Home » Posts tagged "employment"

Job Hunting and Reaching Out for a Job

Evans Liberal Politics
March 12, 2011

 

Job Hunting and Reaching Out for a Job

Evans Liberal Politics, March 12, 2011, by Paul Evans:

This will be a generally short post because, for a change, I will not be blogging the news today but will be instead doing some bone fide JOB HUNTING!

UPDATE: I’ve spent the last sixteen hours applying for jobs online, in Wooster, and also trying very hard to scare up a little something to live on for the rest of the month, until some cash comes my way.

In the last six months I have learned what it is to face homelessness, to have no fuel oil to heat the house, to lose my electricity, and I have lost every single one of my old friends. It is so very easy to have an excuse or very good reason to no longer help me, I have found. And I have come to hate begging people for help more than I every hated anything in my life. Everyone talks about “sustainability.” Today, I lost my last longstanding friend over my poverty and my insistence that I help two friends by giving them a place to live, trotz alle dem (no matter what).

This is very sad for me. All I can say is that I have found that in deciding to no longer help me, or never help me in the first place, I have found that it is very easy to have good “reasons” why not to help. Very easy to say no. Very easy, I have found, to find reasons why it would be better if I were no longer these people’s friend. So every one of my old friends dropped me. Without exception.

A few people have helped, mainly churches and ministers, and a few friends, whose friendship I lost over this. I have to ask?? No. I am forced to conclude: This is human nature. I really didn’t want to think that people were like this.

I’m sorry to be bitter. This whole ordeal has hurt me a lot. I will NOT give up. But it hurts. I guess I should conclude that if my friends were going to drop me because they no longer approved of my life or the way I was living it, then they weren’t very good friends, anyway. But that’s not how I feel. I loved these people, really, actually ….and it hurts.

Blogging the news will now resume, and with more than usual effort. Damn, I don’t have a single friend who understands the blogging bug, why I do it, what I get out of it. (And I did lose all my old friends, as described above. The only friends I have in the world are my Dad, my dog Ruby, my minister friend Kevan, and my two housemates.) But I sure as hell enjoy communicating the truth about things to you! For me, this is great!

photo of a foldeded newspaper in front of an apartment door with the headline Paul Gets a Job

At Evans Liberal Politics we have described several times how at my house, we are living in dire poverty, barely able to pay for the electricity, if that. Our furnace is off and we have no fuel oil, while we are hanging on to the phone/internet by the skin of our teeth. Generally, we run out of money by the middle of the month and end up begging from our friends and local churches.

Since this is an unsustainable and completely unacceptable way to live, all three of us here have it in our minds that, somehow, despite an unemployment rate that hovers near 31 percent for those making $20,000 a year or less, and some “bad marks” on our employment records, we are ALL going to get jobs!!!

So — I know — I have some few loyal readers who will be disappointed, and my Google rankings will really take a nosedive, but I am tired of being dirt poor and I am going to be spending the day trying to get a job. And the world will go on spinning and Republicans and Democrats will go on hating each other and true liberals everywhere will be in disbelief, wondering exactly what has happened.

Employers please see the Hire Paul Evans! & About Evans Politics page if interested. Download my resume here. Phone 330-262-0571 if interested in hiring me.

Anyone who might like to make a donations, please send a money order to:
Paul E. Evans
5396 Overton Road
Wooster, OH 44691

Everybody have a GREAT day! ~ owner Paul Evans

Comments for this post are disabled.

Economy loses 95,000 jobs as government cuts payrolls

Evans Liberal Politics
October 8, 2010

 

Economy loses 95,000 jobs as government cuts payrolls


Cuts in Government Led U.S. Economy to Lose 95,000 Jobs, © The New York Times, October 8, 2010, by Catherine Rampell, excerpt quoted verbatim:

The economy shed 95,000 nonfarm jobs in September, the Labor Department reported Friday, with most of the decline the result of the layoffs by local governments and of temporary decennial Census workers.

If You Agree
Click on Bad Old Bush
to Visit Paul’s Playlist
of 231 Rock & Pop Hits


magazine cover from the Daily Mirror with the words 'How can 59,054,087 people be so DUMB' on Bush's re-election serves as a link to launch Paul's Playlist of 190 rock and pop hits

The steep drop was far worse than economists had been predicting. Most estimates were for a loss of only a few thousand jobs.

