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Sunday, September 1, 2013

Clarion Call Rings Throughout Nation: 'Low Pay Is Not OK'.

Wave of fast food worker strikes resurges on Thursday with walkouts across the US



  Federal contracting jobs doubled between 1996 & 2009 for low-paying jobs, which means taxpayers are subsidizing these jobs twice!

  
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Testimony on Low-Wage Work: How Our Tax Dollars Drive Inequality by Amy Traub


 "For our report “Underwriting Bad Jobs: How Our Tax Dollars Are Funding Low-Wage Work and Fueling Inequality,” my colleague Robert Hiltonsmith and I analyzed data on federal contractors, health care spending, Small Business Administration loans, federal infrastructure grants and Public Buildings Service property leases.[1] We found that through these sources of federal funding, nearly two million private sector workers are employed, doing jobs we have decided are worthy of public funding, for wages of $12 an hour less, in some cases much less. There is no single private sector employer responsible for this many low wage employees." Read more -- http://bit.ly/16KCRaB.


Friday, August 30, 2013

Fascinating article about the continued wage gap not only between men and women, but more so by race and ethnicity!


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In Reality, Middle-Class Blacks And Middle-Class Whites Have Vastly Different Fortunes by


"With the passing of the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, commentators have been assessing the status of blacks in society. Matt Yglesias has a post about the black-white income gap, and how it has not budged in 40 years. Brad Plumer has a post at Wonkblog that features a list of 10 charts showing the persistence of the black-white economic gap, including rates of unemployment, poverty, and so on.

The statistics provided in these posts—and indeed most statistics provided on this question—compare all blacks against all whites. This kind of comparison is worth making for certain purposes, but it also has its limitations. By itself, such group-level comparisons lend themselves to the hasty conclusion that the difference between the economic situations of blacks and whites is mainly that blacks are more concentrated on the low end of the economic ladder." Article -- http://bit.ly/16WqPrX

Monday, August 26, 2013

I recently read about a poll taken by a national organization that said the average American nearing retirement age has only put aside $10,000! Why aren't Americans saving more money?


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Will You Have a Middle-Class Retirement? by Tom Sightings

 

"What is middle class in America today? According to a definition from the Brookings Institution, the middle class comprises families with incomes between one-half the median income and twice the median income. Today this would make a middle-class annual income range from about $25,000 to $100,000."

"But your location and your situation make a big difference. If you're trying to raise a family on $100,000 a year in New York, Washington or Los Angeles, you're barely scraping by. If you're a retired couple without kids in Macon, Ga., or Mason City, Iowa, you're among the richest people in town." Read article -- http://bit.ly/1c9S6cs

After years of economic turmoil, most families now believe the most valuable--and elusive--possession in American life is economic security.


This sentence jumped off the page at me when reading the article below by Ronald Brownstein. This is evidently the  "ambivalent" message from the latest Allstate/National Journal Heartland Monitor Poll which explored the public's perception of what it means to be middle class in America today. The poll reveals even more unsettling feelings by the majority of people interviewed!

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Meet the New Middle Class: Who They Are, What They Want, and What They Fear by Ronald Brownstein

 

"After years of economic turmoil, most families now believe the most valuable--and elusive--possession in American life is economic security. Americans still believe they can reach for the stars, but they are increasingly fearful they are standing on a trapdoor as they try." Read more -- http://bit.ly/17XSo2f

 



 Why America's Middle Class is Losing Ground by


Obama’s Plan to Save the Middle Class: Redistribution Now, Education Later by Ezra Klein

 

"My colleague Jim Tankersley writes that “there are two kinds of middle-class Americans struggling today. There are the people who can’t find work or can’t work as many hours as they’d like. And there are full-time workers who can’t seem to get ahead. In Tuesday’s State of the Union and its response, there wasn’t much for either group — at least when it comes to their biggest problem.” Read more -- http://wapo.st/VaNdvI