Thursday, April 28, 2011

Ronald McDonald Saves the U.S. Economy with McJobs


from yahoo.comJc Torpey– Wed Apr 20, 6:03 pm ET

     COMMENTARY | Things were really getting bad with the economy for a while, considering the iPad and iPad 2 are killing the publishing and retail industry, putting even more people out of jobs, says Jessie Jackson Jr., and he claims it is because the devices are manufactured in China. Then, the S&P warned that if something is not done soon to reverse the deficit, it might be forced to downgrade the nation's debt rating. Times were tough and, despite the government's best efforts to restart the economy, drive employment, and pull America out of the recession, jobs continue to be nonexistent.
     We don't have to worry anymore, though, since Ronald McDonald announced proudly that he and his McDonald's franchise would put 50,000 Americans to work and America would be saved. This is a sad commentary on the state of the U.S. economy; McDonald's announced its April 19 "National Hiring Day," saying that the company wants 50,000 new employees.
     McDonald's is making a big point, saying more than 75 percent of current management started as store workers, making this a "career opportunity." McDonald's might have been a career opportunity when someone from Flint, Michigan, filled out an application after the General Motors layoffs in 1999, but it won't help now.

For more...

Monday, April 25, 2011

Economists 'shocked' by jobs-to-China report


Posted: April 13, 2011
8:30 pm Eastern
By Ian Fletcher
© 2011 WorldNetDaily

      There's a nice new academic paper just out by an MIT economist and his friends that gives some hard data to back up everyone's suspicion that the U.S. is losing jobs to China. It's titled "The China Syndrome: Local Labor Market Effects of Import Competition in the United States," by David Autor.
     The bottom line here probably won't be all that surprising to most ordinary Americans, though it will annoy the living daylights out of most academic economists and our political establishment. In the authors' own words:
Our study suggests that the rapid increase in U.S. imports of Chinese goods during the past two decades has had a substantial impact on employment and household incomes, benefits program enrollments, and transfer payments in local labor markets exposed to increased import competition. These effects extend far outside the manufacturing sector, and they imply substantial changes in worker and household welfare.

     In ordinary language, we're getting ripped off, folks. "Welfare" in this context doesn't mean welfare checks; it is the economists' term for, roughly, "economic well-being." And the "substantial changes" mentioned are not for the better.
     One key discovery of this study is hard data to back up the idea, which I have personally argued for years, that free trade is not a small-government policy. In reality, free trade tends to expand government, by increasing the demand for social services and transfer payments (unemployment, welfare etc.) needed to mitigate its social costs. As the authors put it:

Growing import exposure spurs a substantial increase in transfer payments to individuals and households in the form of unemployment insurance benefits, disability benefits, income support payments, and in-kind medical benefits.
     Quite. But don't think the butcher's bill is paid for by all this welfare-state generosity. The authors conclude that all this government assistance doesn't cover the harm done by free trade:
Nevertheless, transfers fall far short of offsetting the large decline in average household incomes found in local labor markets that are most heavily exposed to China trade.
     Now here's the real kicker: the authors calculate that the economic efficiency lost due to increased transfer payments is quite likely big enough to cancel out all the supposed gains in economic efficiency due to trade with China!
Our estimates imply that the losses in economic efficiency from trade-induced increases in the usage of public benefits are, in the medium run, of the same order of magnitude as U.S. consumer gains from trade with China.
     In other words, the blithe assumption of conventional economics that "Sure, free trade has its costs, but the benefits are infinitely larger" doesn't hold up. We're either not winning out, or winning only peanuts.

     Finally, for any readers who have been smugly assuming that because they don't personally work in manufacturing, none of this affects them, bad news. The authors report that:

Our analysis finds that exposure to Chinese import competition affects local labor markets along numerous margins beyond its impact on manufacturing employment. In particular, while growing exposure to Chinese imports reduces manufacturing employment in a local labor market, it also triggers a decline in wages that is primarily observed outside of the manufacturing sector. Reductions in both employment and wage levels lead to a steep drop in the average earnings of households. (Emphasis added.)