“September’s U.S. payroll report adds to the evidence that the recovery is losing what little forward momentum it had,” said Paul Ashworth, senior United States economist at Capital Economics.

The recovery that officially began in June 2009 has slowed considerably in recent months, raising concerns about the long slog the country will have to endure to dig itself out of the deepest downturn since the Great Depression. Private payrolls have been growing throughout 2009 but at a rate too sluggish to make much of a dent in unemployment. The outlook for the rest of the year is equally discouraging, economists say.

“We’re looking for companies to get more confident in the pace of recovery and start to hire around 150,000 jobs a month, which is what we need just to keep the unemployment rate flat,” said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics. “But I just don’t see that happening between now and the end of the year.”

While total government jobs fell by 159,000, private sector companies added 64,000 jobs last month. The unemployment rate, which measures the percentage of workers who are actively looking for but unable to find jobs, stayed flat at 9.6 percent.

A broader measure of unemployment, which includes people who are working part-time because they cannot find full-time jobs, and people who have given up looking for work, rose to 17.1 percent from 16.7 percent in August. This was largely because of a jump in the number of people who are reluctantly working part-time. ….

Read the full article here.

Comment by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: 77,000 of the newly unemployed were Census workers whose job ran out of time. Also, keep in mind that unemployment is not evenly distributed throughout the economy. For those workers making $200,000 a year or more, unemployment remains at a very acceptable rate of 3.2 percent. But for those workers making $20,000 a year or less, the official unemployment rate stands at 31 percent. That doesn’t count the underemployed, those working part time jobs who really want full time jobs, nor those workers who have given up and stopped looking for work.

Spiritual Cinema Circle

Check out our Famous Guide to Liberal News & Politics on the Web, the best guide to where to find "The Truth" in the news around the web.


Check out Paul’s Playlist of 206 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


NEW! For our readers: Check out our 40 song "Only Classic Rock Playlist", now on its own page!


Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.

Why It’s Foolish to Weaken the Dollar to Create Jobs

Evans Liberal Politics
October 2, 2010

 

Why It’s Foolish to Weaken the Dollar to Create Jobs


Why It’s Foolish to Weaken the Dollar to Create Jobs, Robert Reich.org, October 1, 2010, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

I keep hearing the only way we’re going to get jobs back any time soon is with a weak dollar.

Microsoft Store

Baloney.

Here’s the theory. As the dollar falls relative to foreign currencies, everything we export becomes less expensive to foreign consumers. So they buy more of our stuff, creating more jobs in the U.S. At the same time, everything they make costs us more. So we buy less from them and more from each other. Again, more jobs here at home.

Washington is actively pursuing a weak dollar as a jobs policy. (The dollar just plunged to a six-month low against the euro.)

How? The Fed is keeping long-term interest rates so low global investors are heading elsewhere for high returns, which bids the dollar down. Every time another Fed official hints the Fed will start printing even more money (“quantitative easing” in Fed speak) the dollar takes another dive.

Meanwhile, Congress is ginning up legislation to allow the President to slap tariffs on Chinese imports because China is “artificially” keeping its currency low relative to the dollar.

But using a weak dollar to create American jobs is foolish, for two reasons.

First, no other country wants to lose jobs because its currency becomes too high relative to the dollar. So a weak dollar policy invites currency wars. Everyone loses.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

At least a half dozen other countries are now actively pushing down the value of their currencies. Japan recently sold some $20 billion of yen in order to keep the yen down, the biggest ever sell-off in single day.

Last week, Brazil’s Finance Minister lashed out at the US, Japan and other rich nations for letting their currencies weaken to spur jobs. Brazil’s high interest rates are attracting global investors and pushing up the value of Brazil’s currency. This is crippling Brazil’s exports and fueling unemployment.

Here’s the other problem. Even if we succeed, a weak dollar makes us poorer. Imports are around 18 percent of the US economy, so a dropping dollar is exactly like an extra tax on 18 percent of what we buy.

It’s no big accomplishment to create jobs by getting poorer. You want to know how to cut unemployment by half tomorrow? Get rid of the minimum wage and unemployment insurance, and make everyone who needs a job work for a dollar a day.

