9 Questions about the 1%, the Unemployed and why the one produces the Other
http://www.juancole.com/2014/06/questions-unemployed-produces.html
9 Questions about the 1%, the Unemployed and why the one produces the Other
Jun. 4, 2014
By Peter van Buren via Tomdispatch
Last year eight Americans the four Waltons of Walmart fame, the two Koch brothers, Bill Gates, and Warren Buffett made more money than 3.6 million American minimum-wage workers combined. The median pay for CEOs at Americas large corporations rose to $10 million per year, while a typical chief executive now makes about 257 times the average workers salary, up sharply from 181 times in 2009. Overall, 1% of Americans own more than a third of the countrys wealth.
As the United States slips from its status as the globes number one economic power, small numbers of Americans continue to amass staggering amounts of wealth, while simultaneously inequality trends toward historic levels. At what appears to be a critical juncture in our history and the history of inequality in this country, here are nine questions we need to ask about who we are and what will become of us. Lets start with a French economist who has emerged as an important voice on whats happening in America today.
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2) So why dont the unemployed/underemployed simply find better jobs?
Another way of phrasing this question is: Why dont we just blame the poor for their plight? Mention unemployment or underemployment and someone will inevitably invoke the old pull yourself up by your bootstraps line. If workers dont like retail or minimum-wage jobs, or if they cant find good paying jobs in their area, why dont they just move? Quit retail or quit Pittsburgh (Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis) and
Move to where to do what? Our country lost one-third of all decent factory jobs almost six million of them between 2000 and 2009, and wherever there is supposed to be, piles of people are already in line. In addition, many who lost their jobs dont have the means to move or a friend with a couch to sleep on when they get to Colorado. Some have lived for generations in the places where the jobs have disappeared. As for the jobs that are left, what do they pay? One out of four working Americans earn less than $10 per hour. At 25%, the U.S. has the highest percentage of low-wage workers in the developed world. (Canada and Great Britain have 20%, Japan under 15%, and France 11%.)