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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

America Out of Work

By Marie Cocco, Washington Post Writers Group. Posted November 27, 2008.


Unemployment is soaring and it may be March before we feel the first dollar of an Obama recovery plan.
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WASHINGTON -- There will be no freedom from want. The only thing we might now hope for is freedom from fear. Even that is a distant state of mind.

It is not just the wild fluctuations in the stock market, the water-cooler jokes about retirement accounts that are now 201(k)s. It is the incomprehensible dithering of our current president through his lame-duck period, his bizarre refusal to give approval to any economic package that aided anyone or anything that is not a big bank or a Wall Street financial institution.

This delay may well be the scariest development of these frightening times.

What are the reasons for President George W. Bush to have blocked the post-election congressional effort to make a down payment on an anti-recession program aimed at job-creation and sending money to the squeezed states, which must balance their budgets while struggling with ever-rising demand for basic services such as Medicaid and what remains of the program we used to call welfare? Bush has argued, at various times in the past few weeks, either that such a package isn't really necessary or that it might be possible if it were tied to a long-term trade deal with Colombia. The reasoning tortures the mind.

Besides inheriting an economic crisis of historic proportions, President-elect Barack Obama must make up for the squandered time. But at the earliest, it is likely to be at least February or March before the first dollar of an Obama recovery plan is felt.

This is a national disgrace.

Consider, for example, that one of the leading indicators of poverty -- a rise in the number of people eligible for food stamps -- climbed 10 percent between August 2007 and August 2008. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, which studies the impact of federal policy on the poor and working class, one in five children already receives food stamps, a rate that is comparable to the recessions of the early 1980s and the 1990s. Advocates for the poor are expecting that a record number of Americans will be receiving food stamps once new numbers are tallied over the coming weeks.

And we aren't deep into this recession yet. Economists believe that unemployment will climb to 8 percent or even 9 percent next year.

As it happens, right around the time we became politically enamored of de-regulating whole industries -- and so prepared the ground for the current economic morass -- we also became politically obsessed with shrinking the social safety net. It was too generous, the thinking went, and had to be made less so to encourage work and discourage dependency.

We are entering a recession the likes of which we haven't seen in about three decades or perhaps longer. Since the last time the economy fared so poorly, changes in the unemployment compensation system, coupled with a transformation of the labor force to include vastly more part-time and low-wage workers, have left a majority of workers unprotected by this basic benefit. "Unemployment benefits cover a smaller set of workers than they did in the late 1970s and early 1980s," says Sharon Parrott, director of welfare reform and income support research at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Fewer than 40 percent of unemployed workers now are eligible for benefits.

And we haven't yet tested -- not on this scale anyway -- what really happens to the welfare-to-work system when there is no work.

Welfare revision was a signature cause of the 1990s, a centerpiece of President Bill Clinton's drive to remake the Democratic Party's image and a relentless demand of congressional Republicans determined to dry up what they considered wasteful social spending. Basic cash assistance to the poorest families has shrunk substantially since the 1970s and 1980s. In most states, adults who have no children and are not disabled are ineligible for any aid. Single mothers who may have lost their jobs now have time limits on the number of months they can receive public assistance. To cope, Parrott says, "they'll double up, they'll live with friends, they'll move from house to house, which is very bad for kids."

We have lavished hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars on the financial masterminds whose collective genius has brought us these desperate times. Some of those taxes were paid by the now-unemployed workers who don't qualify for benefits. Having socialized the financial system, there is no excuse now for failing to repair the social safety net.

Marie Cocco's e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.

(c) 2008, Washington Post Writers Group

 


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See more stories tagged with: work, economy, unemployment, financial crisis, economic meltdown

Marie Cocco is a prize-winning syndicated columnist on political and cultural topics for The Washington Post Writers Group. She is a frequent commentator on national TV and radio shows.

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Reduce work hours and hire more people.
Posted by: aouie01 on Nov 27, 2008 1:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cities that are planning on reducing their workforce should be made to seriously consider the following alternative.

Rather than harm a few greatly, they should spread the pain (and joy for some who would be glad to have fewer work hours doing something they do not enjoy) more evenly. e.g. Instead of Los Angeles reducing most of the workforce by 3%, they should reduce work hours to 30 for all those with more work hours, and hire more people to fill in for the remaining workload. (May have to cut hourly rate a little for new hires to account for health care and other overheads per employee.)

A further implementation of the above concept would be to tax individuals for every hour worked beyond 30 hours for others (as opposed to being self-employed) at a high rate (say 50%), and use the funds to make sure those having their access to resources made more difficult by the current economic forces are given the opportunity to be productive towards the functioning of societies. Hours worked for a person's own business will not be taxed at the high rate, thus encouraging entrepreneurship and favoring smaller local businesses.

