Showing posts with label Labor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Labor. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Northwestern football players are employees and can unionize, labor board rules

Northwestern University and Michigan State University football players lined up against each other.

In big, big news in the fight to curb the NCAA’s exploitation of unpaid athletes, the National Labor Relations Board’s Chicago district ruled that Northwestern University football players meet the definition of employees and can unionize:

NLRB regional director Peter Sung Ohr cited the players’ time commitment to their sport and that their scholarships were tied directly to their performance as reasons for granting them union rights.

Ohr wrote in his ruling that Wildcats players “fall squarely within the [National Labor Relations] Act’s broad definition of ‘employee’ when one considers the common law definition of ‘employee.’”



Northwestern will appeal the ruling, and with the players on the team turning over substantially from year to year, by the time of a final decision on whether they get a union vote, many of the leaders of this effort to unionize will have graduated. But this is an important step in the fight.

The full ruling is here.




Daily Kos



Northwestern football players are employees and can unionize, labor board rules

Thursday, March 6, 2014

VIDEO: Five Years of the Bull Market: Economist"s Take









Five years ago this weekend, March 9, the U.S. stock market hit its crisis bottom. Since then the S 500 has more than doubled, but the economy still remains a sputtering engine. Lindsey Piegza, chief economist at Sterne Agee, discusses on MoneyBeat.













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VIDEO: Five Years of the Bull Market: Economist"s Take

Monday, March 3, 2014

Health Care Cost Emergency Declared By San Francisco Labor

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Health Care Cost Emergency Declared By San Francisco Labor

Thursday, February 27, 2014

China backs suit over Japan"s forced labor



By Christopher Bodeen, AP
February 27, 2014, 12:03 am TWN





BEIJING — China’s government accused Japan of failing to conclusively address allegations of forced labor during World War II and voiced support Wednesday for Chinese plaintiffs seeking to sue to Japanese companies in a Beijing court.

The lawsuit brought by 37 former workers and their descendants, 69 years after the end of the war, comes as China-Japan tensions rise over territorial claims and their troubled history. While aggressively pursuing claims over disputed islands, Beijing has also sought to play up Japan’s wartime guilt for which it says Tokyo has never shown proper contrition.


Tokyo insists that postwar agreements settled cases of forced wartime labor, and the Japanese government spokesman said Wednesday that the plaintiffs had “no case.” But Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the issue remained unresolved.


“Forced labor is a grave crime which Japanese militarists committed during their World War II aggression. It is an issue which has yet to be properly solved,” Hua said.


The lawsuit names Mitsubishi Materials Corporation and Mitsui Mining and Smelting as defendants and asks for compensation of 1 million yuan (US$ 163,000) for each defendant as well as apologies in the Chinese and Japanese languages to be placed with the country’s major media outlets.


Beijing lawyer Kang Jian, who is representing the 37 plaintiffs, said they filed their paperwork with the Beijing No. 1 Intermediate Court, but did not yet know whether they would get a hearing.


Japan’s wartime government systematically abducted nearly 40,000 Chinese citizens and forced them to work for Japanese companies for little or no pay to make up for a labor shortage at home. They were sent to mines, construction sites and factories operated by 135 Japanese companies, many of them among Japan’s corporate giants today.


About 7,000 people died of malnutrition and mistreatment by their employers.


Dozens of similar lawsuits brought in Japan were dismissed, although some were settled outside court. The lawsuit filed Wednesday is believed to be the first such action brought before a Chinese court.


Japanese government spokesman Yoshihide Suga, speaking to reporters at his routine morning briefing, reiterated Tokyo’s position that all such claims were settled by agreements between the two governments.


“This is a matter between China and companies with China-related business, so it is a civil issue, Suga said.


“However, I can say that since such problems were included in the Japan-China communique, there is no case,” he said. “The individual rights for seeking (compensation) were included in the communique.”


Renewed frictions between Beijing and Tokyo arose in 2012 after Japan nationalized a group of tiny uninhabited islands controlled by Japan but claimed by China.





