We are becoming a nation of Scrooge-Marts and outsourcers.



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Topic: Politics > Politics-USA
User: "Harry Hope"
Date: 26 Mar 2006 12:01:59 PM
Object: We are becoming a nation of Scrooge-Marts and outsourcers.
http://dissidentvoice.org/Mar06/Sklar24.htm
Wanted: A High-Road Economy
by Holly Sklar
March 24, 2006
Waving the banner of "global competitiveness," corporate and
government policymakers are running the U.S. economy into the ground.
We are becoming a nation of Scrooge-Marts and outsourcers -- with an
increasingly low-wage workforce instead of a growing middle class.
We are living the American Dream in reverse.
The minimum wage buys less today than it did when Wal-Mart founder Sam
Walton opened his first Walton’s 5 & 10 in Bentonville, Arkansas in
1951.
It would take more than $9 in 2006 to match the federal minimum wage
peak reached in 1968, adjusting for inflation.
At today's $5.15 an hour, it takes nearly two minimum wage workers to
earn what one made 38 years ago.
The minimum wage sets the wage floor.
When the minimum wage is stuck in quicksand, it drags down wages for
workers up the pay scale as well.
Hourly wages for average workers are 11 percent lower than they were
in 1973, despite rising worker productivity.
It wasn't always like this.
Between 1947 and 1973, worker productivity rose 104 percent while the
minimum wage rose 101 percent, adjusting for inflation.
The United States has become a downwardly mobile society.
The American Dream is the American Pipe Dream for more and more
people.
The downward shift in wages is moving higher up the career ladder.
The inflation-adjusted earnings of college-educated workers have
fallen since 2000.
We are breaking records we don’t want to break.
Record numbers of people have no health insurance.
The share of national income going to wages and salaries is at the
lowest level since 1929 -- the year that kicked off the Great
Depression.
The share going to after-tax corporate profits, which heavily benefit
corporate executives and other wealthy Americans through increased
dividends and capital gains, is at the highest level since 1929.
"In 2005, for the first time since the Great Depression, Americans
borrowed more than they earned," Parade magazine reports in "What
People Earn."
Fueled by obscene wage inequality and tax cuts, income and wealth are
piling up at the very top.
More and more jobs are keeping people in poverty instead of out of
poverty.
Middle-class households are a medical crisis, outsourced job or busted
pension away from bankruptcy.
Contrary to myth, the United States is not becoming more competitive
in the global economy by taking the low road.
We are in record-breaking debt to other countries.
We have a record trade deficit, hollowed-out manufacturing base and
deteriorating research and development.
The infrastructure built by earlier generations of taxpayers has
eroded greatly, undermining the economy as well as health and safety.
Households have propped themselves up in the face of falling real
wages by maxing out work hours, credit cards and home equity loans.
This is not a sustainable course.
The low road is like a "shortcut" that leads to a cliff.
We will not prosper in the 21st century global economy by relying on
1920s corporate greed, 1950s tax revenues, downwardly mobile wages and
global-warming energy policies.
We will not prosper relying on disinvestment in place of reinvestment.
We can't succeed that way any more than farmers can "compete" by
eating their seed corn.
As Business Week put it in a special issue on China and India,
"China's competitive edge is shifting from low-cost workers to
state-of-the-art manufacturing. India is creating world-class
innovation hubs, and its companies are far better performers than
China's."
The United States will not succeed by shifting increasingly from
state-of-the art manufacturing and world-class innovation hubs to
low-cost workers.
Contrary to myth, many European countries are better positioned for
the future than the United States, with healthier economies and longer
healthy life expectancies, greater math and science literacy, free or
affordable education from preschool through college, universal health
care, less poverty and inequality and more corporations combining
social responsibility with world-class innovation.
Among the world's 100 largest corporations in 2005, just 33 were U.S.
companies while 48 were European.
In 2002, 38 were U.S. companies and 36 were European.
CEO-worker pay gaps are much narrower at European companies than
American.
Americans work over 200 hours more a year on average than workers in
other rich industrialized nations.
The United States dropped from number one to number five in the World
Economic Forum's global information technology ranking.
The top four spots are held by Singapore, Iceland, Finland and
Denmark, with Sweden number six.
The U.S. trade deficit increased 17 percent in 2005.
As the Economic Policy Institute reports, "U.S. trade deficits
increased with every major area of the world, including China (34
percent), OPEC (18 percent), Africa (15 percent), Europe (15 percent),
Mexico and Canada (13 percent combined), Latin America (12 percent),
and all Asian countries bedsides China (5 percent)."
In the book How We Compete: What Companies Around the World Are Doing
To Make It In Today's Global Economy, Suzanne Berger reports the
findings of MIT's Industrial Performance Center study of more than 500
international companies.
She observes, "Contrary to the widely held belief of many managers, we
conclude that solutions that depend on driving down costs by reducing
wages and social benefits -- in advanced countries or in emerging
economies -- are always dead ends. . .
"Strategies based on exploiting low-wage labor end up in competitive
jungles, where victories are vanishingly thin and each day brings a
new competitor. . . As low-end firms that compete on price move from
one overcrowded segment of the market to the next, there is virtually
no chance of gaining any durable advantage. The activities that
succeed over time are, in contrast, those that build on continuous
learning and innovation."
Instead of pretending the problem is overpaid workers and accelerating
offshoring, we need to shore up our economy from below and invest in
smart, sustainable development. Raising the minimum wage is a vital
step.
The high road is not only the better road, it is the only road for
progress in the future.
An America that doesn’t work for working people is not an America that
works.
______________________________________________________
If the above makes you happy, vote Republican in November.
If not...............................................................
Harry
.

User: "Igor The Terrible"

Title: Re: We are becoming a nation of Scrooge-Marts and outsourcers. 26 Mar 2006 07:15:23 PM
HOLY *****~!!!!!! You mean to tell me there is a living/breathing
human being out there who can actually see through all the *****
being spewed out by this thieving/traitorous administration regarding
the REAL state of our economy and the direction it's heading??????
Igor adds 1 point to the average IQ of the American citizenry.
.


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