Living Wages and Affordable Housing


Essays/Opinions & Social Justice & Community Based Economics & Personal and Global Responsibility & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing & foreign policy06 Apr 2007 09:26 pm
by Angry White Liberal

I must confess that I have something of a love-hate attachment for Steve Pearlstein.  Robert Kuttner briefly quotes him in this very interesting American Prospect article…

Last July, at a Hamilton Project public program, The Washington Post’s Steve Pearlstein mischievously asked panelists Rubin, Altman, and Summers why not take a “time out” on further trade deals until Congress passes some of the social buffers that the project keeps endorsing in principle. “To a man, they recoiled at the idea,” Pearlstein reported.

Calling this posture “a perfect example of how the Democrats have lost the instinct for the political jugular and the ability to use policy disputes to political advantage,” Pearlstein added, “The idea here isn’t to kill free trade. It’s to take it hostage.” Lately, many Democrats in Congress have indeed been trying harder to hold the next trade deal hostage to more social protections. If they fail, Rubin’s counsel will have played a key role.

http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&name=ViewPrint&articleId=12573

Ecological Wisdom & Community Based Economics & Personal and Global Responsibility & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing & Environment03 Apr 2007 07:01 am
by Angry White Liberal

On Saturday, I wrote about Michigan’s economic situation. Today, WaPo writes about various mining proposals in the U.P. Check it out.

Like much of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, Marquette was built on mining. Thousands of Irish, German, Polish, Italian and other immigrants arrived here in the late 1800s and early 1900s to forge new lives in the copper and iron mines.As mines closed during the mid-1900s and many residents fled to the auto industry in Detroit, the town and the region struggled.

Now, thanks to rapidly rising metal prices, international mining companies are again interested in the Upper Peninsula. A subsidiary of industry giant Rio Tinto wants to open the country’s largest nickel mine about 25 miles from Marquette, and various companies are prospecting for copper, nickel, uranium and other materials.

One would think they would be welcomed with open arms.

Think again.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/02/AR2007040201406.html?nav=hcmodule

Ecological Wisdom & Social Justice & Nonviolence & Decentralization & Community Based Economics & Respect For Diversity & Personal and Global Responsibility & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing & Environment & global warming & foreign policy01 Apr 2007 03:14 am
by Angry White Liberal

Forests Destroyed in China’s Race to Feed Global Wood-Processing Industry

The Chinese logging boss set his sights on a thickly forested mountain just inside Burma, aiming to harvest one of the last natural stands of teak on Earth.He handed a rice sack stuffed with $8,000 worth of Chinese currency to two agents with connections in the Burmese borderlands, the men said in interviews. They used that stash to bribe everyone standing between the teak and China. In came Chinese logging crews. Out went huge logs, over Chinese-built roads.

About 2,500 miles to the northeast, Chinese and Russian crews hacked into the virgin forests of the Russian Far East and Siberia, hauling away 250-year-old Korean pines in often-illegal deals, according to trading companies and environmentalists. In the highlands of Papua New Guinea, Indonesia and Africa and in the forests of the Amazon, loggers working beyond the bounds of the law have sent a ceaseless flow of timber to China.

Some of the largest swaths of natural forest left on the planet are being dismantled at an alarming pace to feed a global wood-processing industry centered in coastal China.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/31/AR2007033101287.html?nav=rss_email/components

Essays/Opinions & Think this through with me & Social Justice & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing31 Mar 2007 06:41 pm
by Angry White Liberal

As a native Michigander, I have maintained for a long time that Michigan is a nice place to be from and not in. On 1/11/07 in East Lansing, Dr. Don Holocek made the following observation while contrasting the State’s economy with the national economy.

The State of the Michigan economy is a totally different story. It has yet to recover since the last recession in 2000-2001, wasn’t strong in 2006, and is expected to stay weak for at least the next couple of years.

http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:KlICbGaxxhYJ:www.tourismcenter.msu.edu/Publications/Economy-Tourism-EventsIndustry-Jan-2007.pdf+michigan+economy+2006&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=52&gl=us&client=firefox-aHere’s

Here’s a WaPo article on home foreclosures in the state.

Here’s what a favorite columnist of mine said in early December:

You know Michigan’s economic situation has to be fairly grim when Comerica’s chief economist begins his monthly newsletter with these words: “Don’t give up hope.“

http://jackshow.blogs.com/jack/2006/12/essay_michigans.html

Finally I will conclude with the words of another M.S.U. economist. Here’s a blurb from the publicity of Charles Ballard’s book:

“Half a century ago, the world was knocking on Michigan’s door. But yesterday is gone, and it is not coming back,” Ballard says. “If the people of Michigan are to achieve a brighter economic future, we will need to develop new ways of thinking, and new ways of engaging with the rapidly changing global economy.”

http://spartanpodcast.com/?p=197

(here’s the actual podcast)

All in all, it seems to me that the situation in Michigan in general (and its urban areas, in particular) is quite grim.

