Yet another Equal Pay Day will pass tomorrow …
Posted: April 12, 2011 Filed under: Women's Rights | Tags: 04/12/2011, Equal Pay Day 1 Commentand you know the drill … not yet.
If you’re seeing RED, wear RED tomorrow.
- In 2007, women’s median annual paychecks reflected only 78 cents for every $1.00 earned by men. Specifically for women of color, the gap is even wider: In comparison to men’s dollar, African American women earn only 69 cents and Latinas just 59 cents. 1
- In 1963, when the Equal Pay Act was passed, full-time working women were paid 59 cents on average for every dollar paid to men. This means it took 44 years for the wage gap to close just 19 cents — a rate of less than half a penny a year. This narrowing of the gap has slowed down over the last six years, with women gaining a mere two cents since 2001. 2
- Women’s median pay was less than men’s in each and every one of the 20 industries and 25 occupation groups surveyed by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2007.3 Even men working in female-dominated occupations tend to earn more than women working in those same occupations.4
- According to the Institute for Women’s Policy Research (IWPR), if equal pay for women were instituted immediately, across the board, it would result in an annual $319 billion gain nationally for women and their families (in 2008 dollars). Over her working life, a typical woman could expect to gain a total of $210,000 in additional income if equal pay were the norm (these numbers include part-time workers).5
Late Night: Stupid Republican Tricks
Posted: April 12, 2011 Filed under: just because, right wing hate grouups, Surreality, U.S. Politics | Tags: constitution, equal protection, Gay Marriage, LGBT rights, Michelle Bachmann, stupid Republicans, Tea Party 9 CommentsTea party leader and all around wacko Michelle Bachmann wants Congress to limit the powers of federal judges to rule on equal protection under the Constitution.
Republicans treat the Constitution like a toy that they can manipulate however they choose. Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) claims that all federal education programs — including Pell Grants and student loan assistance — are unconstitutional. Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) says that they are constitutional problems with the federal ban on whites-only lunch counters. Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) suggested that child labor laws, FEMA, food stamps, the FDA, Medicaid, income assistance for the poor, and even Medicare and Social Security violate the Constitution. And when the Ninth Circuit held that yes, the Constitution does have a First Amendment, Newt Gingrich’s political advocacy group called for that court to be abolished.
With so many Republicans claiming that the Constitution can mean whatever they want it to mean, it should be no surprise that Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) wants a piece of this action. Yesterday, Bachmann told a gathering of social conservatives in Iowa that if the courts insist on applying the Constitution’s requirement that no state may “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws” to gay people, then Congress should strip federal judges of their power to hear marriage equality cases.
Transcript:
“Something else that we can do to reinforce our pro-marriage, pro-life, pro-family agenda is to limit the subject-matter jurisdiction of the courts,” Bachmann said during a Monday speech in Pella, Iowa.
“At the federal level with what are called Article III courts, Article III of the United States Constitution, we can limit the subject matter that justices can rule on. We have it within our authority to decide what judges can rule on and what they can’t.”
We Interrupt your Regularly Scheduled Programming for a Bit of Deprogramming
Posted: April 12, 2011 Filed under: Catfood Commission, Domestic Policy, Economic Develpment, financial institutions, income inequality | Tags: helping the world's poor, Income Inequality, tax havens 9 CommentsIt’s time for my regular rant on how bad income inequality is for an economy. I know that John Boenher wants to transfer all the resources in the country to so-called job creators and that CEO Hacks are trying to turn the public school system into a drone production unit, but as usual, I’m going to interrupt the messaging with empirical evidence. I’m just one of those people that doesn’t believe any one unless they back it up with honest numbers. This time, I’m going to direct you to a study by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Just in case you don’t already know, the IMF is not exactly a bastion of comrades-in-arms. They’ve been soundly criticized by developing nations for exporting American-style capitalism wherever they go to provide help to struggling nations. So, with that in mind, here’s a briefing on the study titled “Warning! Inequality May be Hazardous to your Health”.
Their introduction is so meaty that I’m going to leave it nearly wholesale for you before I return to editing more things for a development journal. Finding ways to raise every one’s boat is my thing, just in case you never noticed.
