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Subject: Think First About the Unemployed


1 Think First About the Unemployed
2 What We Want from a White House Jobs Summit


Left Margin

Think First About the Unemployed, Not the Politicians
... and Act 

By Carl Bloice - BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board 
Black Commentator 
November 12, 2009

http://www.blackcommentator.com/350/350_lm_think_unemployed_not_politicians.
php

There are two mantras trotted out frequently when the
subject of unemployment comes up that President Obama
would best not repeat. The first is that, yea, things
are getting worse but not as fast as they were. The
second - one that he seems taken with - is that
joblessness is expected to be a "lagging indicator,"
that is, the "recovery" will, by its nature, come
quicker than improvement in the jobs picture.

The decline in the economy has, indeed, slowed down and
that is one of the accomplishments of his
administration. It can be directly attributed to the
economic stimulus package put in play last year. But
that looks to be temporary and as the project winds
down, the future appears at best uncertain.

The lagging indicator argument - which both Obama and
Labor Secretary Hilda Solis cited again last week - is
not an iron law of economics. Saying something happen
one way in the past is no guarantee it will do so in
the future. Indeed, current commentary on the economic
crisis contains constant references to the potential of
a "new normal," that is a jobless recovery that lasts a
long time. A reoccurring theme in economics writing
these days is that we are in danger of creating a
category of workers who have either been jobless for so
long, or have not been able to even enter the
workforce, that they will lose the skills and habits
necessary to successfully work in the future.

It goes without saying that the burden of this
situation falls heaviest on African American and Latino workers, especially
the young.

    "The country also needs a program that would create
    jobs for teenagers - ages 16 to 19 - whose
    unemployment rate is currently a record 27.6
    percent," the New York Times said editorially last
    Sunday. "Deep and prolonged unemployment among the
    young is especially worrisome. It means they do not
    have a chance, and may never get the chance, to
    acquire needed skills, permanently hobbling their
    earnings potential."

African American unemployment reached 15.7 percent in
October (17.1 percent for black men). It's been
climbing steadily for the past two years. It was 11.3
percent a year ago and 12.6 percent in January. A
similar picture emerges for Latinos: 10.4 percent in
October 2008, 12 percent in January and currently
running at 15.5 percent.

The Labor Department Household survey indicates that
black teenage unemployment was 41.3 percent in October;
it was 30.9 percent this time last year. Latino youth unemployment reached
35.6 percent in October, up from 28.3 percent a year ago. About a quarter of
white teens were reported out of work in October. That's bad enough but I
suspect if it had risen to half, someone would have called for a state of
emergency.

There appears to be general agreement that unless
something drastic is done soon the jobless figures will
just continue to rise. How high will they go? Most
economists seem to think unemployment will start to
decline sometime next year. "In all likelihood, the
economy will continue to shed jobs, at least through
the rest of the 2009, and probably into the first
months of 2010. The unemployment rate will probably not
peak until the spring of next year, at close to 11.0
percent," writes Dean Baker of the Center for Economic
and Policy Research. "As dreadful as they are, the
headline numbers understate the severity of the
problem," says the Times. "They also obscure an even
grimmer fact: Unless there is more government support,
it will take several years of robust economic growth -
by no means a sure thing - to recoup the jobs that have
been lost."

I guess it was to be expected that the 10.2 percent
overall unemployment figure, coming as it did on the
heels of the November 3 election, would prompt a lot of commentators to
speculate and draw conclusions about what it all means for the Obama
Administration and the Democratic Party. Times columnist Charles Blow put it
pretty succinctly: "Job creation has dropped from top priority to one of
many, and President Obama has been remanded to pandering for patience and
offering excuses." On the one hand, he argues the tortured rationale that
there is good news in the awful numbers: Things are still getting worse but
at a slower pace. On the other, he incessantly reminds us that he inherited
the crisis. The implication: "Don't blame me, blame Bush."

"But this president can't keep deflecting to the last
one," wrote Blow. "Pain is presently felt. The crisis
that took form on Bush's watch is being experienced on
Obama's. Fair or not, finger-pointing is not effective
policy."

It's a refrain we've heard quite a bit over the past
week. Somehow it moves me little. What's happening to
the lives of the legions out of work - particularly the
young men and women - has to take second place to the
fortune of the President and his party. The human
crisis would be real regardless of who is in the Oval
Office and is what should move the President and the
Congress to do the right thing.