The Commerce Department just reported that U.S. incomes rose half a percent in August, the biggest jump since last September. That’s good news. But it’s no trend. Incomes plunged into such a deep hole last year that a half percent rise is still in the hole.

Since the start of the Great Recession, millions of working Americans have had to settle for lower wages in order to keep their jobs. (Here at the University of California, the wage cuts are called “furloughs.”)

Or they’ve lost higher paying jobs and can only find work that pays less.

Or they’ve lost their benefits. Or their co-pays, deductibles, and premiums have soared. And their employer no longer matches their 401(k) contributions.

Two-tier wage contracts are the newest vogue in labor relations. Older workers stay at their previous wage; new hires get lower wages and smaller benefits.

Even a wage freeze becomes a lower wage over time, as inflation eats into it. For three decades America’s median wage has barely budged, adjusted for inflation.

Get it? The goal isn’t just more jobs. It’s more jobs that pay enough to improve our living standards.

Using a weakening dollar to create more jobs doesn’t get us where we want to be.

here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future is just out and is for sale at a 48 percent savings (hardcover) at Amazon.com. Watch a specially produced video about Aftershock, here. The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

Why Pay More? $7.49 .COM Domains from GoDaddy.com 468x60

Check out Paul’s Playlist of 200 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


NEW! For our readers: Check out our 40 song "Only Classic Rock Playlist", now on its own page!


Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.

Striking workers march in Europe

Evans Liberal Politics
September 30, 2010

 

Striking workers march in Europe


Striking workers march in Europe, © The Los Angeles Times, September 30, 2010, by Devorah Lauter, (photo © Jon Nazca / Reuters / September 30, 2010), excerpt quoted verbatim:

The labor force protests cuts to jobless benefits, public service wages and pensions in a mostly peaceful show of force.

in Spain and elsewhere in Europe, workers protested austerity cuts by governments under pressure from the European Union to make cuts

Reporting from Paris — Thousands of European workers took their battle against punishing public spending cuts to the streets Wednesday, a show of force that came as governments struggle to reel in high deficits at a time of sluggish economic growth.

Striking workers marched in cities from Athens to Bucharest, protesting cuts to jobless benefits, public service wages and pensions that threaten to undo the European social welfare model.

Most of the marches were peaceful. But there was violence, too: in Barcelona, where demonstrators clashed with police and in Greece, where a three-week-long truckers strike led to shots being fired at a convoy of police-escorted trucks that were delivering goods despite the strike.

The economically troubled European countries are trying to cut their spending and demonstrate financial strength to investors and others, but are seeing the labor unions challenge their proposals as harmful to workers.

Demonstrations Wednesday included a gathering in Brussels of union representatives from about 30 countries, according to protest organizers. Thousands of protesters participated in marches on buildings associated with the European Union, according to union representatives and police.

“No to austerity, employment and growth are priorities,” read one sign in Brussels.

In Spain, a rare national strike had buses and regional trains functioning at a snail’s pace, in protest against emergency austerity measures by Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s Socialist government.

Spiritual Cinema Circle

“The cuts are bad for the people,” said Violeta Doval, 29, a protester in Madrid, and a sociologist. “These measures don’t touch the cause of the situation, and they won’t create employment.… The first thing the government did was to help the banks by giving them a lot of money, and then a little later they want to solve the problem by just taking money from the workers.”

Spain’s deficit of over three times the European Union standard of 3% of gross domestic product, has spooked international markets fearful of a scenario that led to the near bankruptcy of debt-ridden Greece this year.

Under international pressure, Spain has promised cuts in public sector salaries, unemployment checks and pensions, while reducing job security benefits and making it easier for companies to fire workers.

As in other parts of Europe, protesters in Spain complained that the new cuts have come too strong, and too fast, from foreign decision-makers who don’t have their country’s sovereign interests at heart.

“People on the outside are telling us what to do,” Doval said. “The European Union hasn’t been helpful during the crisis, they have only put on pressure, and they don’t know what is best for our people, like social measures that are really needed.”

Zapatero’s austerity plan, which is not expected to undergo major changes in reaction to the strikes, surprised many Spaniards because the program is considered typical of right-wing policy, and appears to contradict their leader’s leftist electoral promises. ….

