Dyslexia or not, you got this right.   I had forgotten about it just as the
lawyers in the Congress forget to do their research once they get elected.
Someone needs to sue. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2011 3:39 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] The good old Hawkin Humphres Act

 

Another well kept secret.
Natalia

From:
http://warisacrime.org/content/lost-debt-ceiling-debate-legal-duty-create-jo
bs


The secret the politicians and media won <http://warisacrime.org/node/58770>
't tell you: Government is legally required to create jobs 


Jeanne Mirer and Marjorie Cohe, War is a Crime - The most galling thing
about pundits stating with such certainty that the government cannot create
jobs is the implication that the government has no business employing
people. In actuality, however, the law requires the government, in
particular the President and the Federal Reserve, to create jobs. This legal
duty comes from three sources: 

(1) full employment legislation including the Humphrey Hawkins Full
Employment Act of 1978,

(2) the 1977 Federal Reserve Act, and 

(3) the global consensus based on customary international law that all
people have a right to a job with favorable remuneration to provide an
adequate standard of living. .

1. Full Employment Legislation

The first full employment law in the United States was passed in 1946. It
required the country to make its goal one of full employment. It was
motivated in part by the fear that after World War II, returning veterans
would not find work, and this would provoke further economic dislocation.
With the Keynesian consensus that government spending was necessary to
stimulate the economy and the depression still fresh in the nation's mind,
this legislation contained a firm statement that full employment was the
policy of the country. As originally written, the bill required the federal
government do everything in its authority to achieve full employment, which
was established as a right guaranteed to the American people. Pushback by
conservative business interests, however, watered down the bill. While it
created the Council of Economic Advisors to the President and the Joint
Economic Committee as a Congressional standing committee to advise the
government on economic policy, the guarantee of full employment was removed
from the bill.

In the aftermath of the rise in unemployment which followed the "oil crisis"
of 1975, Congress addressed the weaknesses of the 1946 act through the
passage of the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act of 1978. The purpose of
this bill as described in its title is:

"An Act to translate into practical reality the right of all Americans who
are able, willing, and seeking to work to full opportunity for useful paid
employment at fair rates of compensation; to assert the responsibility of
the Federal Government to use all practicable programs and policies to
promote full employment, production, and real income, balanced growth,
adequate productivity growth, proper attention to national priorities."

The Act sets goals for the President. By 1983, unemployment rates should be
not more than 3% for persons age 20 or over and not more than 4% for persons
age 16 or over, and inflation rates should not be over 4%. By 1988,
inflation rates should be 0%. The Act allows Congress to revise these goals
over time.

If private enterprise appears not to be meeting these goals, the Act
expressly calls for the government to create a "reservoir of public
employment." These jobs are required to be in the lower ranges of skill and
pay to minimize competition with the private sector.

The Act directly prohibits discrimination on account of gender, religion,
race, age or national origin in any program created under the Act.
Humphey-Hawkins has not been repealed. Both the language and the spirit of
this law require the government to bring unemployment down to 3% from over
9%. The time for action is now.

2. Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve has among its mandates to "promote maximum employment."
The origin of this mandate is the Full Employment Act of 1946, which
committed the federal government to pursue the goals of "maximum employment,
production and purchasing power." This mandate was reinforced in the 1977
reforms which called on the Fed to conduct monetary policy so as to "promote
effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices and moderate long
term interest rates." These goals are substantially equivalent to the
long-standing goals contained in the 1946 Full Employment Act. The goals of
the 1977 act were further affirmed in the Humphrey-Hawkins Act the following
year.

3. The global consensus based on customary international law that all people
have a right to a job with favorable remuneration and an adequate standard
of living

In the aftermath of World War II, and for the short time between the end of
the war and the beginning of the Cold War, there was an international
consensus that one of the causes of the Second World War was the failure of
governments to address the major unemployment crisis in the late 20's and
early 30's, and that massive worldwide unemployment led to the rise of
Nazism/facism. The United Nations Charter was created specifically to "save
succeeding generations from the scourge of war." To do so the drafters
stated that promoting social progress and better standards of life were the
necessary conditions "under which justice and respect for obligations
arising under treaties and respect for international law can be maintained."