The rules should (be left permanently on to encourage people to run their own businesses or) have a criteria based sunset clause such as when those without any means to have access to resources (cut off financially) drops to below a very low amount (say 0.5% of the population).

While the above would make a lot of sense, most people tend to be self-centered and may not favor the idea, and will be too busy looking to hold the president or corporations almost solely responsible for the misery of others whose access to resources are greatly reduced by the economic restructuring. Hope they will be swayed to consider the plan at least to feel relatively secure that they won't have their access to resources hindered greatly (i.e. not having to worry about "losing jobs").

This idea may seem shocking to some who work 50 to 60 hours just to make ends meet, but as long as there are enough resources (food and shelter), we should be able to ensure that they get at least the bare minimums. Don't forget that when unemployment is high, those who work so many hours contribute to others being cut off from the money flow which cuts off their access to resources greatly in our current economic system.

Sincerely,
Aouie

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Tattletale Brigades and Taxes on Breathing Will Not Rejuvenate Anything
Posted by: salt-of-the-earth on Nov 27, 2008 3:19 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama is just Bush on steroids.

Choose your poison -- the Nazi Neocons or the Marxist Communist Neocons. Either way we get the New World Order, tyranny, war, and death to almost everyone on the planet.

When Obama starts hiring his millions of government goons to come and eat out our substance, to run our lives, we will regret the day we ever saw his face. For a picture of the future, remember the film "Killing Fields" -- the scenes of the young Khmer Rouge with their submachine guns rounding up the populace for the forced marchs to the reeducation centers.

Everybody must be the same, and those who think outside the box will not be tolerated (ie allowed to live).

Obama is the one who pushed through the Bankster heist and he will finish the job for his masters to destroy America. It's all about bringing in the New World Order, and Obama is their tool, cool as a cucumber, not the least concerned about the many lawsuits against him for refusing to document his name and citizenship. Obama knows his masters will take care of all that stuff for him, assassinate Supreme Court justices if need be, because Obama is their man, as long as he does what he's told.

Obama will do what he is told and do it gladly because Obama is ONE OF THEM. (ie Illuminati, Luciferians, international crime syndicate)

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» BAM. Posted by: Coleman
Obama on road to turning US into politically correct hell hole
Posted by: Bobsays on Nov 27, 2008 5:33 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has started with the vetting procedures for jobs in the administration. They want every detail of a person's life, so they can micromanage them. You must never have uttered a bad word, done anything fun, never had a bad job or told a boss to F-off.

That's a sign of what is coming. You might get help, but only - just like with the Salvation Army - you sign up for the bigger agenda. Get ready to be micromanaged.

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» You are kidding, right? Posted by: CatDad
Wow, most of the posts are from sick fantasists
Posted by: rancespergl on Nov 27, 2008 8:32 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm glad we can look forward to hysteria from low i.q. internet users.

Let's take all their money and send them to that "special" school in "northern" Virginia.

If you know what I mean, "comrades".

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To the pitchforks and torches!!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Nov 27, 2008 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the article:
"We have lavished hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars on the financial masterminds whose collective genius has brought us these desperate times. Some of those taxes were paid by the now-unemployed workers who don't qualify for benefits. Having socialized the financial system, there is no excuse now for failing to repair the social safety net."
. . . . .

There is also no excuse for failing to prosecute those criminal geniuses for fraud and confiscating their ill-gotten gains to be returned to those they stole from. Granted, it might be ten cents- or even one cent on the dollar, but it would at least be something. This could be done under existing laws covering impoundment of criminal spoils.

I say, impoverish and imprison these bastards and let them feel what it's like to live like the rest of us have to live

Don't hold your breath, though, for this to happen; the Good Ol' Boys Club in the Military-Industrial-Media Complex is more solid (and dishonest) than ever, so no one there will be inclined to prosecute their aristocratic BFFL's any time soon.

Are we heading for a repeat of France under Louis XVI and Miss Antoinette? Maybe – and maybe it feels good to remember what happened to them ...

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Playing politics with American's Lives...
Posted by: QuestionAuthority on Nov 27, 2008 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dubya is just playing politics. He's burrowing in his "agents of mass destruction" in the Federal bureaucracy to fight the Democratic Administration, passing bales of toxic legislation, and trying his best to sabotage the Democrats. He and the neocons are going to to do everything possible to try to make Obama fail, so they can attempt to portray him as a failure in the next election cycle.

Of course, love of country and concern for his fellow citizens plays no part in this - because I am convinced that he is a true sociopath. He really doesn't feel other's pain or connect his actions to their suffering. To him and his cronies, it's all about wealth and power (two aspects of the same thing in our society), and who wields it.

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When America can get out of its self-deluded "I can fly like Peter Pan" cultural mentality,
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 27, 2008 6:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
then there'll be room for improvement. Until then, I'm sticking to ECONOMIC VIGILANTE-ISM since that helped my wife and I survive the last 8 years.