Read the full article, here.

Let’s play nice, now! See 187 photos of the austerity protests by AP on Yahoo News.

See Anti-austerity protests sweep across Europe, AP on Yahoo News, September 29, 2010, by Raf Casert.

See Workers rally across Europe to protest against cuts, Guardian.co.uk, September 29, 2010, by Ian Traynor.

See Anti-austerity protests hit Europe, AlJazeera English, September 29, 2010, by AlJazeera.

See Spanish workers go on general strike as part of Europe-wide protests against ‘austerity’ measures, DailyRecord.co.uk, September 29, 2010, no author listed.

See Thousands rally in opposition to austerity, Irish Times, September 30, 2010, by Arthur Beesley.

See Thousands protest Romanian austerity measures, CNN, September 28, 2010, by Cosmin Stan.

Why Pay More? $7.49 .COM Domains from GoDaddy.com 468x60

Check out Paul’s Playlist of 193 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


NEW! For our readers: Check out our 37 song "Only Classic Rock Playlist", now on its own page!


Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.

Krugman, Morgenson Nail Wall Street Jobless Lies, Mortgage Fraud

a blocky golden dollar sign highlights this article on Wall Street greed, jobless lies and mortgage frauda blocky golden dollar sign highlights this article on Wall Street greed, jobless lies and mortgage fraud

Evans Liberal Politics
September 27, 2010

 

 

Krugman, Morgenson Nail Wall Street
Jobless Lies, Mortgage Fraud


Krugman, Morgenson Nail Wall St. Jobless Lies, Mortgage Fraud, Daily Kos, September 26, 2010, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

IMHO, there are two must-read pieces in Monday’s New York Times concerning unemployment and the Great Recession, Wall Street mortgage fraud, and our economy, in general.The first article of note is the paper’s Monday business lede, by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Gretchen Morgenson, “Raters Ignored Proof of Unsafe Loans, Panel Is Told,”  which publicizes testimony that occurred last week before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, wherein we learn of the truly astonishing extent of rampant, institutionalized, mortgage-investment-related fraud which was pervasive throughout Wall Street in the run-up to our economy’s crash and burn in September 2008.

Why Pay More? $7.49.COM Domains from GoDaddy.com - 336x280

The second piece is an op-ed by Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, entitled, “Structure of Excuses,” which continues a theme upon which I’ve posted multiple diaries of late: the concept of “structural unemployment” as the cause of our society’s extended joblessness problem is little more than a grossly-misleading myth perpetuated by our status quo via the MSM.

#            #            #

MORGENSON:Raters Ignored Proof of Unsafe Loans, Panel Is Told


In what might very well become a historical milestone concerning coverage of the events that ultimately led up to the 2008 implosion of Wall Street, NY Times Pultizer Prize-winning business journalist Gretchen Morgenson, on the front page of Monday’s NY Times’ business section, reports on testimony and events over the past week at the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission,  in “Raters Ignored Proof of Unsafe Loans, Panel Is Told.”

Quite clearly, based upon Ms. Morgenson’s report, it’s now obvious that the FCIC has been provided with an arsenal of smoking guns which collectively scream that–the credit ratings agencies were clearly complicit and directly enabling Wall Street’s misrepresentations to the investing public of the quality of their mortgage-backed securities throughout much of 2006, 2007 and 2008, but–virtually every major Wall Street firm was aware of the fraud they were committing at the time, as well.

The article tells us of last week’s testimony of D. Keith Johnson before the FCIC…

…D. Keith Johnson, a former president of Clayton Holdings, a company that analyzed mortgage pools for the Wall Street firms that sold them, told the commission on Thursday that almost half the mortgages Clayton sampled from the beginning of 2006 through June 2007 failed to meet crucial quality benchmarks that banks had promised to investors.

However, as Morgenson states it, “…until Mr. Johnson’s testimony last week, it was largely unknown that the ratings agencies had been told that vast numbers of loans were being packaged as securities even though they failed to meet underwriting standards.”