Many of us have been struck by the huge increase in income inequality in the United States in the past thirty years. The rich have gotten much richer, while just about everyone else has had very modest income growth.
Some dismiss inequality and focus instead on overall growth—arguing, in effect, that a rising tide lifts all boats. But assume we have a thousand boats representing all the households in the United States, with boat length proportional to family income. In the late 1970s, the average boat was a 12 foot canoe and the biggest yacht was 250 feet long. Thirty years later, the average boat is a slightly roomier 15 footer, while the biggest yacht, at over 1100 feet, would dwarf the Titanic! When a handful of yachts become ocean liners while the rest remain lowly canoes, something is seriously amiss.
In fact, inequality matters. And it matters in all corners of the globe. You need look no further than the role it might have played in the historic transformation underway in the Middle East.
The increase in U.S. income inequality in recent decades is strikingly similar to the increase in the 1920s. In both cases there was a boom in the financial sector, poor people borrowed a lot, and it all ended in huge financial crises. Did the recent financial crisis result somehow from the increase in inequality?
Some time ago, we became interested in long periods of high growth (“growth spells”) and what keeps them going. The initial thought was that sometimes crises happen when a “growth spell” comes to an end, as perhaps occurred with Japan in the 1990s.
We approached the problem as a medical researcher might think of life expectancy, looking at age, weight, gender, smoking habits, etc. We do something similar, looking for what might bring long “growth spells” to an end by focusing on factors like political institutions, health and education, macroeconomic instability, debt, trade openness, and so on.
Somewhat to our surprise, income inequality stood out in our analysis as a key driver of the duration of “growth spells”.
We found that high “growth spells” were much more likely to end in countries with less equal income distributions. The effect is large. For example, we estimate that closing, say, half the inequality gap between Latin America and emerging Asia would more than double the expected duration of a “growth spell”. Inequality seemed to make a big difference almost no matter what other variables were in the model or exactly how we defined a “growth spell”. Inequality is of course not the only thing that matters but, from our analysis, it clearly belongs in the “pantheon” of well-established growth factors such as the quality of political institutions or trade openness.
While income distribution within a given country is pretty stable most of the time, it sometimes moves a lot. In addition to the United States in recent decades, we’ve also seen changes in China and many other countries. Brazil reduced inequality significantly from the early 1990s through a focused set of transfer programs that have become a model for many around the world. A reduction of the magnitude achieved by Brazil could—albeit with uncertainty about the precise effect—increase the expected length of a typical “growth spell” by about 50 percent.
The upshot? It is a big mistake to separate analyses of growth and income distribution. A rising tide is still critical to lifting all boats. The implication of our analysis is that helping to raise the lowest boats may actually help to keep the tide rising!
That basically says that no one’s boat will really rise as much as it could unless all boats rise. Intuitively, this makes sense because if you think about it, businesses need customers. Poor customers just don’t buy as much unless you provide them with good incomes. Unless you want make government the primary customer in an economy or you’re deluded into thinking business investment will ever be the major agent in GDP, you realize that household consumers are the true center of any market economy. Denying them incomes denies every one of incomes. Just providing monies to the top 1 or 2 percent who are now likely to take their spending and investment any where on the planet is just delusional. Actually, if you want some really good reading on that, I suggest you pick up the book Tax Havens: How Globalization Really Works (Cornell Studies in Money).
In Tax Havens, Ronen Palan, Richard Murphy, and Christian Chavagneux provide an up-to-date evaluation of the role and function of tax havens in the global financial system-their history, inner workings, impact, extent, and enforcement. They make clear that while, individually, tax havens may appear insignificant, together they have a major impact on the global economy. Holding up to $13 trillion of personal wealth—the equivalent of the annual U.S. Gross National Product—and serving as the legal home of two million corporate entities and half of all international lending banks, tax havens also skew the distribution of globalization’s costs and benefits to the detriment of developing economies.
The first comprehensive account of these entities, this book challenges much of the conventional wisdom about tax havens. The authors reveal that, rather than operating at the margins of the world economy, tax havens are integral to it. More than simple conduits for tax avoidance and evasion, tax havens actually belong to the broad world of finance, to the business of managing the monetary resources of individuals, organizations, and countries. They have become among the most powerful instruments of globalization, one of the principal causes of global financial instability, and one of the large political issues of our times.
