref=us ) [since I wrote this letter, UFCW's Hansen has become the new president of CtW- whether or not the coalition has any new life is dependent on him, and he seems to be a conciliator]

The split, at the end of the day, looks more a disintegration, a symptom of the weakness of the AFL-CIO and its inability to satisfy the divergent interest groups in the federation.

The first, the "protective" unions- public sector unions most of all, but also the downfallen manufacturing unions- allied around the democratic party's conservative wing. These unions were the stable core of the AFL-CIO sponsoring job preservation, health care, & pensions.

Second are the pragmatic "business" unions- the Teamsters, the Laborers, and the Carpenters (the Gompers-style "dinosaurs" that Fletcher describes). They had no particular affiliation to the democratic party, resented the political spending and the legacy costs of the AFL-CIO apparatus; the theatrics of a "split" were a convenient way out of the AFL-CIO and its high per capitas (as well as a way for the venerable federation to save face).

The third group was the catalytic force mentioned before, united under the banner of "service workers' unionism"- SEIU, UNITE, UFCW, and HERE- were not fearful that their jobs were "going overseas," indeed, their industries were growing, and took a more militant attitude, wanting to fulfil what they saw as promising opportunities for their unions to gain strength. A coordinated plan- in many ways a continuation of the strategies of the "New Voice" coalition- seemed wise given the dificulties involved in new organizing against the obstinate "union-free" environment in the U.S.

This was the stage for Sterns proposed mega-merger, and ultimately the wing of the CTW coalition the left would pin its hopes on.

"Services," however, is a term that hides more than it reveals however, and each of the "catalytic" unions also had significant portions in the other camps- particularly HERE, whose jurisdiction in hotels places it more naturally in the pragmatic camp, SEIU, which has elements of pragmatic unionism in its janatorial contracts, and protective unionsim in the form of healthcare and public worker contracts.

A final point about the CtW alliance, the broad consensus (even within the Sweeny administration) of "the need for new strategies." There was also a feeling (which grew quickly after Bush's re-election) that the unions needed an independent political strategy.


>>4. I think Trumka asked Obama about the EFCA recently and he said he's still think about it... What state is it in? Is it completely dead?


I think EFCA was dead on arrival. I never believed it stood a chance in hell of passing. Such bills are occasionially passed, but not under conditions like this.


Reform of the Taft-Hartley laws has been a goal of our movement every generation since they passed. Our movement in the U.S. is still too underdeveloped, to weak, and too traumatized.

The left is so scared of being called "socialist" that the Right is the only one talking about socialism at all!


>> 4. What were unions’ main goals for and main work at the US Social Forum? What do you think came out of the social forum?

Labor didn't have a caucus at the Social Forum- although one was proposed and seemed for a while like it would materialize. A product of poor organization and insufficient commitment. At "Netroots", there was a labor caucus, but I'm not sure they had much in the way of results.


>>> 5. Are there any other local struggles that you think I should highlight? I just talked to someone who works at UNITE HERE international as a research who said the campaign against the HYATT is worth looking at. Have any feelings about it?

The Hyatt struggle is legit. The LA Federation of Labor has gotten its act together (their president has just been placed on the AFL-CIO exec council, which is either the kiss of death or a hopeful development). I like some of the work the RWDSU has been doing in NYC.

In general, the growth of worker centers and immigrant rights groups in the past 10 years speaks to an atmosphere of union and political revivalism. While it is hopeful, and in some places (like LA) has achieved a level of connection with the "official" union movement, there is also strong evidence of the recalcitrance of the established unions, and an unjustified arrogance.