Of critical importance here, however, as far as this latest FCIC testimony is concerned, is the now-formally-recognized reality — a truth which has been widely known among Wall Street insiders all along, by the way — that while the Wall Street spin on all of this fraud for the past couple of years has been to blame the credit ratings agencies for Wall Street’s fraudulent transgressions,  the reality is that these same Wall Street firms were also contracting out due diligence services on these very same mortgage portfolios, directly, with the same firms that were providing similar services to the ratings agencies.

Essentially, as we’re now hearing it in Morgenson’s report regarding recent FCIC testimony, these Wall Street firms were fully aware of their misrepresentations to the investment community and to the public. And, as Morgenson also tells us, the Wall Street purveyors of these fraudulent mortgage-backed investment vehicles merely used these due diligence reports on their portfolios to negotiate better pricing with the mortgage firms that were bundling them!

As the article notes, in some instances, almost half of all of the mortgage loans initially bundled in certain mortgage-backed securitization (MBS) deals did not meet underwriting standards.

(Diarist’s Note: IMHO, the NYT article headline is somewhat misleading; perhaps perpetuating the Wall Street meme that attempts to pass along full blame for rampant mortgage fraud to the credit ratings agencies. Obviously, Morgenson’s article points out that my comment regarding Wall Street’s missteps rings true.)

Raters Ignored Proof of Unsafe Loans, Panel Is Told

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
New York Times
September 27, 2010…The results of the Clayton analyses were not disclosed to investors buying the loan pools. Instead, Wall Street firms used the information to pressure the lenders issuing the most troubled loans to accept a lower price for them, according to prosecutors who have investigated these cases.

A more proper procedure, analysts said, would have been for lenders like these — New Century Financial and Fremont Investment and Loan among them — to buy back the problem loans and replace them with higher-quality mortgages. But because these companies did not have enough capital to do that, they were happy to sell the troubled mortgages cheaply to the brokerage firms.

Since Wall Street firms were paying lower prices for the troubled loans, they could have passed along those discounts to customers, reducing investor risk. But Wall Street charged investors the same high prices associated with better-quality loans, thereby increasing their own profits on the problematic securities, according to a law enforcement official and executives with Wall Street companies. To be sure, the prospectuses detailing the types of loans in these pools contained brief warnings that some of the mortgages might not meet stated underwriting standards. But few investors probably realized that huge portions of the pools had failed to meet the benchmarks…

Bold type is diarist’s emphasis.

textbookx.com (Akademos, Inc.)

KRUGMAN: “Structure of Excuses


First, in referencing two of my posts over the past week, here are the first couple of paragraphs from my diary from Sunday (yesterday) morning: “‘Structural Unemployment’ & ‘Deleveraging,’ My Ass!

“Structural Unemployment” & “Deleveraging,” My Ass!

by bobswern
Daily Kos
Sun Sep 26, 2010 at 07:37:06 AM EDTOver the past couple of years, many have been sucked-in by a lot of bullsh*t economic pseudo-analysis from GOPers and misdirected Dems parroting totally false, Wall Street-centric memes and baseless “conventional wisdom” about our Great Recession.  Gradually, the obfuscated truths are finally coming to the fore.

This morning, Yves Smith picks up where respected economist and NetRoots Nation guest Mike Konczal left off a week ago, explaining that the widely-accepted, Orwellian theme of structural unemployment is completely bogus.

(Konczal irrefutably demonstrates, via his just-released study, that the statistical facts tell us that the jobless downturn–which is significantly and adversely affecting all business sectors, not just construction–was a direct byproduct of Wall Street’s stripmining of Main Street’s mortgage marketplace, and is/was due to a general lack of demand that is still extremely pervasive throughout our society. However, there is no “skills mismatch” in the marketplace [i.e.: the basic concept behind the structural unemployment meme]; and that’s just another Wall Street excuse for offshoring jobs and/or cutting pay/hours on Main Street among those who’ve been able to hold onto their jobs until now.)

For more detail on the bogus structural unemployment meme, here are links to other diaries I’ve posted on the subject in the past few days: “‘Proofiness’ and ‘Disestimation’,” (9/25/10), and “Konczal Study: Lack of Demand, Not Skills, Is Jobless Problem,” (9/20/10).

Now, onto the maestro’s take on Wall Street’s propaganda concerning joblessness amongst us little folk…

Structure of Excuses

By PAUL KRUGMAN
New York Times
September 27, 2010What can be done about mass unemployment? All the wise heads agree: there are no quick or easy answers. There is work to be done, but workers aren’t ready to do it — they’re in the wrong places, or they have the wrong skills. Our problems are “structural,” and will take many years to solve.