Social Justice & Community Based Economics & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing30 Mar 2007 01:54 am
by Angry White Liberal

Income inequality grew significantly in 2005, with the top 1 percent of Americans — those with incomes that year of more than $348,000 — receiving their largest share of national income since 1928, analysis of newly released tax data shows.

The top 10 percent, roughly those earning more than $100,000, also reached a level of income share not seen since before the Depression.

While total reported income in the United States increased almost 9 percent in 2005, the most recent year for which such data is available, average incomes for those in the bottom 90 percent dipped slightly compared with the year before, dropping $172, or 0.6 percent.

The gains went largely to the top 1 percent, whose incomes rose to an average of more than $1.1 million each, an increase of more than $139,000, or about 14 percent.

The new data also shows that the top 300,000 Americans collectively enjoyed almost as much income as the bottom 150 million Americans. Per person, the top group received 440 times as much as the average person in the bottom half earned, nearly doubling the gap from 1980.

********************************************************

He noted that the analysis was based on preliminary data and that the highest-income Americans were more likely than others to file their returns late, so his data might understate the growth in inequality.

The disparities may be even greater for another reason. The Internal Revenue Service estimates that it is able to accurately tax 99 percent of wage income but that it captures only about 70 percent of business and investment income, most of which flows to upper-income individuals, because not everybody accurately reports such figures.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/29/business/29tax.html?ei=5087%0A&em=&en=5a2d017aeb4df8cf&ex=1175400000&pagewanted=print

Essays/Opinions & Social Justice & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing20 Jun 2006 09:47 am
by Administrator

Folks,

You can here an excellent talk by Krugman on this topic from Monday’s (yesterday’s) Democracy Now show

Class War Politics

By PAUL KRUGMAN

Published: June 19, 2006

In case you haven’t noticed, modern American politics is marked by vicious partisanship, with the great bulk of the viciousness coming from the right. It’s clear that the Republican plan for the 2006 election is, once again, to question Democrats’ patriotism.

But do Republican leaders truly believe that they are serious about fighting terrorism, while Democrats aren’t? When the speaker of the House declares that “we in this Congress must show the same steely resolve as those men and women on United Flight 93,” is that really the way he sees himself? (Dennis Hastert, Man of Steel!) Of course not.

So what’s our bitter partisan divide really about? In two words: class warfare. That’s the lesson of an important new book, “Polarized America: The Dance of Ideology and Unequal Riches,” by Nolan McCarty of Princeton University, Keith Poole of the University of California, San Diego, and Howard Rosenthal of New York University.

“Polarized America” is a technical book written for political scientists. But it’s essential reading for anyone who wants to understand what’s happening to America.

What the book shows, using a sophisticated analysis of Congressional votes and other data, is that for the past century, political polarization and economic inequality have moved hand in hand. Politics during the Gilded Age, an era of huge income gaps, was a nasty business — as nasty as it is today. The era of bipartisanship, which lasted for roughly a generation after World War II, corresponded to the high tide of America’s middle class. That high tide began receding in the late 1970’s, as middle-class incomes grew slowly at best while incomes at the top soared; and as income gaps widened, a deep partisan divide re-emerged.

Both the decline of partisanship after World War II and its return in recent decades mainly reflected the changing position of the Republican Party on economic issues.

Before the 1940’s, the Republican Party relied financially on the support of a wealthy elite, and most Republican politicians firmly defended that elite’s privileges. But the rich became a lot poorer during and after World War II, while the middle class prospered. And many Republicans accommodated themselves to the new situation, accepting the legitimacy and desirability of institutions that helped limit economic inequality, such as a strongly progressive tax system. (The top rate during the Eisenhower years was 91 percent.)

When the elite once again pulled away from the middle class, however, Republicans turned their back on the legacy of Dwight Eisenhower and returned to a focus on the interests of the wealthy. Tax cuts at the top — including repeal of the estate tax — became the party’s highest priority.

But if the real source of today’s bitter partisanship is a Republican move to the right on economic issues, why have the last three elections been dominated by talk of terrorism, with a bit of religion on the side? Because a party whose economic policies favor a narrow elite needs to focus the public’s attention elsewhere. And there’s no better way to do that than accusing the other party of being unpatriotic and godless.

Thus in 2004, President Bush basically ran as America’s defender against gay married terrorists. He waited until after the election to reveal that what he really wanted to do was privatize Social Security.

Pre-New Deal G.O.P. operatives followed the same strategy. Republican politicians won elections by “waving the bloody shirt” — invoking the memory of the Civil War — long after the G.O.P. had ceased to be the party of Lincoln and become the party of robber barons instead. Al Smith, the 1928 Democratic presidential candidate, was defeated in part by a smear campaign — burning crosses and all — that exploited the heartland’s prejudice against Catholics.