China Post Online – China News



China backs suit over Japan"s forced labor

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Economic Elite Announce Plan to Replace Human Labor with Machines

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Economic Elite Announce Plan to Replace Human Labor with Machines

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries: Christian Businesses Must Follow Demands of Gay Customers


Townhall.com:

The owners of a Christian bakery who refused to make a wedding cake for a lesbian couple are facing hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines after they were found guilty of violating the couple’s civil rights.

The Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries said they found “substantial evidence” that Sweet Cakes by Melissa discriminated against the lesbian couple and violated the Oregon Equality Act of 2007, a law that protects the rights of the LGBT community.


Last year, the bakery’s owners refused to make a wedding cake for Rachel Cryer and Laurel Bowman, of Portland, citing their Christian beliefs. The couple then filed a complaint with the state.


“The investigation concludes that the bakery is not a religious institution under the law and that the business’ policy of refusing to make same-sex wedding cakes represents unlawful discrimination based on sexual orientation,” said Charlie Burr, a spokesman for the Bureau of Labor and Industries.


The backlash against Aaron and Melissa Klein, owners of the bakery, was severe. Gay rights groups launched protests and pickets outside the family’s store. They threatened wedding vendors who did business with the bakery. And, Klein told me, the family’s children were the targets of death threats.


The family eventually had to close their retail shop and now operate the bakery out of their home. They posted a message vowing to stand firm in their faith. It read, in part:


“To all of you that have been praying for Aaron and I, I want to say thank you. I know that your prayers are being heard. I feel such a peace with all of this that is going on. Even though there are days that are hard and times of struggle we still feel that the Lord is in this. It is His fight and our situation is in His hands….Please continue to pray for our family. God is great, amazing and all powerful. I know He has a plan.”


Under state law, the complaint against the bakery now moves into a period of reconciliation. If they can’t reach an agreement, formal civil charges could be filed and the Kleins could face hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines.


Last August, Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian told The Oregonian, their desire is to rehabilitate businesses like the one owned by the Christian couple.


“Everybody is entitled to their own beliefs, but that doesn’t mean that folks have the right to discriminate,” he told the newspaper. “The goal is never to shut down a business. The goal is to rehabilitate.”


Aaron Klein told me there will be no reconciliation and there will be no rehabilitation. He and his wife will not back down from their Christian beliefs.


RELATED:  ‘Bachelor’ Juan Pablo Galavis-GLAAD Release New Apology for Anti-Gay Statements
Politik Ditto



Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries: Christian Businesses Must Follow Demands of Gay Customers

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Boeing machinists allege unfair labor practices, seek revote




NEW YORK/SEATTLE Wed Jan 8, 2014 8:02pm EST



Tom Wroblewski, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) District Lodge 751, enters the union headquarters to announce that a vote narrowly passed by 51% in support of Boeing

Tom Wroblewski, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) District Lodge 751, enters the union headquarters to announce that a vote narrowly passed by 51% in support of Boeing’s contract with the machinists’ union to construct the wings for the 777X jetliner in Seattle, Washington January 3, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/David Ryder




NEW YORK/SEATTLE (Reuters) – Angry Boeing machinists have filed eight unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board alleging their union’s top leaders manipulated a recent contract vote, and demanding that ballots be recast.


The NLRB has launched an investigation into the charges, filed by individual members against the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, said Anne Pomerantz, an attorney with the NLRB regional office in Seattle.


The charges stem from a January 3 vote that approved Boeing’s contract offer by just 600 votes, ensuring its latest jetliner, the 777X, will be built in the Seattle area.


The vote divided the union because, to gain the work, machinists had to agree to eliminate their pension after 2016.


If the push for a recount fails, which appears likely, Boeing will resume the rocky relationship with the city and region it helped to build, although it is less of a force.


Union members allege their international leaders timed the vote to coincide with the holidays, when many members were on vacation, and “disenfranchised” them, Pomerantz said.


The members also allege leaders held the vote over objections from the local district, which considered the new offer too similar to a November proposal to merit re-balloting.


“All the charges we have seen are against the international, not Boeing,” Pomerantz said.


The “international,” an umbrella organization, oversees local districts, such as District 751, which represents more than 31,000 machinists in the Puget Sound area.


FAIR OR NOT?


