A so-called “labor shortage” in the United States has quickly become a catch-all justification for policies that prevent workers from gaining too much power on the job, or collectively organizing by forming unions.
Not enough applicants for low-paid jobs packing meat, or working the cash register at Dairy Queen? Better crank up the Federal Reserve’s interest rates (a policy explicitly aimed at spurring a recession and putting people out of work), so that we have a larger reserve of the desperate unemployed. Pandemic-era social programs ever-so-slightly redistributing wealth downward? Better shut them down, lest we eliminate the supposed precarity needed to incentivize work.
The concept of a labor shortage can be used to effectively justify any anti-worker policy under the sun. From reading the financial press or listening to business elites, the shortage may seem like an economic fact — a material reality that is beyond dispute. But, in reality, the framing of a “labor shortage” is at its heart ideological. As long as we’re talking about a labor shortage, we’re not talking about a shortage of good, dignified union jobs. As long as we’re talking about how people “don’t want to work,” we’re not talking about how bosses don’t want to treat their employees with basic fairness and respect. And as long as we’re talking about how it’s bosses who are supposedly hurting, we’re not talking about what it would take to build an economy that doesn’t perpetually harm the poor and dispossessed. - In These Times
Monday, November 28, 2022
Too much crap about a "worker shortage"
You've undoubtedly seen, from the greedheads' vast kennel of whimpering, groveling propagandist curs in corporate media and elsewhere, about how unemployment is "too low," the retirement age needs to be raised, etc. Despicable.
Hmmm ... I am sensing the Social Security Trust Fund will be seeing financial stability by the Party Of Trump's efforts.
ReplyDeleteAs of the week ending October 1, 2022, the United States has lost nearly 1.1 million lives to COVID-19, of which about 790,000 are people ages 65 and older ... thus a lot of people who would have garnered benefit payments for years, are now dead.
Second, the Republican Study Committee's Blueprint To Save America is to enact the Social Security Reform Act which raises the retirement age to 70, caps benefits for children of deceased parents and sets a path to terminate the collection of Social Security tax (but maintains the Medicare tax).
Yep ... work longer is exactly what the Party Of Trump wants you to do before you start being a drain on the Social Security system ... after all, isn't "Social" Security just an outcome of the "socialist" government that Tom Emmer has warned us about ? Remember when Emmer said "If you boil down what socialism really is, it's about government making the choices" ... so now, the government is making the choice that workers work longer and get less.