So what should we do about all this? I won’t offer the Democrats advice right now, except to say that tough talk on national security and affirmations of personal faith won’t help: the other side will smear you anyway.

But I would like to offer some advice to my fellow pundits: face reality. There are some commentators who long for the bipartisan days of yore, and flock eagerly to any politician who looks “centrist.” But there isn’t any center in modern American politics. And the center won’t return until we have a new New Deal, and rebuild our middle class.

Essays/Opinions & Social Justice & Living Wages and Affordable Housing11 May 2006 12:04 pm
by Angry White Liberal

It’s sad to see the anemic state of organized labor in this country today. Worse, it kills me to admit that, to a large degree, the erosion of the labor movement is the fault of the unions themselves. Their refusal or inability to change with the times, to keep the movement relevant in the face of globalization and the digital conversion — the so-called new economy — has been disastrous.

Disastrous, I might add, for union members and nonunion workers alike.

Just as the Democratic Party has largely ceded the battlefield to Republican stridency in recent years, so, too, has organized labor wilted before an economy where the unrestrained market rules all. The result is unsurprising: The rich get richer, the shareholder is valued more than the employee, jobs are eliminated in the name of bottom-line efficiency (remember when they called firing people “right-sizing”?) and the gulf between the rich and the working class grows wider every year.

You see this libertarian ethos everywhere, but nowhere more clearly than in the technology sector, where the number of union jobs can be counted on one hand. Tech is the Wild West as far as the job market goes and the robber barons on top of the pile aim to keep it that way. They’ll offshore your job to save a few bucks or lay you off at the first sign of a slump, but they’re the first to scream, “You’re stifling innovation!” at any attempt to control the industry or provide job security for the people who do the actual work.

http://www.wired.com/news/columns/theluddite/0,70858-0.html?tw=rss.index

Essays/Opinions & Social Justice & Community Based Economics & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing11 May 2006 04:01 am
by Angry White Liberal

Got this from Dollars and Sense
A dark night, a mysterious dame and a gumshoe looking for clues in the case of the vanishing wages
Ha! In addition to being on the mark, this column by Jared Bernstein is funny, too!

She had a neckline as low as the Nasdaq in ‘01, curves like sine waves and a dress tighter than the global oil supply. She had my attention even before she pulled out two reports I’d seen that very morning.

“I’m sorry to barge in on you like this,” she said in a voice that gave my calculator a power surge. “I didn’t know where else to turn.”

“You came to the right place, doll,” I said. “I see you’ve got the first-quarter GDP report, along with the new compensation results.” I’d been puzzling over these numbers all day, but what, I wondered, could this tall glass of ice water want with them?

“That’s right,” she purred. “I need to know why GDP is up 4.8%, the strongest quarter since 2003, yet real wages are falling.” Yeah, I thought, you and everybody else who works for a living.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/commentary/la-op-bernstein7may07,0,4131549.story

Social Justice & Grassroots Democracy & Living Wages and Affordable Housing11 Mar 2006 06:14 pm
by Angry White Liberal

Employers Sharply Criticize Shift in Unionizing Method to Cards From Elections

In seeking to equate Mr. Raynor with foreign dictators, the business-backed group that ran the advertisement was trying to discredit the most successful strategy that unions have used to try to reverse a decades-long slide in membership.

That strategy is known as card checks, a process in which companies grant union recognition once a majority of workers sign cards saying they favor a union. Unions increasingly want to use this procedure to replace the traditional organizing method: secret-ballot elections overseen by the National Labor Relations Board.

Many businesses oppose card checks because they say the procedure makes it much easier for unions to secure majority support, often giving management little chance to present its case against unionization. But unions say companies often prevent fair elections by firing and intimidating union supporters.

Click here for link.

Politics & News & Think this through with me & Ecological Wisdom & Social Justice & Grassroots Democracy & Community Based Economics & Personal and Global Responsibility & Future Focus/Sustainability & Living Wages and Affordable Housing15 Dec 2005 09:47 am
by Angry White Liberal

Study Finds Elevated Lead Levels in Neighborhoods
The article doesn’t raise the question, but I have to wonder if the poor and lower-middle class are or will be disproportionately affected by this…

The dirt poses the greatest hazard to small children who might play in it, said Steven M. Presley, a toxicologist at Texas Tech University, who led the soil survey team. The hazard could be reduced by keeping the dirt from becoming dry and airborne, by covering it with uncontaminated soil or, if necessary, by hauling it away.

“These levels are not astronomical. It’s not like this is an insurmountable hazard. But we are saying that we did find levels that exceeded these thresholds for human health,” Presley said yesterday after the study, which will appear in Environmental Science & Technology, was posted on the American Chemical Society’s Web site.

Click here for link.


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