     So don't think there's anywhere to hide from the China threat.
    
     Make no mistake, people: the case for free trade is inexorably crumbling.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Sen Johnson From WI Wants To Tax Corporations Less That Send Jobs To China


 This is just a note to remind you that just because someone in Congress  says he cares about you and promises to help you doesn't guarantee he really will help you.
-----lee

Published by Mona Allie at 11:07 pm under Solidarity

Sen. Ron Johnson (R- WI) argues against ending the subsidy which allows U.S. Corporations with plants in China to be taxed at a lower rate than if their plant was located in United States.

Johnson went on to argue that instead of killing the subsidy, the U.S. should lower it’s corporate tax rate by 15 percent to be on par with China and not be at a “competitive disadvantage.”
In the video below, Johnson is repeatedly caught off guard by Citizens for Tax Justice’s Director, Bob McIntyres use of facts and logic. Whenever Johnson get’s into trouble, he runs to Koch brother’s hack, Scott Hodges from the Tax Foundation, for some ridiculous, Orwellian explanation of why down is up and ice is fire. 

Corporations are sending jobs overseas that are badly needed here in America. Corporate America is raping our economy while paying less taxes than the average person — some getting enormous returns from the I.R.S. while the working class pays.


Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) today issued the following statement regarding the debate over federal funding for fiscal year 2011:
“The only reason a government shutdown is even possible, is because President Obama and congressional Democrats failed in their responsibility to pass a fiscal year 2011 budget. This budget should have been passed last August, and their failure and lack of leadership is now coming back to haunt us.
“We have been operating under temporary continuing resolutions for the first half of this fiscal year. The current argument is over a couple of billion dollars when this year’s deficit will be close to $1.5 trillion. It’s time to get serious about the fact that we are bankrupting America.
“I encourage all my colleagues – Democrats and Republicans – to stay focused on the issue: restoring fiscal sanity.
“We need to get past this year’s budget, and move onto the more serious discussion of our nation’s long-term fiscal health. Congressman Paul Ryan’s just released FY2012 budget begins that serious discussion. Let’s get to work.”
Bullshit. Ryan’s budget affords nothing to average Americans. It’s solely supportive of the wealthy and it will run us into an economical free fall.
Corporations are taxed less and given every advantage because this tactic is supposed to create jobs — jobs they send overseas and Johnson now wants us to reward them.

As if we needed further proof that the threat of a government shutdown was truly about the economy.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Mass. Solar Company Moving Jobs To China

"...after receiving $58 million in state aid..."

Manufacturing.Net - November 05, 2009

MARLBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) -- A solar panel company is moving some jobs overseas after receiving $58 million in state aid and being touted by Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick as a symbol of the state's economic future.
Evergreen Solar Inc. said Wednesday it is moving panel assembly jobs currently done at a plant in Devens to China next year. The announcement came as the company announced that it lost $167 million in the first nine months of this year.
About half of the 577 full-time and 230 contract employees at the Devens factory are involved in putting the panels together, but the company did not say how many jobs the state would lose.
Ian Bowles, secretary of the state Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, called Evergreen's decision disappointing.

For more...

Saturday, April 16, 2011

IMF Cuts U.S. Growth Forecast on Oil, ‘Lackluster’ Jobs Pace


     Higher oil prices, fewer jobs. That's the way it goes except drill baby drill and more jobs. But will Washington ever listen? Only if the Tea Party keeps the pressure up.
------lee

By Timothy R. Homan
Apr 11, 2011 10:06 AM PT

     The International Monetary Fund lowered its forecast for U.S. growth this year, predicting higher oil prices and the pace of job gains will restrain the recovery.
     The world’s largest economy will expand 2.8 percent this year, down from the 3 percent projected in January, the IMF said today, citing the need to reduce deficits and boost exports. Global gross domestic product will grow 4.4 percent in 2011, matching the previous estimate, according to the Washington-based lender’s World Economic Outlook report.
     Consumer spending, the biggest part of the U.S. economy, faces headwinds from the rising cost of food and gasoline.Federal Reserve officials last month said the expansion is on“firmer footing,” lessening the need to extend a bond purchase program beyond June.
     “If the U.S. is going to do fiscal consolidation of the size that it has to do, then demand has to come from elsewhere,” Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the IMF, said today at a news conference. “It has to come from net exports. This just has to happen for the U.S. to be able to sustain growth.”
     The economy grew 2.9 percent last year, the most since 2005, according to figures from the Commerce Department. U.S. GDP will expand 2.9 percent this year and 3.1 percent in 2012, according to the median estimate of about 70 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News from April 1 to April 7. 