"The Administration's biggest economic mistake so far
was to badly underestimate last January how bad the
employment situation would become by fall," Robert
Reich wrote in his blog last week. "As a result, it
low-balled the stimulus - settling for a plan that,
while avoiding even worse job losses, didn't go nearly
far enough."

It's alarming to think that the high powered brain
surgeons the President brought in to stop the
hemorrhaging on Wall Street couldn't get the job
projections right. But then again, maybe they did and
just didn't want to tell us because we might object
even stronger to their putting banks and bankers first.
In any case, Reich says now, "Obama has to return to
Congress, seeking a larger stimulus."

"Everything else on the table - a new jobs tax credit,
more loans to small businesses, more help to troubled homeowners, another
extension of unemployment insurance, another round of subsidies to
first-time home buyers - are small potatoes relative to the importance and
likely effect of a larger stimulus. Some of these initiatives may do some
good, but even combined they'll barely make a dent in the growing numbers of
jobless Americans," wrote Reich, even before the latest statistics were
release, when it wasn't certain the jobless rate would even hit 10 percent.

`Meanwhile, the states are slicing their budgets,
laying off workers, and ratcheting up taxes. That's
because state tax revenues are falling off a cliff, and
almost every state is barred by its constitution from
running a deficit. That means the states are actively implementing an
anti-stimulus plan."

The Times editors concur with Reich's prescription,
saying, "We know that more stimulus spending and
government programs are a fraught topic. But they are
exactly what the country needs. It may be the only way
to prevent a renewed downturn. And the only way to
create the jobs needed to put Americans back to work.
Those are the essential - and missing - ingredients of
a sustained recovery."

Last Sunday, Washington Post Staff Writer Alec
MacGillis talked about another kind of medicine that
needs to be taken off the shelf, and which a lot of
people seem to want to keep under wraps. "Why has a
White House that talks so much about boosting
employment steered clear of the most direct strategy
that could keep Americans on the job?" he wrote.

"Since taking office, the Obama administration has
studiously avoided paying people to go to work, which
could be accomplished by subsidizing workers' private-
sector employment or by creating new government-paid
jobs," wrote MacGillis. "There are programs in a
handful of states that financially compensate employees
who cut their hours to prevent broader layoffs at their companies -- an
approach that costs relatively little, since it results in lower payouts of
unemployment benefits, and that has helped Germany keep unemployment under 8
percent despite the deep slowdown there. But the Obama administration has so
far opted not to expand this initiative. And aside from a small summer
employment program for young people, it has not sought to create jobs on the
public payroll, something the country did in the 1930s and 1970s."

Of course, we know well what the response that kind of
program would evoke. The "Blue Dogs" would start
screaming about the federal deficit and passing on the
debt to our children and grandchildren just as they did
during the healthcare debate. The "tea party" people
would start jumping up and down and yelling about a "government-run jobs
program." The administration is "scared of [any plans] seeming like
old-fashioned make- work, but that's what it is: You're giving [people] jobs
because they have nothing left to do," Dean Baker, co-director of the Center
for Economic and Policy Research, told MacGillis "Giving people a shot at a
job has to be worth a little bad publicity . . . but as in a lot of areas,
they proved more cautious."

Yes, Depression era New Deal programs, like the Works
Progress Administration and the Civilian Conservation
Corps, should be put on the table. Not necessarily the
same programs. Much of the country's infrastructure is
in dire need of repair and reconstruction. We need new
energy efficient transportation systems.

There is a pressing need to accelerate the development
of new "green jobs" programs to meet the challenge of
climate change and fossil fuel depletion.

John Russo, co-director of Youngstown State
University's Center for Working-Class Studies, told
MacGillis that the Obama administration shows little
indication of lifting the taboo against public works
projects because "Neo-liberalism continues apace even
though it's been thoroughly discredited." The White
House, he said, "has held back, and it has hurt. People
were looking for a more aggressive approach; they did a political
calculation and said, `This is all we can do.' "

"The alarming news that unemployment has hit double
digits should be a wake-up call to sleepy politicians,"
said AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka November 6. "The
nation's jobless rate worsened yet again last month,
with 190,000 jobs lost and the unemployment rate
climbing to 10.2 percent. A total of nearly 16 million
can't find work.

