Part 2
The obscenely wealthy and greedy want to make as much money as possible by paying as little as possible for labor. The Fed and the GOP are their tools, doing whatever they can to help the greedy make more money while ignoring the plight of workers.
What to do about America's "labor shortage?" Easy. Pay people more. https://robertreich.substack.com/p/why-is-there-a-labor-shortage?
#TheyWantTheirSerfBack
#Greed
#GOPIsTheRichsTool
#TheFedIs TheRichsTool
"Republicans and some corporate economists, meanwhile, are blaming the “labor shortage” on overly-generous jobless benefits. They say the way to get more people into jobs is to make their lives outside jobs less tolerable.
A recent “study” by Casey Mulligan and E.J. Antoni claims that “it pays not to work in Biden’s America,” because unemployment and Affordable Care Act benefits are so generous that “many businesses can’t get workers back on the job almost three years after COVID-19 hit these shores.”
Baloney. Apart from the non-working wealthy and their heirs, most unemployed people are hard up.
Pandemic benefits are over, and America’s social safety nets are in tatters — as they were at the start of the pandemic. Before the pandemic, fewer than 30 percent of unemployed Americans qualified for unemployment benefits, which last no longer than 6 months — the least generous of any other rich nation. Since then, we’ve done nothing to fix this broken system.
Affordable Care Act subsidies, meanwhile, allow low-income people to afford health insurance. Without these subsidies, many wouldn’t get the medical care they need and would face higher odds of getting seriously sick and hence unable to work.
Taken to its logical extreme, the corporate Republican argument might be correct. Eliminate all safety nets and at some point people without jobs will hurt so much they’ll have to take any available job, at any wage, whatever the job demands.
But do this, and we end up with an economy that’s even crueler than today’s.
The reason people aren’t working is that work doesn’t pay them enough, given declining wages and the increasing costs of childcare, eldercare, and transportation.
Both the Fed’s solution (slow the economy so employers can find the workers they need without raising wages) and the Republican corporate solution (slash safety nets so people are so desperate they have to take any job available) are cruel. They would impose huge burdens on many of the most vulnerable people in our society.
If we want more people to take jobs and we wish to live in a decent society, the answer is to pay people more."