There’s not really much difference between the Gadhaffi family and the Koch brothers when it comes to where the money goes from exploiting national resources. It’s also really no surprise that when you observe the countries that have the highest per capita incomes in the world that you find the world’s tax havens in the top tiers. (Norway and the US are the only countries in the top ten that aren’t tax havens.) Giving money to the richest folks in your country–the behavior of so-called banana republics–is detrimental to the economic health of that country in many ways. It’s just another way that financial institutions and financial innovation has gutted the productive capability of many a country.
The original IMF study–released on April 8, 2011–is here. I would like to point to the policy implications and suggestions section which makes going to the original study imperative. Think about this when you listen to US banana republic President Obama speak tomorrow on the marvels of the catfood commission’s report. Notice there are other studies cited in the policy suggestions.
There is nonetheless surely policy scope to improve income distribution without undermining incentives—perhaps even improving them—and thereby contribute to lengthening the duration of growth spells.
- Better targeting of subsidies can be a win-win proposition, as with the reallocation of fiscal resources towards subsidies of goods that are consumed mainly by the poor,which can free up capacity to finance public infrastructure investment while better protecting the poor (Coady et al., 2010).
- Active labor market policies to foster job-richer recoveries (ILO, 2011) may help to make recoveries more sustainable, especially as rising unemployment appears to be associated with deteriorations in the income distribution (Heathcote, Perri, and Violante, 2010).
- Equality of opportunity can make for both more equal and more efficient outcomes (World Bank, 2005). For example, effective investments in health and education—human capital—may be able to square the circle of promoting durable growth and equity while avoiding shorter-run disincentive effects (Gupta et al., 1999). Such investments could strengthen the labor force‘s capacity to cope with new technologies (which may have contributed to more inequality in a number of cases), and thereby not only reduce inequality but also help sustain growth. They could also help countries address possible adverse distributional consequences of globalization and reinforce its growth benefits.
- Some countries have managed through pro-poor policies to markedly reduce income inequality. Brazil, for example, after its market-oriented reforms of 1994 implemented active propoor distributional policies, notably, social assistance spending, that were critical to substantial reductions in poverty (Ravallion, 2009).
- Well-designed progressive taxation and adequate bargaining power for labor can also be important in promoting equity, though with due attention to the need to avoid dual labor markets that perpetuate divisions between insiders and outsiders.
Yes, I bolded the sections that are in absolute contradiction with current US political groupthink. I guess Obama just really isn’t that into development policy or research in economics. Read them and weep for what could be. Meanwhile, turn on the TV and go right back to the villagers promoting the idea that trickle up economics makes all of us better off, if you dare.
Tuesday Reads
Posted: April 12, 2011 Filed under: morning reads 44 CommentsGood Morning! There is lots of news out there, none of it good.
We just have one more day to go until President Obama gives the country the bad news that the poor folks and the working and middle classes are going to have to “share the sacrifice” so that billionaires like Jamie Dimon can continue to live in the style to which they’ve become accustomed.
John Amato had a terrific post up yesterday afternoon about Obama’s upcoming speech in which he’ll outline his plan to destroy the Democratic party by throwing out the legacies of FDR, JFK, and LBJ. I highly recommend it. Read it and you’ll get the background on the final sellout along with some other useful opinions from around the blogosphere.
I’ll just tell you who is behind the destruction of the safety net: Timmy Geithner and his Treasury gang, along with “economic adviser” Gene Sperling and his deputy Jason Furman. God forbid Obama should get economic advice from real economists! That would be wrong.
I know you’ll all be very happy to know that John Boehner says his relationship with President Obama has improved after the recent budget negotiations. Well I should think so. After all, Boehner got everything he wanted and more! From The Hill:
“Clearly, we understand each other better,” Boehner said during an interview on Fox News, his first after Republicans and Democrats reached a deal late Friday to fund the government through September. “I think we have developed a process that may allow the debate to move forward.”
The Speaker’s comments reveal a contrast between the nature of the negotaitions that went on behind closed doors and the public jousting between both parties that went on until the 11th hour before the government was set to shut down.
