Well,
now it appears that, as the New York Times put it Monday,
the “Rise in Jobless Poses Threat to Stability Worldwide.” This
comes just after the new United States Director of National
Intelligence, Dennis Blair, told Congress instability caused by
the global economic crisis had become the biggest security threat
facing the United States, outpacing
terrorism. It seems the experts have been looking at the rising
unemployment figures around the world and pondering the large and
sometimes volatile protest demonstrations and strikes over the past
few months in places like Italy,
Latvia, Chile,
Greece, Chine,
Bulgaria, Iceland, Russia,
Britain and France. It is now
being estimated that the current world economic crisis began a little
over a year ago, and will result in 50 million people being forced
out of work. A total of 3.6 million jobs have been lost in the U.S. already.
It
seems the magic number is 10 percent: when that figure for the portion
of people out of work is reached it portends serious trouble. As
of January the jobless rate in this country stood at 7.6 percent.
But the government’s official statistics are always problematic.
As Heidi Shierholz of the Economic Policy Institute observes only
jobless workers actively seeking work are considered. Not counted
are those who have dropped out of - or never entered - the labor
force because they felt they would not be able to secure meaningful
work. The official unemployment rate understates weakness in the
labor market, Shierholz says. From January 2001 to January 2009,
the labor force participation rate dropped 1.7 percentage points,
from 67.2 percent to 65.5 percent and “if those missing workers
were counted as unemployed instead of as not being in the labor
force, the unemployment rate today would be 9.9 percent.”
If
those numbers are to be considered alarming, consider the situation
facing African American workers. This January the black jobless
rate hit 12.9 percent; it was 9.2 percent in January 2008. That’s
an increase of 3.7 percent points over 13 months. “Black men have
been hit especially hard,” notes economist Dean Baker. “Their unemployment
rate rose by 0.7 pp [percentage points] to 14.1 percent, an increase
of 5.8 pp from its year ago level.”
Ethnic
minorities continue to experience the largest increases, the EPI
notes. Over the same period, the unemployment rates for Hispanics
reached 9.7 percent and 6.9 percent for whites. The rate for Asians
stood at 6.9 percent, almost twice what it was a year ago.
A
number of well-intentioned commentaries have appeared over recent
weeks suggesting that the principal cause in high African American
unemployment is the number of black job seekers with criminal records.
This is seriously misleading. While it is a serious problem, the
main factors in high black joblessness are racial discrimination
and a half century of deindustrialization that continues to wipe
out jobs in manufacturing, construction and transport that were
the source of what prosperity there has been in the African American
community. All of this is now exacerbated by the deepening economic
crisis.
“The
January decline in payroll jobs (along with a sizeable downward
revision of previous month’s estimates) brings the total jobs lost
since the recession began in December 2007 to 3.6 million,” writes
Shierholz. “As sobering as this number sounds, it actually far understates
the true gap between how many jobs there are today and how many
are needed. Simply to keep up with the ever-expanding population,
the economy would have had to have added approximately 127,000
jobs every month over this period - or 1.7 million jobs in the 13
months since the start of the recession. Thus, the loss of 3.6 million
jobs since December 2007 actually means the economy is now 5.2 million
jobs below where it would need to be to have maintained pre-recession
rates of employment for the American workforce.”
Last
week, Leo Hinder, chair of the Smart Globalization Initiative at
the New America Foundation and partner at a private equity firm,
and Donald Riegle, former chair of the Senate Banking Committee,
published a commentary in the Financial Times titled: “Create
Jobs to Rebuild Americas Economy.” Therein they wrote, “These massive
bail-outs and the stimulus package are not nearly a big enough response
to the meltdown of the US economy. Pouring unlimited money into an economy
to high-income individuals, as was done under Presidents Ronald
Reagan and George W. Bush or to banks and Wall Street now is inefficient,
ineffective and unfair.”
“
What we need instead is a focus on creating the 19 million jobs
that we are short of for workers to be nearly fully employed,” Hinder
and Riegle wrote. “Only a jobs-based strategy can maintain our living
standards and enable us to project our leadership around the world.
Only this strategy, along with a reinvigorated manufacturing sector,
can produce enough wealth to pay off our new debts and Mr. Bush’s
$11,000 billion debt legacy.”
“No
nation can borrow its way to sustained prosperity. Nor does prosperity
come from de-linking wages from productivity or from a government’s
refusal to protect the right of workers to organize. Yet this is
what has been going on for the past 25 years. We have the greatest
income inequality in the US since 1928. Our once vital manufacturing sector
is now less than 30 per cent of our economy. The
trade unions represent only 7.5 percent of US private sector employees.
Most productivity gains have gone to those at the highest income
levels through preferential tax policies. We must earn our way back
to prosperity by fully developing, fairly deploying and fairly compensating
our human capital.”