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Americans out of work and no bail-out for them
Posted by: masthead on Nov 27, 2008 10:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No doubt Bush made a mess the last 8 years at the expense of the working stiff . Now when the time has come to feed the poor, create work programs, what does our government do? They lend our money to bail out the wall street hustlers, and worse, to the banks who turn around and increase the interest on our credit cards to 19.5 per cent. They got our money but the bastards are not letting us benefit from it. These bankers should be shot and their miserable corpses left to the buzzards. The military corporate complex will still continue under Obama whose administration will be filled with Clintonites. And here I thought Hillary had lost the election.

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I can Tell You What Happens When Low-Paying Jobs With No Benefits is All that there is
Posted by: joeocho88 on Nov 29, 2008 4:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I AM YOUR TOUR GUIDE TO THE NEW AMERICAN JOBS but to me it is just the same old stuff, different day.

I was wondering how long it was going to take the American public to catch up with me and the Texas Labor policy!

You go hungry A LOT, you do without A LOT, including the utilities that you had a home, And you are AFRAID a lot and you pray a lot but you have the sickening feeling that nobody is listening or gives a damn, starting with those out of touch elites in Washington,DC including the Deity of your choice.Sometimes you wonder if you have died and gone to hell. You are scared a lot.Sometimes you cry...

You sure won't get any medical care, in part, because the undocumented workers will crowd you out of medical facilities even stab you like they try to crowd you out of the soup kitchens and overnight homeless shelters.

Just some of the stuff you can learn to expect because you did not stand up for the American worker when the jobs began to vanish. That stuff has a domino effect you know and NOW it is YOUR turn! Here in POVERTY,FEAR and PAIN with me...

There is no requirement in Texas to pay the workers more than minimum wage and certainly NO affordable health and dental insurance, retirement,And if they DO make these claims in their job ads, it will ultimately benefit them and YOU, the worker who makes money for them, will never see a dime of it. Some jobs do not get time and a half overtime anymore thanks to Clinton and Bush!

There is a truism an African American man told me once:"Honey, it ain't just about making the big money, it is how long you stay around to make the big money."

I always had to buy a car with the possibility that my job could quite before the payments did.

Rent was best simplified so you could move out fast if you were suddenly terminated without notice because that is LEGAL here in Texas
--usually because a family member of a friend or a friend of a friend needed your job.
Nepotism is a way of doing business here.

Who your family knows often means the difference between dire poverty and a job that pays enough that you can even save some money ahead. No family, minimum wage, paycheck skimming Hades jobs for you.

Employers here do NOT want you knowing about Federal Wages and Hours or OSHA and certainly NOT the fact that they can KEEP the money they take out of your check for Social Security benefits unless you catch them at it and you have five years after terminating employment to do so.

Workers compensation is a joke because employers will lie to prevent you from getting what you deserve and thanks to TORT REFORM, you won't get it so don't risk getting hurt in your minimum wage job or you will be sleeping under the bridge...

Unemployment insurance payment when you are out of work is a joke too. Employers will lie about that too to keep you from getting it.

You can get BLACKISTED which means INELIGIBLE FOR REHIRE and SLANDERED AND LIBELED SECRETLY with any future employer here and have NO legal recourse. Can YOU afford an employment attorney on MINIMUM WAGE and now you aren't working at all???

And when you have put in so much overtime that you can barely see just so you can eat, pay rent, liability insurance, car payment... and have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING LEFT and KNOWING THAT YOU WILL HAVE NOTHING BUT SOCIAL SECURITY FOR YOUR RETIREMENT FUTURE AND THERE'S NOTHING YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT!

Nice to be trendy,isn't it.
Welcome to HELL!

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2009 50% worse than 2008
Posted by: floridahank on Dec 2, 2008 5:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we thought 2008 is cruel, I see 2009 being
50% worse yet. The politicians, Dem, Reps don't have any idea what to do to get out of
this crisis, and Obama is way in over his
head for this kind of world's financial
situation. He's hiring Clinton people for
almost every position -- (that's his change
he preached for the past months?)

Yes.....the auto industry will get its bail-out, and there's more industries next in line
for "their share." Will it be the credit
card people, yelling "Everybody uses credit
cards today...we can't fail...it'll crush
the majority of families who need credit
when they don't have $$$ and we're losing
money for default of payments every day.

How about the health-care industry - hospitals
lose $$$$ every year, and the uninsured
patients keep increasing. Drs. are complaining
the Medicare payments to them are inadquate.

How about the US Postal Service -- that's
a losing organization every year. How much
$$$ will they need soon?

And what is going to be done for the people
losing their homes -- many thousands every
day nationwide -- they need help TODAY!

2009 might be the year of the common-man
revolution if there's not something done
big-time, soon. I'm not optimistic -- but
what can one person do? We certainly can't
throw the crooks out of office yet-- we just
elected them!

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