But don’t bother asking for evidence that justifies this bleak view. There isn’t any. On the contrary, all the facts suggest that high unemployment in America is the result of inadequate demand — full stop. Saying that there are no easy answers sounds wise, but it’s actually foolish: our unemployment crisis could be cured very quickly if we had the intellectual clarity and political will to act.

In other words, structural unemployment is a fake problem, which mainly serves as an excuse for not pursuing real solutions…

In Sunday’s diary, I went into fairly extensive detail on one of those quite “real” solutions towards the end of my post: a small ($1 billion program) but extremely successful jobs program praised by Dems and GOP’ers, alike…one which is about to come to a grinding halt due to a lack of desire on Capitol Hill to extend funding for it. Here’s Bob Herbert’s NY Times column from July 3rd on this very initiative, “A Jobs Program That Works.

Gradually, with hindsight being 20/20, we are learning more with each passing day concerning the details as to how 30 years of greed and unbridled capitalism-gone-wild  have brought us to where we are now. The solutions to our economy’s problems ARE out there. But, given Republican obstructionism, one may only wonder whether or not the collective will is there (in our government, and within our population as a whole) to solve them.

Evans Liberal Politics would like to thank Bob Swern for permission to republish his work on an ongoing basis. Bob is our favorite progressive economics writer. More than even Paul Krugman, Mr. Swern fleshes out his articles with lots of details and links, and so provides real grist for liberals and progressives to learn from. You are invited to email Bob Swern here.

Watch or download a devastating and scathing PowerPoint presentation on the Banking Industry and Subprime Mortgages: WARNING – contains obscenity, not for those under 18! (Download the FREE PowerPoint viewer direct from Microsoft if needed. — 60.3 MB)

Why Pay More? $7.49 .COM Domains from GoDaddy.com 468x60

Check out Paul’s Playlist of 193 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


NEW! For our readers: Check out our 37 song "Only Classic Rock Playlist", now on its own page!


Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.

The Two Categories of American Corporations — And Their Politics

Evans Liberal Politics
September 14, 2010

 

The Two Categories of American Corporations
And Their Politics

 

The Two Categories of American Corporation — And Their Politics, Robert Reich.org, September 12, 2010, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Some giant American corporations depend on a buoyant American economy and a world-class industrial base in the United States. Others are far less dependent. What comes out of Washington in the next few years will reflect which group has most political clout — especially if Republicans take over the House and capture more of the Senate this November.

CompUSA Best Sellers

The first group includes national telecoms like Verizon and AT&T that need a prosperous America because most of their sales are here. Same with finance companies like Bank of America and Travelers Insurance whose business strategy has been built around U.S. consumers. Ditto certain giant chains like Home Depot. Naturally, all these companies were especially hard hit by the Great Depression and its devastating impact on American consumers.

The second group includes companies like Coca Cola, Exxon-Mobil, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and McDonalds, that get substantial revenues from their overseas operations. Increasingly this means China, India, and Brazil. Ford and GM are still largely dependent on US sales but becoming less so. GM sold more cars in China last year than in the US. Not surprisingly, American companies that are less dependent on American consumers have been showing the biggest profits.

Wall Street gets this. Viewing the 30 giants that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average, analysts are predicting that the 10 with the largest portion of sales inside the U.S. will show average revenue gains of just 1.6 percent over the next year, while the 10 with the largest portion of their sales abroad will grow by an average of 8.3 percent.

So what does this mean for politics? Big companies hedge their bets and support both Republicans and Democrats. But in my experience, companies in the first group are more responsive to tax, spending, and monetary policies that cause unemployment to drop and wages to grow, and less obsessed by inflation and deficits, than are companies in the second group. The former are also more supportive of new investments in infrastructure and education, which improve U.S. productivity over the longer term.

The problem is, more and more big companies are moving into the second category because that’s where the markets and the money are. Years ago groups like the Business Roundtable consisted mostly of large American corporations that were indubitably American, and took largely progressive positions on U.S. jobs and wages. I remember working with the National Association of Manufacturers on measures to improve U.S. education and job training. The American Electronics Association pushed the Reagan Administration for an industrial policy to preserve the nascent industrial base of U.S. computing.

