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Inscrit le: 27 Sep 2011 Messages: 7915 Localisation: England
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Posté le: Dim Juin 02, 2013 3:57 am Sujet du message: to ease economic anxiety |
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How ,Sportbike leverCNC sport bike parts to ease economic anxiety
Clearly, the expectations of economic security and mobility that were widely shared by Americans in the decades after World War II have vanished,adjustable Lever, replaced by a pervasive economic anxiety. Anxiety, however, won’t change anything. Neither will the majority of analyses of how we got into this fix,Motorcycle lever, nor will most of the (relatively few) recommendations as to how we can get out of it.Consider, for instance, the twin problems of wage stagnation and declining household CNC sport bike parts Brake and Clutch Lever income. According to former private equity banker and Obama administration official Steven Rattner,Sportbike lever, writing in the New York Times, “the lack of wage growth owes much to the continuing effects of globalization, a trend that has benefited the United States as a whole while hurting many workers.” Good for America, apparently,rear sets, but bad for Americans. Besides, he implies, who can do anything about globalization? It’s as inexorable as the sunrise.Not much grounds for anything but more anxiety in that kind of analysis. And there is yet another trade agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, that the Obama administration is currently negotiating behind closed doors with nations whose wage rates are lower than ours. We’ll surely be told that it’s good for us,adjustable Lever, just as we were told during the selling of every other trade agreement that Congress ratified during the past two decades of wage stagnation.One way to move from anxiety to action might be to demand that the administration come up with projections of the proposed accord’s effect on domestic wages. If,billet mirror, as Rattner suggests and all evidence points to, globalization has led to a “lack of wage growth,CNC sport bike parts,” just why is our government continuing to promote such agreements? The terms on which we globalize — who benefits, who gets clobbered — aren’t as inexorable as racing lever the sunrise. The public might just alert Congress that it expects its representatives to look out for its interests.Most American workers,Brake and Clutch Lever, however, are not in competition with their counterparts in Mexico and China — not if they work at Wal-Mart or McDonald’s, on construction sites, at college campuses or behind the wheel of a truck. The downward pressure that globalization exerts on wages spills over to other sectors, but it’s no more than a secondary cause for pervasive income stagnation.The primary cause is that,Motorcycle Superstore,Motorcycle lever, with collective bargaining nearly as dead as the dodo (just 6.6 percent of private-sector workers belong to unions),handle lever, there is no pressure on American employers to share their productivity gains with their workers in the form of higher wages. But there’s considerable pressure to boost payouts to stockholders. The age of shareholder capitalism, most notably proclaim billet mirror ed by General Electric CEO Jack Welch in the early years of the Reagan presidency (while Welch was furiously off-shoring much of GE’s manufacturing),sport bike accessories, has, like the age of globalization, also coincided with the age of wage stagnat adjustable Lever ion,bar end mirror. But moving from a shareholder capitalism that has diminished most Americans’ share of the national pie to a stakeho Motorcycle lever lder capitalism that distributes a grea bar end mirror ter share of company revenue to the workers who produce it will require major changes to our political economy. It will require our remaining unions to organize millions of workers whom they won’t enroll as members but who can nonetheless agitate for better pay and working conditions. It will require Congress,Motorcycle Superstore,rear sets, state legislatures and city councils to set the kind of wage standards — and not just minimum-wage standards — that workers once were able to win for themselves before the advent of shareholder capitalism. It will require the rebirth of the kind of economic left in the United States that gave us the New Deal and the four ensuing decades of broadly shared prosperity. Tall orders all, but the alternative is just more anxiety, and all its attendant pathologies.Read more from Harold Meyerson’s archive or follow him on Twitter. Read more:Harold Meyerson: It’s not the left that’s changed, it’s the economyRo Khanna: Five myth handle lever s about manufacturing jobsRobert Shapiro: Weak job creation is the new normalRobert Samuelson: Why job creation is so hardMatt Miller: Raise the minimum wage |
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