It is no accident that one of the first actions of the UN was to draft the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The Declaration was ratified by all
then members of the United Nations on December 10, 1948. It is an extremely
important document because it not only recognized the connection between the
respect for human dignity and rights, and conditions necessary to maintain
peace and security. The Declaration is the first international document to
recognize the indivisibility between civil and political rights (like those
enshrined in the Bill of Rights) on the one hand, and economic, social and
cultural rights on the other. The UDHR is the first document to acknowledge
that both civil and political rights are necessary to create conditions
under which human dignity is respected and through which a person's full
potential may be realized. Stated another way, without political and civil
rights, there is no real ability for people to demand full realization of
their economic rights. And without economic rights, peoples' ability to
exercise their civil rights and express their political will is replaced by
the daily struggle for survival.

The Declaration, although not a treaty, first articulated the norms to which
all countries should aspire. It stated that everyone has the right to an
adequate standard of living. This includes the rights to: work for favorable
remuneration, (including the right to form unions), health, food, clothing,
housing, medical care, necessary social services, and social insurances in
the event of unemployment, sickness, disability or old age. There has been a
conspiracy of silence surrounding these rights. In fact, most people have
never heard of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Similarly, most Americans do not know that the UN drafted treaties which put
flesh on the broad principles contained in the Declaration. One of the
treaties enshrines Civil and Political Rights; the other guarantees
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. These treaties were released for
ratification in 1966. The United States ratified the treaty on civil and
political rights and has signed but not ratified the economic, social and
cultural rights treaty.

The latter treaty requires the countries which have ratified it to take
positive steps to "progressively realize" basic economic rights including
the right to a job. Almost all countries of the world have either signed or
ratified this treaty. When most countries become party a treaty, they do so
not because they think they are morally bound to follow it but because they
know they are legally bound. Once an overwhelming number of countries agree
to be legally bound, outliers cannot hide behind lack of ratification. The
global consensus gives that particular norm the status of binding customary
law, which requires even countries that have not ratified a treaty to comply
with its mandate.

The conspiracy of silence

With the duty to create jobs required by U.S. legislation, monetary policy
and customary law, why has the government allowed pundits to reframe the
debate and state with certainty the government cannot do what it has a legal
obligation to do?

We allow it because of the conspiracy of silence which has prevented most
people from knowing that the full employment laws exist, that the Federal
Reserve has a job-creating mandate, and that economic human rights law has
become binding on the United States as customary international law.

Congressman John Conyers of Michigan knows about the Humphrey-Hawkins Full
Employment Act, and he has introduced legislation that would fund the job
creation aspects of that Act in the "The Humphrey-Hawkins 21st Century Full
Employment and Training Act," HR 870. It would create specific funds for job
training and creation paid for almost exclusively by taxes on financial
transactions, with the more speculative transactions paying a higher tax.

If Congress refuses to enact this legislation, the President must demand
that the Federal Reserve use all the tools relating to controlling the money
supply at its disposal to create the funds called for by HR 870, and to
start putting people back to work through direct funding of a reservoir of
public jobs as Humphrey-Hawkins mandates.

There is nothing that would prevent the Federal Reserve from creating a fund
for job training and a federal jobs program as HR 870 would require, and
selling billions of treasury bonds for infrastructure improvement and jobs
associated with it. The growth in jobs would stimulate the economy to the
point that the interest on these bonds would be raised through increased
revenue. There is no reason the Fed on its own could not add a surcharge on
inter-bank loans to fund these jobs. These actions could be done without
Congressional approval and would represent a major boost to employment and
grow the economy. If the Federal Reserve is going to abide by its mandate to
promote maximum employment, and comply with the Humphrey Hawkins Act, and
the global consensus it must take these steps.

Failure of the Fed and the President to take these affirmative steps is not
only illegal, it is also economically unwise. The stock market losses after
the debt ceiling deal is in part based on taking almost 2 million more jobs
out of the economy and will only further depress demand creating further
contraction in the economy. This is not an outcome any of us can afford.

Jeanne Mirer, who practices labor and employment law in New York, is
president of the International Association of Democratic Lawyers. Marjorie
Cohn is a professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and past president of
the National Lawyers Guild. 

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