No longer. Large American corporations are going global as fast as they can. That’s good for their shareholders. But in a Washington ever more susceptible to their money and influence, that’s not necessarily good for most Americans.

here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future is going to be released September 21, and is available for Pre-ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

Check out Paul’s Playlist of 187 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.

Economic Realities: Press From Hell vs. New WH Candor

a dollar sign composed entirely of fire against a black background highlights this article on economic troubles and the Great Recessiona dollar sign composed entirely of fire against a black background highlights this article on economic troubles and the Great Recession

Evans Liberal Politics
September 13, 2010

 

Economic Realities: Press From Hell
vs. New WH Candor

 

Economic Realities: Press From Hell vs. New WH Candor, Daily Kos, September 12, 2010, by Bob Swern, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

It couldn’t happen at a more inopportune moment, but we are starting to get bombarded with many more inconvenient, if not downright ugly, facts (for Democratic incumbents) regarding our economy. And, as of today — finally — instead of happy talk about unmet expectations that “accentuate the positive” with stories about our “Recovery Summer,” it would appear that the White House is shifting strategy and telling it like Main Street has known it to be for quite some time, too.All I can say is, better late than never: “Goolsbee: Unemployment ‘Going to Stay High.’

Click the Evans Liberal Politics
Getaway Car to Visit Paul’s
Playlist of Rock & Pop Hits
* #1 Rated by Google *


photo link of Paul's 2002 Honda CR-V at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center Arboretum serves as a link to Paul's Playlist of 182 Rock, Pop and Electronic Hits

Goolsbee: Unemployment ‘Going to Stay High’
White House Adviser Says Long Road to Less Joblessness
By JOSHUA MILLER
ABC
September 12, 2010Unemployment in the United States is “going to stay high” Austan Goolsbee, Obama’s chief economic adviser, told Christiane Amanpour this morning on “This Week.”

“This recession is the deepest in our lifetimes, the deepest since 1929,” said Goolsbee, who was just appointed chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers. “More than eight million people lost their jobs. It’s going to take a significant push on our part – and time – before that comes down,” he said. “I don’t anticipate it coming down right away…”

Meanwhile, and for the record and for quite awhile, too, I’ve been referencing previous, candid administration commentary about unemployment forecasts (which have also dropped off the radar of the MSM amidst the spin of past months), much to the chagrin of many in this community, such as this:  ”Romer, Orszag, Geithner: ≥9.7% Jobless Through 2010.”  Unfortunately, we’re now reading where even those projections may be understated: “Double Digit Unemployment Rate early next year?

And, here, courtesy of Calculated Risk, are two really good reasons why the administration’s unemployment projections may still fall shy of reality: “Paper: Housing and the Business Cycle.”

Here’s an example of what I’m talking about when I use the term, “Press Advisories From Hell,” as noted in the diary’s headline: “Census Bureau to Announce Findings for Income, Earnings, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage.” The U.S. Census Bureau’s online news conference announcing this report’s findings will be held this upcoming Thursday, September 16th, at 10AM EDT. 12 days later, “…local data for income, poverty and health insurance coverage will be available Tuesday, Sept. 28th, when the Census Bureau releases new socioeconomic, housing and demographic data from the 2009 American Community Survey.”

I posted a few diaries on this last year, around this time, when the Census Bureau’s 2008 Reports were announced, including, “New Census Data This A.M.: Income, Poverty and Health Ins.”  (9/10/09), and this, “Hidden Health Ins. Realities In New Census Bureau Report (9/11/09).”

This year, the forecast is significantly worse: “Poverty Rate In U.S. Saw Record Increase In 2009: 1 In 7 Americans Are Poor.”

Poverty Rate In U.S. Saw Record Increase In 2009: 1 In 7 Americans Are Poor

Associated Press (via Huffington Post)
HOPE YEN and LIZ SIDOTI | 09/11/10 11:14 PM | APWASHINGTON — The number of people in the U.S. who are in poverty is on track for a record increase on President Barack Obama’s watch, with the ranks of working-age poor approaching 1960s levels that led to the national war on poverty.