"It is of great concern that there is still little sign
of a sustainable private sector recovery, even more
jobs will be lost in the coming months. Despite Wall
Street celebrations of what they see as a recovery
based on GDP growth of 3.5 percent in the third
quarter, American workers know there can be no recovery
unless everyone who wants to work can find a good job.

"The nation's jobs situation would be even worse
without the Obama administration's American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act. Nearly one million jobs have been
saved or created because of the stimulus plan and the
White House says the nation is on track to meet the
president's goal of 3.5 million by the end of next
year. Additionally, the extension of unemployment
benefits by Congress is an essential and welcome step.

"Every day, it becomes more urgent that the federal
government step up to the plate with bold actions to
boost job creation. Those actions should include
urgently needed fiscal relief to state and local
governments, community jobs programs, additional
investments in infrastructure and green jobs and credit
relief to small and medium-sized businesses. Failing to
act puts us at very real risk of a lost generation --
of hard-working Americans who can't put food on the
table and bright young people who never realize their potential.

"We must do better."
___________________

BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Carl Bloice
is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating
Committee of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism
and formerly worked for a healthcare union.

===

What We Want from a White House Jobs Summit

By Isaiah J. Poole
November 13, 2009 - 7:32am ET
http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2009114612/what-we-want-white-house-jobs
-summit

President Obama's team made it clear months ago that he
will brook no talk of a "second stimulus" at a time
when the first stimulus is under significant criticism-
from the right, to be sure, but also from the left. Nonetheless, Thursday's
announcement of a White House jobs summit offers an opportunity to reset the
political conversation on building an enduring recovery for the 17.5 percent
of Americans who are unemployed and underemployed.

It matters where that conversation starts. When Obama
disclosed news of the summit at White House, Campaign
for America's Future co-director Robert Borosage issued
this statement:

     The jobs summit should consider both immediate and
     long-term strategies. Next year, the Congress
     should act to create jobs immediately - creating
     urban and green jobs corps to put young people to
     work, aiding states and localities to forestall
     layoffs of police and teachers, expanding
     investments in new energy, in retrofitting
     buildings, in transport and infrastructure to
     boost economy over the course of the next two
     years.

     At the same time, the president should use the
     summit to begin defining what the engine of growth
     will be in the economy that we build out of the
     ruins of the old. Consumers will not go back to
     spending more than they earn. With a falling
     dollar, exports could play a bigger role. But the
     main engine will be public- investment-led growth,
     featuring a bold commitment to make the transition
     to new energy the centerpiece of a long-term
     economic strategy. This can be deficit-funded
     while the economy recovers, but should be paid for
     by progressive taxes over the long-term.

The political right would rather focus the conversation
on another number-$12 trillion-which is what the
national debt will be by early December. Concern over
the deficit constrained the size and ultimate
effectiveness of the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act, which has arguably kept unemployment from getting
worse but has yet to prove to a lot of people outside
the Beltway that it is actually improving the Main
Street economy. If anything, our experience with that
stimulus plan-split between one-third tax cuts and two-
thirds inadequate spending on such items as infrastructure-tells us that our
economic malaise needed to be treated like a serious infection: Only a fast,
hard and consistent attack works; anything less allows the disease to fester
and become harder to treat.

News of the summit comes at a propitious moment. Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid has said that his top priority now, other than getting a
health-care reform bill passed, is to get job-creation legislation passed.
John Nichols writes in The Nation that Reid and his fellow Democrats can
borrow from proposals that are already on the table in the House, including
Oregon Democratic Rep. Peter DeFazio's plan to fully fund a surface
transportation reauthorization for our highways and mass transit with the
aid of a crude-oil transactions tax. (Bill Scher has included links to some
other ideas from progressive leaders in today's "Progressive Breakfast.")

The news also hits an American public that is
dispirited by the state of the economy-only 39 percent
of the people interviewed in a Pew Research Center poll
this week see the economy improving next year-and the
Wall Street bailouts, which a majority of the people in
a CBS News poll saw as solely benefiting the bankers at
the expense of the taxpayers.

But President Obama still has significant political
capital, and he can use it to build consensus around an investment economy
agenda: Rebuild the nation's public commons, fuel the transition to the
green economy, restore manufacturing as a critical building block of
restoring middle-class prosperity. Those who have reaped he most from our
economic policies should be asked to contribute the most to its continued
security.

_____________________________________________

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