Against
this backdrop the current efforts to arrest the fast-paced economic
downturn and debates over the various economic stimulus, take on
a specially significance for African America and other people of
color.
No
one pretends that the stimulus package approved by Congress last
week is going to turn this situation around anytime soon. It’s a
start but we are still faced with one out of 10 workers looking
for employment coming up short in the middle of next year.
President
Obama has said things are going to get worse before they get better.
What
then are we to make of the opposition to the Obama stimulus plan
(modest when weighed against the seriousness of the situation)?
What must be going through the minds of the Republicans, not one
of whom in the House of Representatives saw fit to vote for the
stimulus package?
Conventional
wisdom suggests the explanation lies in what economist Paul Krugman
terms “the party’s commitment to deep voodoo - enforced, in part,
by pressure groups that stand ready to run primary challengers against
heretics - is as strong as ever.” There’s some truth to that. Over
on the rightwing side of the Internet, Republican operatives and
scribes are up in arms about the three Republican senators who made
passage of the stimulus bill possible. Dick Morris, former political
adviser to Sen. Trent Lott
(R-Miss.) and President Bill Clinton, called them the “Benedict
Arnolds of the GOP.” Elsewhere pledges are being made to defeat
“The Judas of the Republican party” when they come up for reelection.
But there is probably another, devious reason for this madness, one suggested
last week by Black Commentator contributor David Love who
wrote:
“The unanimous rejection by
the House Republicans of the Obama stimulus package is proof that
the current incarnation of the GOP cares far more about positioning
itself for the 2010 election than in saving the nation from the
next Great Depression. For these individuals, politics takes precedence
over anything else. They are banking on Obama’s failure and the
complete destruction of the economy, and then they will provide
the cleanup crew. If they didn’t care about the state of the nation
as they ran it into the ground under their watch, why should they
care now?”
This
view is echoed by former labor secretary Robert Reich:
“If
everything goes as well as possible and the stimulus and next round
of bank bailouts work perfectly, a turnaround could begin as early
as mid-2010. But even under this rosy scenario, employers wouldn’t
start rehiring until late 2010 because they’ll want to be sure the
upturn is for real (employment typically lags in a recovery). This
means that under the best of circumstances - assuming the stimulus
is big enough to jump-start the economy and the next bank bailout
big enough to get credit moving - most Americans won’t feel much
better than they do now by November, 2010. Unemployment could easily
be hovering close to 8 percent; underemployment, close to 14 percent;
and many other indicators, still in the doldrums.
“That’s
if all goes extremely well. But
what if the stimulus isn’t big enough? (I fear it won’t be, given
the large and growing gap between what the economy can produce at
near full-employment and the meager demand coming from consumers
and businesses.) And what if the bailout doesn’t quite work? (It
may not, given that the banking system is collapsing and many banks
are actually insolvent.) The economy in November of 2010 may be
worse than it is now, with no turnaround in sight.”
Reich
concludes:
“Republicans
don’t want their fingerprints on the stimulus bill or the next bank
bailout because they plan to make the midterm election of 2010 a
national referendum on Barack Obama’s handling of the economy. They
know that by then the economy will still appear sufficiently weak
that they can dub the entire Obama effort a failure - even if the
economy would have been far worse without it, even if the economy
is beginning to turn around. They’ll say ‘he wanted more government
spending, and we said no, but we didn’t have the votes. Elect us
and we’ll turn the economy around by cutting taxes and getting government
out of the private sector’.”
“Obama
believes Republicans will eventually embrace bipartisanship,” continues
Reich. “ I hope he’s right but I fear he’s wrong. They want to take
back Congress the way Newt Gingrich retook the House (and helped
Republicans retake the Senate) in 1994 - with hellfire and brimstone.
Once in control of Congress, they’ll be able to block Obama’s big
initiatives on health care and the environment, stop any Supreme
Court nominees, and set up their own candidate for the White House
in 2012.”
On
Monday, Cynthia Tucker wrote in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
“Such is the state of the Grand Old Party these days, trapped in
an outmoded ideology, contemptuous of compromise, bitter about its
loss of power. Indeed, congressional Republican leaders seem more
interested in finding a cudgel to wield against President Obama
and other Democrats in 2010 than in rescuing the nation from the
worst economic calamity since the 1930s.”
If
this assessment is correct, the Republicans are playing a cynical
and dangerous game.
This is political corruption at its foulest. They are threatening
the well-being of millions of people who have been or will be thrown
out of work by capitalism’s current breakdown, particularly so the
over 12 out of every 100 African Americans who are on the streets
looking for a way to earn a living - or have simply given up. Their
obstruction poses a threat to our stability right here at home.
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. Click here
to contact Mr. Bloice. |