That strengthened relationship could come in handy over the next several months — Congress is set to debate whether to raise the nation’s debt limit, as well as a 2012 budget proposal.
I’m so happy for the Speaker and the President!
There’s another storm brewing in Wisconsin. It appears that Waukesha County Clerk Kathy Nickolaus, who suddenly *found* just the right number of votes to push her former boss David Prosser over the top in his close election fight for a seat on Wisconsin’s Supreme Court, may have lied when she claimed a Democratic colleague could back up her claims about *finding* that magically appropriate number of votes on her hard drive.
The Waukesha County Democratic Party released a statement Monday ascribed to Ramona Kitzinger, 80, a member of the canvassing board since 2004.
In the statement, Kitzinger said that even during the canvass of Brookfield’s votes during the day Thursday, no mention was made of the big mistake, something in retrospect she called “shocking and somewhat appalling.”
Meanwhile, in Madison, the state’s top election official referred to “apparent negligence” by Waukesha County Clerk Kathy Nickolaus. At a news conference Monday, Kevin Kennedy, executive director of the Government Accountability Board, said she needs to change her practices to bolster public confidence.
The state agency will not certify the election results until it finishes its review of what happened in Waukesha County, spokesman Reid Magney said.
Here is Kitzinger’s statement. Those Republicans sure do know how to fix election results. Back in the day, Democrats could do that kind of thing, but no more. Democrats are nothing but doormats these days.
Oh dear, Cornell West sounds kind of mad at President Obama.
In an interview last week, he suggested that Obama has sold out and become “a puppet” of powerful interests, merely promising change and not delivering. West warned that this would trust the U.S. into a “democratic awakening” the likes of which the nation had not seen in decades.
Appearing on an MSNBC panel recently, West remained outspoken.
Amid a very heated discussion of whether President Obama is doing enough for black people in America, he called the president “another black mascot” of “Wall Street oligarchs.”
Here’s the video.
Of course, technically Obama didn’t sell out. He was always Wall Street’s puppet.
There’s a lengthy article on the effects of the BP oil spill in The New York Times: Gulf’s Complexity and Resilience Seen in Studies of Oil Spill. It’s too extensive to summarize. Go read it if you’re interested.
The TSA is still on the job, this time groping and drug testing a six-year-old girl.
Doesn’t that just inspire pride in being an American?
What’s the deal with Long Island and serial killers?
Some towns and counties have cancer clusters. Others have high rates of traffic fatalities or foreclosures. In New York, Long Island has been grappling with its own disturbing demographic: Three serial killers who targeted the same type of victims have operated in the same tidy suburbs in the span of 22 years.
Since 1989, when the first victim was killed, the three have been active in Long Island’s two counties — Suffolk and Nassau — in apparently unrelated cases. Joel Rifkin, a 34-year-old unemployed landscaper from East Meadow, confessed to killing 17 women he said were prostitutes following his arrest in 1993. Robert Shulman, a 42-year-old postal worker from Hicksville, was convicted of killing five prostitutes after he was arrested in 1996. The third killer has yet to be apprehended, but the police know that he or she exists: the bodies of eight people — at least four of them female prostitutes — have been found in the thick brush near a Suffolk County beach since December.
More bones were found today along the Long Island beaches and have been sent to the medical examiner’s office to determine whether they are from one or two people. One of the remains is just a skull.
Authorities involved in the painstaking probe along the popular stretch of public beach now involves more than 125 state, federal investigators and local investigators from two neighboring counties.
Investigators have said they believe that a serial killer was responsible for the murders….But probers now says [sic] that they cannot rule out the likelihood that more than one killer will be linked to the bodies which total seven sets of adult human remains, a toddler’s remains and the bones found today that may be from one or two people….
According to authorities, any differences in the method of murder, disposal, burial, and any DNA evidence will be among the elements of a rigorous forensic examination. The probe will include the assistance of state police and FBI agents including evidence collection experts, behavior science investigators and profiling gurus.
We live in a very sick culture.
That’s all I’ve got, and I wish I could have found some good news but no luck. What are you reading and blogging about today?







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