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Friday, 3 October 2014
US: The battle to make a living
Is there a political will to improve the economic
status of working and middle-income families in
the US?
With an American labour movement in tatters,
and strikes now virtually unheard of, thousands
of vulnerable and replaceable workers are
taking to the streets, demanding they be paid a
living wage.
This development - marked most recently in early
September by worker walkouts and street
demonstrations totalling thousands of workers
across the country - is a testament to effective
organising, to be sure. But it is far more than that.
It is a reflection of the desperation of working
people across the US. Minimum and low-wage
jobs don't pay enough for people to survive, but
those are the only jobs an increasing number of
Americans can find.
The US federal minimum wage is now stuck at
$7.25 (many states and localities have higher
minimums). At that level, a full-time job pays
$15,000. The official poverty level for a family of
four - a notoriously inadequate measure - is
approximately $24,000. More than 3 million
hourly workers are paid the minimum wage or
lower; half of them are 25 or older.
The underlying problem is far more pervasive -
and systemic - than the facts on minimum wage
workers show. The core problem is this: Real
wages for most Americans are no higher now
than they were in 1979.
Wealthiest Americans
The gains from the vast majority of economic
growth in the United States over the last 35 years
have accrued to the wealthiest Americans.
Indeed, wage rates have risen at an annual rate
of 1 percent or higher only among the top 5
percent of the population. Between 1979 and
2013, the Economic Policy Institute reports,
productivity in the United States rose 65 percent,
while the wages of nonsupervisory workers rose
by just 8 percent.
Stagnant wages are often attributed to
technological change and the rise of the service
economy. Both of these factors are important
parts of the story of why it is so hard to make a
living in the US today, but, by themselves, they
have little explanatory power. After all, isn't
technological change making the economy more
efficient - and shouldn't this lead to a rise in
wages? And exactly why should service jobs pay
poorly? The financial services sector is the richest
in the country.
To understand why it's becoming so much harder
to make a living in the US, we have to look at
different trends and to one underlying issue: the
allocation of political and economic power.
A multinational corporate-friendly trade policy
has had two devastating effects on working
people in the United States. First, millions of
good-paying manufacturing jobs have left the
United States, with the products factories once
made in the US replaced by imported goods made
by low-paid workers with minimal rights. It is not
unusual for the same company to be selling the
good - just to have simply shifted production
overseas.
Much of the deindustrialisation of the US is traced
to the 1980s, when iconic steel mills in the
Midwest shut down. But deindustrialisation has
been especially severe in the 2000s, with a third
of US manufacturing jobs lost in the first decade
of the millennium. There are some signs of
manufacturing jobs beginning to revitalise in
recent years.
The second effect of corporate globalisation has
been a massive pull-down effect on wages.
Employers point to overseas competition - some
of it real, much of it imagined - to forestall
unionisation efforts and the demand for wage
increases. As Kate Bronfenbrenner, a leading
authority in the field writes, "Not only are
individual workers afraid to ask for significant
wage increases, the spectre of capital mobility
haunts the union organising process for
unorganised workers and collective bargaining
over wages and benefits for workers already in
unions."
Financialisation
Paralleling employers gaining power over their
workers, Wall Street and the financial sector have
gained enormous power relative to the real
economy. Financialisation of the economy has
subjected companies in the real economy to new
pressures to reduce costs - which often translates
into firing workers or lowering wages. In the run-
up to the financial crisis, Wall Street firms
captured almost a third of corporate profits.
Of course, the Wall Street-induced financial crisis
imposed enormous hardship on working people
across the country. Millions lost their homes and
savings. Unemployment spiked and remains high,
especially taking into account those who have
given up looking for work. Households
collectively lost $9.1 trillion in wealth as a
result of the financial crash, and unemployment
remained above 8 percent for the longest period
since the Great Depression.
The US labour market remains very weak, but
except for a short-time in the 1990s when
unemployment was very low, wages have
remained stagnant even with modest
unemployment rates. That's because labour
power is so weak. Unionisation rates have
dramatically declined over the last 40 years,
thanks to unrelenting aggression from employers
and minimal legal protections. Now, well below 10
percent of private employees are members of
unions. If there's a single most important reason
for why it’s so hard to earn a decent living in the
US, it's probably plummeting unionisation.
But, more to the point, all these factors all
intersect. Corporate globalisation weakens
unions; with a strong union movement, the US
would have a different trade policy. Service
economy jobs don't inherently pay poorly - jobs
in unionised grocery stores are well-paying, those
in non-unionised stores typically not.
Political will
If there were political will to improve the
economic status of working and middle-income
families, it would be easy enough to move
forward. The first and easiest place to begin
would be to raise the minimum wage above $10
an hour. Raising the minimum wage is
supported by 70-80 percent of the public. But
Republicans in Congress will not let it move. The
notorious Koch Brothers, responsible for one in
10 political advertisements this election season,
oppose the very existence of the minimum wage,
and a top Koch strategist recently suggested the
minimum wage paves the pathway to
totalitarianism.
The minimum wage would be just the start.
However, there are bipartisan obstacles to more
fundamental measures - measures supported
strongly by the public, but opposed by the
corporate donor class. These include reversing
corporate globalisation, reducing Wall Street's
power and the financialisation of the economy,
making corporations pay more in taxes, and using
deficit spending to spur government investment
in the economy.
So, until public pressure builds sufficiently to
make politicians more responsive to voters than
donors, the action is on the streets. Fast-food
workers are demanding a living wage. Low-wage
workers are demanding their cities and states
jump the minimum wage so that workers can
escape poverty. Companies like McDonald's, Wal-
Mart and others are feeling the heat.
"I'm participating because I'm doing whatever it
takes," one Burger King worker who joined
living wage protests said. "I'm tired of living in
poverty."
Protests by workers in the fast-food and retail
sectors take real courage, because they know
their jobs are at risk. At the same time, those
protests are, for now, about the only hope these
workers have to attain a living wage.
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