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Tuesday May 07, 2024

Poverty wages

By John Buell
June 19, 2021

Ending enhanced unemployment benefits has become the signature economic agenda for the GOP, a party with little else to promote. Unfortunately the largely low-key response of the President on this issue has been disappointing. The failure to mount a vigorous defense of these benefits is bad ethics, bad policy, and bad politics. As for ethics, let us assume for the minute that some workers lie around idle at home while enjoying the extra $300 from the government. Should economic leaders cut off any additional assistance to all workers who currently cannot find any job at all, in order to incentivize the return to the workplace of the few who could?

As the Economic Policy Institute’s David Cooper pointed out: “Nearly all the states cutting UI still have significantly fewer jobs than before the pandemic. Those that are still relying on these programs are likely those that need them most – the people having the hardest time finding suitable work or facing significant constraints on their ability to resume working due to care responsibilities, health concerns, or other factors,” Cooper noted. “Cutting off adequate supports to these workers to try to force them to take whatever job might be available – even if it is low-paying, high-risk, not suited to their skills, or incompatible with their responsibilities at home – is cruel and not in the long-term best interest of any state's workers or businesses.”

This reduction in federal assistance at a time when full recovery is far from certain carries the macro economic risk of stalling recovery and initiating another round of secular stagnation. And who would be blamed? From this point on Joe Biden and the tenuous Democratic majority probably owns the economy. And once the 300 dollar enhanced UI becomes a Blue state benefit it opens up new ways to divide the working class electorate. Democrats, and Biden especially, need to preempt this strategy.

Some workers have had to choose between their safety and their wallets. This choice, however, reflects on the power dynamics of the US workplace and the breadth and depth of the safety net. Business interests maintain their goal is merely to fill the slots with qualified candidates, but in fact they aim to fashion a cadre of workers who will accept, even actively seek, any job, no matter how demeaning or dangerous.

Employers will be the judge as to the risks workers must accept. OSHA – several months late – issued its new Covid 19 workplace safety guidelines. These are binding only for healthcare workers. For other workplaces they are only voluntary. There are many reasons for concern regarding workplace practices of businesses unregulated by government and/or strong rank and file labor union presence. In other words most US businesses.

Excerpted: ‘Generous Unemployment Benefits Are Not the Problem –Poverty Wages are’

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