For complete article

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

New Jersey’s Chris Christie—Bad As Bush On Immigration


 Sorry folks, this is no joke.  We do not need anymore quislings in the war on illegal immigration.
  -----lee


April 01, 2011

     With a meager slate of Republican candidates less than 11 months before the Iowa Caucuses, Sen. Jim DeMint fueled speculation on Saturday when he told reporters “I’m not going to mention any more names but I think there are a number of names bubbling around, particularly governors who have realized that doing basic common sense things tends to inspire Americans today.”
     DeMint had previously named governors Rick Scott of FloridaScott Walker of Wisconsin, and Chris Christie of New Jersey in particular as the “governors who are inspiring now.” [Late entrants into the 2012 field?, by Chris Cillizza, Washington Post, March 29, 2011] Walker and Scott both have reasonably strong records on immigration, but are not widely considered to be serious candidates for president. That’s causing even more to suspect that Christie well be persuaded to run, despite his protestations.
      This speculation was heightened by a Zogby Poll last week that showed Republican viewers saw him as the candidate most likely defeat Obama.
     Many hardcore conservatives, such as Ann Coulter, have already called for Christie to run.
     This is cause for extreme alarm for immigration patriots. Whatever his other strengths, Chris Christie’s record on immigration is absolutely horrendous. It is no accident that Christie supported the disastrous George W. Bush in 2000.. He is an unmistakable, unreconstructed Bushbot. Of nine potential GOP candidates graded by NumbersUSA, Christie is in dead last with an F grade.
      Of course, Chris Christie’s conservative support comes because of his budget cutting rather than his immigration stance. He inherited over ten billion dollars and debt and then cut 2.2 billion dollars of projected spending off the annual budget his first year in office. In doing so, he had to fight the much-feared public sector unions. He stood his ground.
     This is all well and good. But according to the Federation for American Immigration Reform, New Jersey's state and local governments spend many hundreds of millions on illegals, who pay, when they pay at all, half of one percent of all the taxes in the state. FAIR estimates the shortfall at 1.6 billion, which is close to the amount of money Christie saved by fighting the budget deficit.
     In other words, the fiscal conservatism shown in  Christie’s much heralded budget cuts is  cancelled out by his tolerance of illegal immigration to the state.
     The same would be true of a "fiscally conservative" President Christie—if he achieved an amnesty, he might eventually cost the country more than President Bush did, and no one ever called him a fiscal conservative.
     New Jersey has long been one of the states most impacted by legal and illegal immigration. Back in 1997, the National Research Council's New Americans report concluded the total immigrant presence was costing New Jersey taxpayers some $232 per family a year—and that was without counting transfer payments. (The cost in California was over $1,100 a year).
     New Jersey is particularly attractive to illegal aliens. Several municipalities, including the state’s two biggest cities, Newark and Jersey City, and its capital Trenton, have sanctuary policies.
     The 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Control Act both outlawed sanctuary cities and enabled states and localities to enter into 287(g) agreements to cooperate with federal immigration authorities. Accordingly, in 2007, the Democratic Mayor of Morristown, NJ Don Cresitello appealed to then US Attorney Chris      Christie for the town to enter into a 287(g) program. Morristown had been overrun with illegal aliens including gang members. One of these illegal aliens killed a ten year old boy after being twice arrested for crimes involving knives and released without being reported to immigration authorities. 
     Far from taking the hardcore Joe Arpaio stance, Cresitello told NJ Star-Ledger columnist Paul Mulshine that “We’re not going to go after jay walkers,” but that he wanted to be able to deal with the MS 13 led drug and prostitution rings. [Morristown’s mayor was right on immigration, by  Paul Mulshine, August 14, 2007]
     In turn, Christie accused Cresitello of “hyperbole and grandstanding.” To this day, Christie still refers to him as a “demagogue” on immigration.
     In 2008, Christie told a church group "Being in this country without proper documentation is not a crime…The whole phrase of 'illegal immigrant' connotes that the person, by just being here, is committing a crime…Don't let people make you believe that that's a crime that the U.S. Attorney's Office should be doing something about. It is not." [Christie at church forum: Illegal immigrants aren't criminals, by Julie O'Connor, Star-Ledger, April 28, 2010]
     Bunk. While illegal presence in itself is technically not a criminal violation, the vast majority of illegal aliens here are guilty of committing the criminal violation of illegal entry.
     Additionally, none of this precludes the US attorney from working with ICE to ensure that criminal illegal aliens are deported. (In 2009, the ICE entered into a 287(g) agreement with Morristown—putting Christie firmly to the left of the Obama administration on immigration enforcement.)
     As governor Christie has done nothing to promote E-Verify, end sanctuary cities, or enter in 287(g) agreements.
     Given this atrocious record, it is no surprise that he came out against Arizona’s SB 1070, stating [Gov. Chris Christie calls for Republican Party rebranding, by Maggie Haberman and Ben Smith, Politico, June 30, 2010]
     So guess what Christie’s “federal fix” is?

