Labor Fights Back for Living Wages and Jobs for All
Friday 06 August 2010
by: Shamus Cooke, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
If the U.S. economy eventually recovers and current trends continue, U.S. workers won't be celebrating in the streets. The corporate establishment has made it clear that a "strong recovery" depends on U.S. workers making "great sacrifices" in the areas of wages, health care, pensions, and more ominously, reductions in so-called "entitlement programs" - Social Security, Medicare, and other social services.
These plans have been discussed at length in corporate think tanks for years, and only recently has the mainstream media begun a coordinated attack to convince American workers of the "necessity" of adopting these policies. The New York Times speaks for the corporate establishment as a whole when it writes:
"American workers are overpaid, relative to equally productive employees elsewhere doing the same work [China for example]. If the global economy is to get into balance, that gap must close."
and:
"The recession shows that many workers are paid more than they're worth...The global wage gap has been narrowing [because U.S. workers' wages are shrinking], but recent labor market statistics in the United States suggest the adjustment has not gone far enough."
The New York Times solution? "Both moderate inflation to cut real wages [!] and a further drop in the dollar's real trade-weighted value [monetary inflation to shrink wages] might be acceptable." (November 11, 2009).
The business journal, The Atlantic, agrees:
"So how do we keep wages high in the U.S.? We don't...U.S. workers cannot ultimately continue to have higher wages relative to those in other nations [China, India, etc.] who compete in the same industries."
President Obama speaks less bluntly about the wage subject for political purposes, but he wholeheartedly agrees with the above opinions, especially when he repeatedly said:
"We must lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity, where we consume less [as a result of lower wages] at home and send more exports abroad."
So how will Obama implement his economic vision that inspired Wall Street to give him millions during his Presidential campaign? Much of the work is happening automatically, due to the Great Recession. Bloomberg News reports:
"More than half of U.S. workers were either unemployed or experienced reductions in hours or wages since the recession began in December 2007... The worst economic slump since the 1930s has affected 55 percent of adults in the labor force..." (June 30, 2010).
Employers are exploiting fears of joblessness by demanding workers take wage cuts and reductions or eliminations in benefits. The millions of unemployed are giving corporations an excuse to slash wages, since desperate workers will work for almost anything.
Federal, State and municipal workers are being specifically targeted and blamed - especially teachers - by politicians and corporate groups. The state budget crises and the federal deficit are being used as reasons to demand that public employees take huge reductions in wages and benefits, for those who aren't laid off. Laid off public workers then enter the private workforce where they are to compete with millions of other unemployed workers. Democratic politicians nationwide have recently agreed with Republicans of the "necessity" of state workers to make huge "sacrifices."
Ultimately, years of Wall Street gambling and corporate greed in general have destroyed the U.S. economy, sending jobs overseas to exploit slave wages with the inevitable result of slave wages coming to the U.S. Decades of tax-cuts for the rich combined with overseas wars for profit have undermined the foundation of economic stability - and U.S. workers are being asked to foot the bill.
In the long-term, the U.S. economy will need to be re-structured, meaning that giant corporations cannot continue to dominate the economy for their personal profits. In the short term, U.S. workers will need to organize themselves to fight back. Alliances with Democratic politicians are no longer an option to stave off attacks from corporations, since the attacks are now coming from both sides of the two-party system.
Labor unions must work together with community groups to demand that the rich pay for the recession with higher tax rates. As AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka recently argued before Obama's Deficit Reduction Commission: "We believe it is only fitting to ask Wall Street to pay to rebuild the economy it helped destroy." And he called for higher taxes on the rich in general, pointing out that "effective tax rates applicable to high-income taxpayers (earning over $250,000 in 2009 dollars) reached their lowest level in at least half a century in 2008."
U.S. workers have been forced to bear the brunt of the current economic crisis, though they had no part in causing it. Meanwhile, Wall Street is back to speculative trading and rewarding itself with big bonuses. It is time to turn the tables and start properly rewarding hard-working Americans. U.S. workers have sacrificed enough!
This October 2, 2010, SEIU Local 1199, the NAACP, and other progressive organizations are staging a march on Washington, D.C., calling on the government to create more jobs. The AFL-CIO has recently endorsed this demonstration and is actively building it. Other major endorsers include the California Labor Federation and the American Federation of Teachers. The SEIU president is predicting the march will be "massive - we believe historic." It might prove to be the beginning of organized labor's comeback.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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Yeah, austerity for all!
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 12:07 — brooke (not verified)Yeah, austerity for all! Oh, could you please move your yacht over a tad...it's putting a scratch on mine. Pass the caviar, will ya?
So, after Americans take a pay cut how will they buy all the crap the business leaders want us to buy so we can support them in the style they've always had?
US workers are nothing more
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 13:37 — Edensasp (not verified)US workers are nothing more than open range corporate managed livestock....
It's so apparent that the
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 15:06 — anyfreeman (not verified)It's so apparent that the process of "offshoring" has afforded the owners to set in motion playing entire economies against each other. This evolution of the proven tactic of playing neighborhoods, ethnic groups, or cities into competition for the opportunity to play bitch to the companies.
The resulting open sewer of social, economic and environmental effluent is pointed to as progress, and held up as proof of capitalism's supremacy.
How's that reality denying thingie working out anyway?
As expected, corporate
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 17:17 — Goobagooba (not verified)As expected, corporate press, largely irrelevant as an indicator of life as it is lived, spouts old fogeyisms as it hacks and coughs its way to dusty death.
Just an "if" here: what if we left Walmart. for example, to their slave factories in Singapore, closed the doors to them here, and set up shop all over again without them? Created our own form of currency - like the French, the Germans, the Russians, the Chinese, to mention a few used to do? Charged them admission to the place, and REALLY kept a close eye on them?
Remember 'taxation without representation' as a reason to make a noise that was heard? And I am not a Tea Party person.
Great article about the
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 17:38 — Anonymous (not verified)Great article about the Stimulus Package and it's effect on jobs in the USA:
http://www.hillsdale.edu/news/imprimis.asp
" ... US workers are being
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 18:23 — S.O. Teric (not verified)" ... US workers are being asked to foot the bill." With what? Taxes? You have to have an income to be taxed. That's the long-term insanity of short-term corporate thinking.
Good article! Some
Fri, 08/06/2010 - 22:47 — Skykisser (not verified)Good article!
Some politicians aren't even pretending anymore. I heard Rand Paul say that those on unemployment insurance should be forced off so that they will take jobs at lower wages and that all wages in the nation need to be lower to benefit business.
I recently heard the same think from a Rep. Congressman. And yet they cry about the end of the tax breaks for the rich. How do these people keep getting elected and why do people vote against their own interests?
I'm glad to hear the union saying something at last. It has seemed that they have been awfully quiet for a very long time. That isn't the way of unions, at least not good ones, the kind that fought so hard for so many of the employment benefits we have today.
We need the unions to speak up loud and rally the workers. Even today it can be done.
Suas an aontas!
Up the unions
"We must lay a new
Sat, 08/07/2010 - 16:12 — Kitty Tanaka (not verified)"We must lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity, where we consume less [as a result of lower wages] at home and send more exports abroad."
Oh come on... you can't just insert an entire phrase into someone's statement to change the meaning . That's Sarah Palin level obfuscation and bullsh!t.
Kitty, you're typing
Fri, 08/13/2010 - 14:40 — Frances in California (not verified)Kitty, you're typing yourself as one of those Pretend Liberals with your comment. Inserting phrases in order to change meaning may, indeed be Palinesque bs, but the statement you tried it on isn't. Go back to the Heritage Foundation and cash your check.