“We were not fairly represented by the international,” said Robley Evans, 51, a local union steward and 28-year employee at Boeing, who filed one of the unfair labor practice charges.


“When you have a vote that was razor thin and you influence it like that … It changed the election in my opinion.”


But R. Thomas Buffenbarger, international president, said workers had every opportunity to vote, and 500 applied for electronic absentee ballots, which could be cast from anywhere.


“This contract vote was probably as accessible to everyone in that bargaining unit as any I’ve ever seen,” he said in an interview.


The ballots were counted at union halls where workers cast them, he said, “in eyesight of everyone who wanted to watch.”


Pomerantz said the NLRB will interview all sides and determine if there is merit in moving forward with a case that the leaders did not provide fair representation. If so, the NLRB General Counsel could file a complaint.


Boeing noted that none of the charges have been filed against it, but declined to comment further.


“Boeing has no authority over the voting process or scheduling,” spokesman Doug Alder said.


Bryan Corliss, spokesman for District 751, said no local leaders were involved in filing charges.


“This is all being member-driven,” he said.


One of four lodges, or local groupings of workers, passed resolutions on Tuesday calling for an audit and a revote, he said. The others were expected to meet this week, their first opportunity to talk since the vote last Friday.


“We’re going to hear a lot from our members,” he said.


MILITANT PAST


Seattle staged the first U.S. city-wide general strike in 1919, and that militancy lives on. Boeing has been hit with four major strikes in the past 25 years, halting 200 days of production in Seattle-area plants.


In an effort to assert independence from the region, Boeing moved its headquarters to Chicago in 2001. In 2011, it opened a 787 production line in South Carolina, a state much less friendly to unions, and has acquired land there for expansion.


Fear that the new widebody aircraft and its new carbon-composite wing factory would leave the state gave the company leverage on its workforce and the local government. Boeing received offers from 22 states interested in the factory.


If “the 777X was not built in the region, it would have been a big hit to Seattle,” said Roque Deherrera, a business advocate at Seattle’s Office of Economic Development.


A ‘no’ vote by the union, “would have sent a clear signal that further models would not be built in Puget Sound, which would be tremendously significant,” said Alex Pietsch, who works for Washington’s governor promoting aerospace.


“The 777X was really the watershed moment.”


Boeing’s commercial aircraft operation contributes $ 70 billion to the state economy through aircraft sales, buying local goods and paying wages, according to a recent study by aerospace industry boosters.


Younger tech workers, who flooded the city over the past two decades, might earn and spend more, and the economy now includes Microsoft Corp, Amazon.com Inc, Costco Wholesale Corp, Starbucks Corp and other big companies. But the loss of Boeing would wipe out part of the region’s middle class and gut blue-collar jobs, especially around Boeing’s plants in Everett and Renton.


HIGH BAR


To spur a revote, however, the facts would need to show that the actions of international leaders were discriminatory, arbitrary or in bad faith, a relatively high bar, said Jeffrey Hirsch, a former NLRB lawyer who is now a professor and associate dean at the University of North Carolina.


“If in fact it really disenfranchised folks, that may be an issue,” he said.


But the standard is not whether the election could have been done better. It is whether the actions were arbitrary.


“A lower turnout doesn’t necessarily mean people were disenfranchised,” Hirsch added.


He also noted that with trial and appeals, the case could last three years or more. By then, Boeing would have built the factory for the 777X, which is due to enter service in 2020.


The machinist have been successful before. In 2011, the NLRB filed a complaint against Boeing, alleging the company built a new factory in South Carolina as retaliation against the machinists for striking.


The complaint quoted Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney as saying he was “diversifying (the) labor pool and labor relationship,” and moving 787 work because of “strikes happening every three to four years in Puget Sound.”


The case went to trial, Pomerantz said, but settled when Boeing and the machinists struck a deal to extend their current contract until 2016, in exchange for work on the 737 jet staying in the Puget Sound region.


That contract is the one machinists voted last week to extend to 2024.


(Reporting by Alwyn Scott and Bill Rigby.)