Monday, April 11, 2011

Outsourcing Caused State Deficits, Not The Unions

Excellent article, but makes common mistake of blaming the problem solely on Republicans and conservatives.  Remember, Obama promised to renegotiate NAFTA, but has made no steps in that direction.---rng

An interesting solution to a very pressing problem.-------lee

from politicususa.com
March 22, 2011

The American population is beginning to awaken to the harm corporations have done to the American worker by shipping our jobs to low wage countries like China and India. The outsourcing of American manufacturing has put a damper on our state budgets. The budget deficits are not caused by unions and their pay packages as the conservatives want you to believe, it is simply caused by lack of jobs. Every time a factory closes, it reduces revenue going to the state, and ultimately causes deficits. In the last ten years 2001-2011 the United States has lost 58,000 factories.
1. The U.S. lost at least $245 billion in manufacturing wages in the last decade due to 5.5 million lost manufacturing jobs. That doesn’t even include the “ripple effect” through other sectors.
2. Ending China’s currency manipulation would create more than 1 million jobs, add to economic growth, and reduce the budget deficit by $500 billion over the next six years. 
3. If California had held its share of manufacturing jobs from 2000-2007, its state budget would be in balance.
Unfortunately there are those who still adhere and believe the conservative free trade mantra is good for everyone. The Wall Street Journal editorial board sides with the World trade Organization and Communist China over American businesses and workers. In the editorial WSJ states;
“Amid all the bad news in the U.S.-China trading relationship, a recent World Trade Organization ruling comes as a breath of fresh air. An appellate panel in Geneva has sent Washington back to the drawing board with regard to a particularly unfair bit of trade “enforcement.”
     Apart from the Wall Street Journal’s applauding of the decision of the globalists, many manufacturers are looking to come back to the United States due to rising logistics and transport costs. In a report by Accenture, 61% of manufacturing executives surveyed said they were considering moving their supply to the demand market in which was the ultimate destination.
     “But now that oil and transportation prices have gone up, productivity gains are not as big as they were, and there are issues around risk in supply chains, companies are starting to go where the customers are, instead of where the raw materials are.” -Matt Reilly, Accenture’s managing director of process and innovation performance. 
      Once these factories come back to the United States, the deficits will begin to disappear. People will begin to go back to work and the attack on unions by the conservatives would be seen as an attack on middle class America and not about deficits or spending at all.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

National Data, By Edwin S. Rubenstein

April 4, 2011 By Edwin S. Rubenstein

March Jobs: Displacement Resumes—Americans Now Driven From Labor Force Completely

