Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
On Labor Day, American Workers Face a Partisan Divide on Important Issues
Inside-Sources
By InsideSources.com
Published 8 months ago on
September 1, 2023

Share

“In the wealthiest country in the history of the world, tens of millions struggle to put food on the table, find affordable housing, affordable healthcare, affordable prescription drugs, affordable childcare, and affordable educational opportunities.”

Mark Weisbrot Portrait

Mark Weisbrot

Opinion

InsideSources.com

That was Bernie Sanders, in New Hampshire last week, summing up some of the injustices at the source of many Americans’ discontent.

It’s Labor Day 2023. The election cycle will be moving into high gear, and 2024 could determine how much we can fix these problems or whether we move backward toward increasing inequality of income, wealth, and access to education.

Let’s start with some good news: Over the past year, inflation has fallen from 9.1 % to just 3.2%. Many economists, including Nobel Prize winners and others prominent in the profession, would say that the job is about done. The Fed’s goal is still 2% and will likely get there. But it doesn’t really have an argument that 3% is a problem.

In any case, the economists and others who said that inflation would become semi-permanent or accelerate turned out to be wrong. Those of us who saw no self-reinforcing mechanism — as with the wage-price spiral of the 1970s, where wages push up prices, which then lead to higher nominal wages, and so on — were correct. The spike in inflation was overwhelmingly caused by disruptions associated with the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. And for these and other reasons, it turned out that inflation could recede without creating mass unemployment or a recession.

This is good news because the Fed, by raising interest rates, has actually caused most of the recessions we have experienced since World War II.

Full Employment Is a Big Deal

Instead, we have full employment. This is a big deal, not only for the millions of people who would otherwise be unemployed and their children. The historical record shows that when the economy approaches full employment, real (inflation-adjusted) wages increase. They increase more for lower-wage workers than for the higher paid, so inequality — by workers’ income, gender, and race — is reduced. The bargaining power of labor, including unions, increases. This is all happening now and can accelerate with smart economic policies.

When the pandemic recession hit, we had the strongest stimulus ever, running deficits of 14.9% of GDP in 2020 and 12.4% of GDP in 2021. That is how we got back to full employment with record speed. Some 13.4 million jobs have been created since President Biden took office.

But the problems raised by Bernie Sanders — who strongly supports the successful economic policies implemented — remain. And there is a deep partisan divide over how to deal with them.

On the Democratic side, there is an emphasis on full employment and real wage growth. This includes meeting the climate crisis with major investments. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the Inflation Reduction Act, and the CHIPS Act have boosted manufacturing construction, which has doubled since the end of 2021.

Biden Supports Workers’ Rights

The Biden administration has also been supportive of workers’ collective bargaining rights. On Aug. 25, the National Labor Relations Board issued a historic decision that will make it more difficult for employers to violate labor law, as they routinely have done, to deny union recognition and collective bargaining. On Tuesday, the administration announced the first 10 medicines subject to price negotiations with Medicare — a landmark development for lowering drug costs.

Republicans hope to capitalize on the anger generated by the injustices they have by far taken the lead role in creating. We lost 5.8 million manufacturing jobs in the 2000s; the real (inflation-adjusted) median wage has barely grown from 1979-2019 (pre-pandemic); patent monopolies have been strengthened so that they cost Americans more than $400 billion annually just for prescription drugs (note at least five Moderna billionaires were created from COVID); unions now represent 6% of the private-sector workforce, as compared to a peak 35% in the 1950s; Republicans have repeatedly opposed minimum wage increases.

No Republican candidate raised their hand at the Milwaukee debate when asked to do so if they believed that human behavior is causing climate change. Republicans have also been trying to cut non-military spending as much as possible without regard to harm caused. And they have consistently opposed efforts to expand healthcare coverage for Americans.

Hence the partisan divide. This election could change the country and the world for decades to come.

About the Author

Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He is the author of “Failed: What the ‘Experts’ Got Wrong About the Global Economy” (Oxford University Press). He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

Make Your Voice Heard

GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to rreed@gvwire.com for consideration. 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Rapidly Growing Hanford Meat Company Buys Cargill Plant in Fresno

DON'T MISS

Politicians Keep Shifting Blame as California’s Homelessness Crisis Worsens

DON'T MISS

‘Double-Digit’ Improvement, 100-Day Plan: FUSD Interim Chief Her Outlines Her Plans and Goals

DON'T MISS

Armenian President Tours Fresno, Visits William Saroyan Gravesite and Museum

DON'T MISS

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

DON'T MISS

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

DON'T MISS

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

DON'T MISS

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

DON'T MISS

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

DON'T MISS

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

UP NEXT

Politicians Keep Shifting Blame as California’s Homelessness Crisis Worsens

UP NEXT

‘Double-Digit’ Improvement, 100-Day Plan: FUSD Interim Chief Her Outlines Her Plans and Goals

UP NEXT

Armenian President Tours Fresno, Visits William Saroyan Gravesite and Museum

UP NEXT

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

UP NEXT

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

UP NEXT

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

UP NEXT

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

UP NEXT

Your PG&E Bill Could Be Going Up. Vote Is Thursday.

UP NEXT

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

UP NEXT

RFK Jr. Says a Worm Ate Part of His Brain, but He’s Better Now

Armenian President Tours Fresno, Visits William Saroyan Gravesite and Museum

14 hours ago

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

Local Education /

15 hours ago

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

15 hours ago

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

15 hours ago

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

15 hours ago

Benson Honored Again as Bulldogs Head to NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships

16 hours ago

Merced County Leaders Vote to Close Two Fire Stations: ‘We’re Moving into Hard Times’

16 hours ago

Your PG&E Bill Could Be Going Up. Vote Is Thursday.

Business /

16 hours ago

Chris Tomlin, Boots in the Park, and Sandra Bernhard Headline Mother’s Day Weekend Options

17 hours ago

RFK Jr. Says a Worm Ate Part of His Brain, but He’s Better Now

17 hours ago

Rapidly Growing Hanford Meat Company Buys Cargill Plant in Fresno

Hanford-based Central Valley Meat Co. announced another major acquisition for the family-owned company — this one from a national name. On T...

32 mins ago

32 mins ago

Rapidly Growing Hanford Meat Company Buys Cargill Plant in Fresno

2 hours ago

Politicians Keep Shifting Blame as California’s Homelessness Crisis Worsens

12 hours ago

‘Double-Digit’ Improvement, 100-Day Plan: FUSD Interim Chief Her Outlines Her Plans and Goals

14 hours ago

Armenian President Tours Fresno, Visits William Saroyan Gravesite and Museum

Local Education /
15 hours ago

Fresno City College Names Dean Medallion Winners and Commencement Speaker

15 hours ago

Predicting What Dyer Will Say During His State of the City Address

15 hours ago

Teoscar Hernández’s 3 RBIs Propel Dodgers to 7th Straight Win

15 hours ago

Shohei Ohtani’s Former Interpreter Pleads Guilty in Sports Betting Case

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend