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Posted: 1/26/2009 4:45:15 AM EDT
Another gem by the same Gentleman who brought you:

"The Stimulus: How to Create Jobs Without Them All Going to Skilled Professionals and White Male Construction Workers."


http://robertreich.blogspot.com/2009/01/stimulus-how-to-create-jobs-without.html


His latest winner.

Note his support of the euphemistically named "Employee Free Choice Act."  If Truth in Advertising laws were followed, it more realistically would be named the "Union Thugs to Make Sure You Voted Correctly Act."  

He keeps touting the new workers (Janitors and Verizon employees) brought into the Union, but I wonder how many of them will be employed much longer.  In this economy, the employer will not be able to afford them much longer.

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-reich26-2009jan26,0,1124419.story

From the Los Angeles Times
Opinion

The union way up

America, and its faltering economy, need unions to restore prosperity to the middle class.
By Robert B. Reich

January 26, 2009

Why is this recession so deep, and what can be done to reverse it?

Hint: Go back about 50 years, when America's middle class was expanding and the economy was soaring. Paychecks were big enough to allow us to buy all the goods and services we produced. It was a virtuous circle. Good pay meant more purchases, and more purchases meant more jobs.

At the center of this virtuous circle were unions. In 1955, more than a third of working Americans belonged to one. Unions gave them the bargaining leverage they needed to get the paychecks that kept the economy going. So many Americans were unionized that wage agreements spilled over to nonunionized workplaces as well. Employers knew they had to match union wages to compete for workers and to recruit the best ones.

Fast forward to a new century. Now, fewer than 8% of private-sector workers are unionized. Corporate opponents argue that Americans no longer want unions. But public opinion surveys, such as a comprehensive poll that Peter D. Hart Research Associates conducted in 2006, suggest that a majority of workers would like to have a union to bargain for better wages, benefits and working conditions. So there must be some other reason for this dramatic decline.

But put that question aside for a moment. One point is clear: Smaller numbers of unionized workers mean less bargaining power, and less bargaining power results in lower wages.

It's no wonder middle-class incomes were dropping even before the recession. As our economy grew between 2001 and the start of 2007, most Americans didn't share in the prosperity. By the time the recession began last year, according to an Economic Policy Institute study, the median income of households headed by those under age 65 was below what it was in 2000.

Typical families kept buying only by going into debt. This was possible as long as the housing bubble expanded. Home-equity loans and refinancing made up for declining paychecks. But that's over. American families no longer have the purchasing power to keep the economy going. Lower paychecks, or no paychecks at all, mean fewer purchases, and fewer purchases mean fewer jobs.

The way to get the economy back on track is to boost the purchasing power of the middle class. One major way to do this is to expand the percentage of working Americans in unions.

Tax rebates won't work because they don't permanently raise wages. Most families used the rebate last year to pay off debt –– not a bad thing, but it doesn't keep the virtuous circle running.

Bank bailouts won't work either. Businesses won't borrow to expand without consumers to buy their goods and services. And Americans themselves can't borrow when they're losing their jobs and their incomes are dropping.

Tax cuts for working families, as President Obama intends, can do more to help because they extend over time. But only higher wages and benefits for the middle class will have a lasting effect.

Unions matter in this equation. According to the Department of Labor, workers in unions earn 30% higher wages –– taking home $863 a week, compared with $663 for the typical nonunion worker –– and are 59% more likely to have employer-provided health insurance than their nonunion counterparts.

Examples abound. In 2007, nearly 12,000 janitors in Providence, R.I., New Hampshire and Boston, represented by the Service Employees International Union, won a contract that raised their wages to $16 an hour, guaranteed more work hours and provided family health insurance. In an industry typically staffed by part-time workers with a high turnover rate, a union contract provided janitors with full-time, sustainable jobs that they could count on to raise their families' –– and their communities' –– standard of living.

In August, 65,000 Verizon workers, represented by the Communications Workers of America, won wage increases totaling nearly 11% and converted temporary jobs to full-time status. Not only did the settlement preserve fully paid healthcare premiums for all active and retired unionized employees, but Verizon also agreed to provide $2 million a year to fund a collaborative campaign with its unions to achieve meaningful national healthcare reform.

Although America and its economy need unions, it's become nearly impossible for employees to form one. The Hart poll I cited tells us that 57 million workers would want to be in a union if they could have one. But those who try to form a union, according to researchers at MIT, have only about a 1 in 5 chance of successfully doing so.

The reason? Most of the time, employees who want to form a union are threatened and intimidated by their employers. And all too often, if they don't heed the warnings, they're fired, even though that's illegal. I saw this when I was secretary of Labor over a decade ago. We tried to penalize employers that broke the law, but the fines are minuscule. Too many employers consider them a cost of doing business.

This isn't right. The most important feature of the Employee Free Choice Act, which will be considered by the just-seated 111th Congress, toughens penalties against companies that violate their workers' rights. The sooner it's enacted, the better –– for U.S. workers and for the U.S. economy.

The American middle class isn't looking for a bailout or a handout. Most people just want a chance to share in the success of the companies they help to prosper. Making it easier for all Americans to form unions would give the middle class the bargaining power it needs for better wages and benefits. And a strong and prosperous middle class is necessary if our economy is to succeed.

Robert B. Reich, former U.S. secretary of Labor, is professor of public policy at UC Berkeley and the author, most recently, of "Supercapitalism."
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 4:53:00 AM EDT
[#1]
This asshole is so full of fail it would be comical if he wasn't in a position to influence policy.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 5:00:55 AM EDT
[#2]
Fifty years ago we were the leading industrial nation in the world.  We also had a trade balance that weighed in our favor.  Can we still make a light bulb?
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 5:04:04 AM EDT
[#3]
I have never trusted midgets.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 5:04:56 AM EDT
[#4]
I listened to Reich on NPR a few times (you need to know what the enemy is thinking!) on my way to work. After having to clean out the truck a few times, I returned to listening to an oldie station.

Link Posted: 1/26/2009 5:06:47 AM EDT
[#5]
I am ashamed and embarrassed that I worked in his office.

He's a nice guy and  he did not like Clinton when the Monica scandal hit.


But he is wrong here.

FUCK DA UNION and FUCK DA KENYAN
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 5:12:21 AM EDT
[#6]
Quoted:
I have never trusted midgets.


Link Posted: 1/26/2009 6:27:44 AM EDT
[#7]
Originally Posted By Robert Reich:
Everything I know, I learned by listening to myself discuss subjects I know nothing about.


Former Teamster.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 6:42:04 AM EDT
[#8]
Fast forward to a new century. Now, fewer than 8% of private-sector workers are unionized. Corporate opponents argue that Americans no longer want unions. But public opinion surveys, such as a comprehensive poll that Peter D. Hart Research Associates conducted in 2006, suggest that a majority of workers would like to have a union to bargain for better wages, benefits and working conditions. So there must be some other reason for this dramatic decline.


Perhaps it's because companies that are unionized tend to fail and go out of business?
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 7:02:03 AM EDT
[#9]
Quoted:
Fast forward to a new century. Now, fewer than 8% of private-sector workers are unionized. Corporate opponents argue that Americans no longer want unions. But public opinion surveys, such as a comprehensive poll that Peter D. Hart Research Associates conducted in 2006, suggest that a majority of workers would like to have a union to bargain for better wages, benefits and working conditions. So there must be some other reason for this dramatic decline.


Perhaps it's because companies that are unionized tend to fail and go out of business?
perhaps less are unionized and manufacturing is at a low point and the economy is in shambles.... you see a trend? people quit blaming the unions for the over all big picture, there is plenty of blame to go around!

Link Posted: 1/26/2009 7:05:14 AM EDT
[#10]
Hint: Go back about 50 years, when America's middle class was expanding and the economy was soaring. Paychecks were big enough to allow us to buy all the goods and services we produced. It was a virtuous circle. Good pay meant more purchases, and more purchases meant more jobs.


The only way we could go "back" to the kind of advantage we had after WWII would be to bomb the bejesus out of every other major industrial power so that we could then charge whatever the hell we want for our goods.  On second thought, maybe that's not such a bad idea.

Link Posted: 1/26/2009 7:09:54 AM EDT
[#11]
If he affects you sorry that I a am saying this.

I LOVE people like him... This is the kind of guy that is going to seal the deal for Obama. As in ruin him.

He is one of several people that in the giddiness and excitement of an Obama admin cannot keep his mouth such and he is also failing to self edited what he says.


Gents it is assholes like this guy that will hopefully keep the Obama admin to one term.

We should embrace this midget and kindly help spread the word of his failed processes. Find quotes by him. Quote him accurately and frequently and ensure that you follow those up with quick blurbs that politely and concisely explain why he is wrong.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 2:21:36 PM EDT
[#12]
Evening White Male bump.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 2:28:31 PM EDT
[#13]
What a load of shit. I have done VERY well in the past 10 years.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 2:34:48 PM EDT
[#14]
I hate unions, therefore I hate the individual who wrote that article. Legalized extortion is all it amounts to.
Link Posted: 1/26/2009 2:41:19 PM EDT
[#15]
Here is the fucks contact info it is on his website:

[email protected]
Robert Reich
(510) 642-0560
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