Census figures for 2009 – the recession-ravaged first year of the Democrat’s presidency – are to be released in the coming week, and demographers expect grim findings.

It’s unfortunate timing for Obama and his party just seven weeks before important elections when control of Congress is at stake. The anticipated poverty rate increase – from 13.2 percent to about 15 percent – would be another blow to Democrats struggling to persuade voters to keep them in power.

The AP coverage included the following point:

Interviews with six demographers who closely track poverty trends found wide consensus that 2009 figures are likely to show a significant rate increase to the range of 14.7 percent to 15 percent.

As the story also noted, if those forecasts hold true,  then we’re looking at approximately 45 million folks in this country–more than one in seven–being officially below the poverty line; and, that constitutes the greatest year-over-year increase since the government began tracking these statistics in 1959.

Yesterday’s NY Times informed us that: “Number of Families in Shelters Rises.”

Number of Families in Shelters Rises
By MICHAEL LUO
New York Times
Published: September 11, 2010…For millions who have lost jobs or faced eviction in the economic downturn, homelessness is perhaps the darkest fear of all. In the end, though, for all the devastation wrought by the recession, a vast majority of people who have faced the possibility have somehow managed to avoid it.

Nevertheless, from 2007 through 2009, the number of families in homeless shelters — households with at least one adult and one minor child — leapt to 170,000 from 131,000, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

With long-term unemployment ballooning, those numbers could easily climb this year. Late in 2009, however, states began distributing $1.5 billion that has been made available over three years by the federal government as part of the stimulus package for the Homeless Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program, which provides financial assistance to keep people in their homes or get them back in one quickly if they lose them.

More than 550,000 people have received aid, including more than 1,800 in Rhode Island, with just over a quarter of the money for the program spent so far nationally, state and federal officials said.

Even so, it remains to be seen whether the program is keeping pace with the continuing economic hardship…

And, on Wednesday, we learned that: “Food Stamp Participation Climbs 10%.”

However, as I noted in THIS diary, on Thursday,  ”…when you look closely at the June ’10 vs. June ’09 vs. June ’08 statistics, the reality looks more like an increase of over 22% from June ’08 to June ’09, and another increase of more than 18% from June ’09 to June ’10. (Note: If someone could explain to me how that’s not the case, I’m ready to correct this observation.) Here are the stats, direct from the government:  Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (“SNAP,” a/k/a food stamps).”

So, while it’s long overdue, IMHO, and despite the ongoing denial of many in this community (I will not be providing links to support this sentence, but you know what I’m talking about, even without the specifics) to the contrary, STILL,  I welcome this apparent shift towards more candor in the messaging coming from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

A little less use of the word, “recovery” (Krugman recently referred to it as “Delusions Of Recovery“), and a little more empathy regarding the suffering currently going down on Main Street is a good place for Democrats to turn, at least if they’re interested in putting forth any type of message that resonates with the voters before November 2nd.

Better late than never.

Evans Liberal Politics would like to thank Bob Swern for permission to republish his work on an ongoing basis. Bob is our favorite progressive economics writer. More than even Paul Krugman, Mr. Swern fleshes out his articles with lots of details and links, and so provides real grist for liberals and progressives to learn from. You are invited to email Bob Swern here.

See Income More Unequal In U.S. Than In Parts Of Latin America, NPR on Evans Liberal Politics, September 8, 2010, by J.J. Sutherland.

UPDATE: See ‘Record increase’ in number of Americans in poverty, The Associated Press on The Raw Story, September 13, 2010, by AP.

Check out Paul’s Playlist of 187 Rock and Pop Hits, and have fun with all the artists you love while you surf the web.


TigerDirect Best Sellers

Follow Evans Liberal Politics and Paul Evans on
Twitter logo link for Evans Liberal Politics on Twitter

Follow Paul Evans on
Facebook logo link to follow Paul Evans on Facebook

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! While we enjoy a certain level of popularity on the web, in order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today? If you value liberal and progressive ideas and politics, please simply share Evans Liberal Politics with friends and contacts to keep free, independent and liberal journalism alive. Thanks in advance.

To make a Word or .pdf document of an article, or share or email it, simply load the individual article by clicking the dark blue title at the very top, or use the icons beneath the article.