Interesting.  Only when the rich get to walk in the shoes of the unemployed to 
they begin to understand the issue.

arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Christoph Reuss
Sent: Friday, February 10, 2006 11:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] The Politics of Unemployment and Uninsurance


http://www.counterpunch.org/rost02092006.html


The Politics of Unemployment and Uninsurance

The New Robber Barons

   By PETER ROST

The U.S. Department of Labor claims we have an unemployment rate of
4.9% [1]. According to "the Economist, however, the true unemployment
rate in the U.S. is over 8%, or 12.6 million Americans [2]. The
difference is due to the fact that the U.S. Government doesn,t count
people as unemployed after six months without a job [3].

I recently joined the ranks of our many unemployed citizens. The
termination of my employment as a Vice President at Pfizer was
subject to intense media interest [4], partly due to the fact that
Pfizer notified the press before they informed me.

Contrary to press reports, however, I have received no severance
payments and for the first time in my life I am eligible for
unemployment benefits; $13,078 [5]. At this annual income level my
family of four would actually fall below the federal poverty level
[6]; quite a difference from a year ago when my salary was over half
a million [7].

I'm also uninsured for the first time in my life and I have to pay
the full price for drugs, just like 67 million other uninsured
Americans [8]. Contrary to many others, however, I do have a choice.
In accordance with federal COBRA law, I was offered the opportunity
to continue my health care coverage for 18 months. There was only one
hitch; I had to pay $15,269 per year to receive this benefit [9]. I
decided that with an income of $13,078 that didn,t make sense.

Clearly the system we have today isn't just broke. The system is
utterly and completely sick and our weakest citizens are paying the
price, every day. And while I have belatedly been forced to share
some of the experiences of our poor, uninsured, and unemployed, my
situation doesn't even start to compare with people with no
resources, no voice, nowhere to go and no one who listens to them.
For those citizens we have something that,s called the Government; a
government that is supposed to look out for the people who can,t look
out for themselves, but instead focuses on "pay to play money.

Today,s system is built on greed. Greed is defined as an excessive
desire to acquire or possess more than someone needs or deserves.
Greed is not a corporate executive who builds an organization such as
Microsoft, creates a lot of jobs, and happens to get rich. Greed is
to become CEO for a drug company such as Pfizer, be responsible for a
stock price drop of 40% over his five year tenure, twice as much as
the AMEX Pharmaceutical Index [10], secure a $100 million retirement
package [11] while firing 16,385 Pharmacia and Pfizer employees [12],
and get a 72% pay increase to $16.6 million as his reward [13].

According to the New York Times average worker pay has remained flat
since 1990 at around $27,000, after adjusting for inflation, while
CEO compensation has quadrupled, from $2.82 million to $11.8 million
[14]. Our CEOs are in a position in which they can basically use
public companies as personal piggy banks. And this is perfectly legal
as long as they get someone else to sign their check. Meanwhile, the
federal minimum wage has remained at $5.15 an hour since September 1,
1997. In fact, after adjusting for inflation, the value of the
minimum wage is at its second lowest level since 1955 [15].

At the same time, the pharmaceutical industry spends over $100
million on lobbying activities to stop lower drug prices, according
to the Center for Public Integrity. There are 1,274 registered
pharmaceutical lobbyists in Washington, D.C. and during the 2004
election cycle, the drug industry contributed $1 million to President
Bush [16]. For an industry that makes $500 billion on a global basis
[17], spending one million on a president or $100 million on lobbying
is pocket change.

This money was well spent. It stopped legalized import of cheaper
drugs and instead we got a new Medicare drug program. This $720
billion law includes $139 billion in profits to drug manufactures and
$46 billion in subsidies to HMOs and private insurance plans [18].
The program has been such a disaster for our poor that at least
twenty-four states have enacted emergency measures to ensure access
to medications in the last couple of weeks [19]. That,s what a
million dollars buys in Washington.

So how could this happen? The answer is simple. The American
democracy has been stolen by our new class of Robber Barons"the CEOs
of our big corporations. A political system dependent on charity from
rich men in hand-tailored suits with $100 million retirement packages
is no democracy. It is a kleptocracy [20]. It is not what our
founding fathers envisioned.

But we have the power to change this; to free our corporations from
sticky-fingered CEO,s, to free our elected representatives from "pay
to play money and to free our people from all these tyrants. We have
the power to be free, at last.


Peter Rost, M.D., is a former Vice President for the drug company
Pfizer. He first became well known in 2004 when he started to speak
out in favor of reimportation of drugs and lower drug price. His
e-mail is [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Notes

1. http://www.dol.gov/

2. http://www.economist.com/finance/

3. http://www.thinkandask.com/news/jobs.html

4. http://www.google.com/

5. NJ Department of Labor Notice to Claimant of Benefit Determination
BC-3C (R-10-99)

6. http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/06poverty.shtml

7. http://scooter.gnn.tv/headlines/3297/

8. http://help.senate.gov/testimony/t194_tes.html

9. Cobra Fact Sheet, January 6, 2006

10. http://finance.yahoo.com/

11. http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/olin_center/

12. http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/

13. http://www.forbes.com/2005/03/10/0310autofacescan06.html

14. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/18/business/18pay.html

15. http://www.cbpp.org/9-1-05mw.htm

16. http://www.usatoday.com/money/

17. http://open.imshealth.com/IMSinclude/i_article_20040929.asp

18. http://www.house.gov/stupak/issues_prescription.shtml

19. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/21/politics/21drug.html

20. http://www.google.com/




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SpamWall: Mail to this addy is deleted unread unless it contains the keyword
"igve".


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to