     According to the Payroll Survey, payrolls increased by 216,000 in March, exceeding the consensus forecast. At 8.8%, the unemployment rate is the lowest since March 2009 and a full percentage point below where it was last November. The parallel Household Survey, which has regularly been more optimistic, probably because it picks up illegal immigrant employment, showed as usual somewhat lower unemployment.
     The Household Survey also contains ethnicity data. Hispanics are disproportionately foreign-born, so they are a convenient (if conservative) proxy  for immigrant displacement of American-born workers. Back in 2004, when we unveiled VDAWDI, data on foreign-born workers was only published annually.
     Displacement been dramatic and it’s continuing. Thus Hispanics garnered most of last month’s Household Survey job growth. In March 2011:
  • Total employment: rose 291,000 (+0.21 percent)
  • Hispanic employment: rose 193,000 (0.97 percent)
  • Non-Hispanic employment: rose 98,000 (+0.08 percent)
     Accordingly, VDARE.COM’s American Worker Displacement Index (VDAWDI) spiked to 126.7 in March from the 125.6 reading reached in January.


Since the official end of the recession in June 2009 non-Hispanics have lost 670,000 jobs while Hispanics have gained 496,000 positions.
  • For every 1,000 Hispanics employed in June 2009 there were 1,025 employed in March 2011.
  • For every 1,000 non-Hispanics employed in June 2009 there were 994 employed in March 2011.
But there is a dark side to lower unemployment rates. While the unemployed share of U.S. labor force has declined, the labor force itself has also declined. It has shrunk steadily over the past few years, to a point where just 64.2% of adults are either in the work force or looking for a job. That is the lowest labor participation rate in a quarter-century. [Looking Ahead to the Jobs Report, By Michael Powell, New York Times, March 31, 2011]
Workers leave the labor force when they lose confidence in their ability to find gainful employment. They enter the labor force when job prospects appear to brighten.
Early in 2010, the Federal government mysteriously did begin publishing monthly foreign-born employment data—but not in a seasonally-adjusted format, making month to month comparisons difficult. But this new data does leave little doubt about what is happening to native-born and immigrant labor forces:

Employment Status by Nativity, March 2010-March 2011
(numbers in 1000s; not seasonally adjusted)
Mar-10
Mar-11
Change
% Change
Foreign born, 16 years and older
Civilian population
34,991
35,996
1,005
2.9%
Civilian labor force
23,855
24,034
179
0.8%
Employed
21,239
21,728
489
2.3%
Employment/population ratio
60.7
60.4
-0.3
-0.5%
Unemployment rate (%)
11.0
9.6
-1.4
-12.7%
Not in labor force
11,136
11,961
825
7.4%
Native born, 16 years and older
Civilian population
202,168
203,004
836
0.4%
Civilian labor force
129,805
128,988
-817
-0.6%
Employed
116,743
117,234
491
0.4%
Employment/population ratio
64.2
63.5
-0.7
-1.1%
Unemployment rate (%)
10.1
9.1
-1.0
-9.9%
Not in labor force
72,363
74,016
1,653
2.3%
Source: BLS, "The Employment Situation - March 2011", April 1, 2011. Table A-7

Over the past 12 months:


Monday, April 4, 2011

European employment


     An interesting graph to check out. Might this portend a similiar graph for the states in the US?
-----lee.

Saws to ploughshares
Feb 17th 2011, 16:33 by The Economist online 

ACROSS the European Union, countries are finding it difficult to provide jobs for their citizens. Youth unemployment is a particular concern. But even for those lucky enough to be in work, the pattern of employment varies widely across the continent. Using data from Eurostat, the official EU statistics body, our interactive chart, below, breaks down the employment make-up of each of the 27 EU member states, along with Norway. The ex-communist countries that joined the EU after 2004 lead the industry pack, while work forces in the richer, northern states tilt towards services. Romania and Bulgaria, the two poorest and newest EU members, top the agriculture list.

Friday, April 1, 2011

2011: Jobs Vs The Deficit