Reuters: Politics



Boeing machinists allege unfair labor practices, seek revote

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Wal-Mart labor group promises 1,500 Black Friday protests next week

Wal-Mart labor group promises 1,500 Black Friday protests next week



The group behind the past year’s Wal-Mart strikes pledged Thursday to back an unprecedented 1,500 protests for “Black Friday” next week, but stopped short of predicting an increase in the number of Wal-Mart employees on strike compared to last year.


“Americans across the country are hearing us, and they are saying that they too want Wal-Mart to change,” Colorado Wal-Mart employee Barbara Gertz told reporters on a mid-day call. Gertz is an activist with the non-union worker group OUR Walmart, which is closely tied to the United Food & Commercial Workers union. As Salon first reported, OUR Walmart began mounting Wal-Mart work stoppages last fall, following five decades entirely free of coordinated Wal-Mart walkouts in the United States. Columbia political scientist Dorian Warren told reporters on OUR Walmart’s call that just as strikers after World War Two turned General Motors from “the embodiment of all that was wrong with our economy” into a corporation which “eventually represented the American dream of upward mobility,” Wal-Mart strikers were now facing down a company which “represents the death of the American dream.” Wal-Mart did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Like last year, OUR Walmart has backed a wave of one-day strikes in the weeks leading up to “Black Friday,” the high-profile, record-revenue shopping day that follows Thanksgiving. An employee who joined a walkout in Dallas yesterday told reporters that she and her husband “went on strike not only for ourselves and our family, but also for countless Wal-Mart workers who are afraid to speak out about poverty wages because of retaliation.” Wal-Mart has terminated at least twenty workers who joined a longer June strike, a move OUR Walmart charges violates federal law. The company maintains it did not illegally retaliate. The federal National Labor Relations Board announced this week that it had found enough evidence to issue a complaint against the company for labor law violations. A delegation of five fired workers is headed to Arkansas to seek a meeting with the company’s US CEO at which they would ask to be returned to their jobs.





Strikes against Walmart have anchored and amplified a comprehensive campaign targeting the company’s brand and ambitions, which received a major media boost this week with the report that an Ohio Wal-Mart took up an employee-to-employee charity collection to help workers get a Thanksgiving meal.


According to OUR Walmart, the 1,500 Black Friday protests will include major demonstrations in over a dozen cities including Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, and Washington DC. The campaign has said that last year’s Black Friday actions included tens of thousands of supporters and over four hundred striking Wal-Mart employees. Asked whether this year’s Black Friday will include strikes by a larger share of Wal-Mart’s 1.3 million employees, UFCW official and key OUR Walmart strangest Dan Schlademan told Salon that more announcements regarding strikes would be forthcoming. “The energy we’re seeing in support of Wal-Mart workers is growing,” said Schlademan, adding that strikes would take place “throughout the week of Black Friday, but we’ll make those announcements closer to that point.”





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Salon.com


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Monday, November 18, 2013

Not yet enough US growth for sustained labor boost -Fed"s Dudley

Not yet enough US growth for sustained labor boost -Fed"s Dudley
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/2daf8__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



NEW YORK Mon Nov 18, 2013 1:10pm EST



NEW YORK Nov 18 (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve has not yet seen enough U.S. economic growth momentum to convince policymakers of a sustained improvement in the labor market outlook, New York Fed President William Dudley said on Monday.


Talking to students at Queens College, Dudley said low inflation and high unemployment point to the need for accommodative policies for a considerable period of time. For now, he added, the benefits of bond buying outweigh the costs, and there are no current signs of “disturbing” asset bubbles.



Reuters: Bonds News




Read more about Not yet enough US growth for sustained labor boost -Fed"s Dudley and other interesting subjects concerning Bonds at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, November 14, 2013

U.S. trade, labor data underscore sluggish economy

U.S. trade, labor data underscore sluggish economy
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/6edc8__?m=02&d=20131114&t=2&i=811815173&w=460&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBRE9AD13ZV00.jpg





WASHINGTON Thu Nov 14, 2013 9:23am EST



A tug boat passes in front of a freighter at the Port of Oakland in Oakland, California November 12, 2013. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

A tug boat passes in front of a freighter at the Port of Oakland in Oakland, California November 12, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith




WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. trade deficit widened more than expected in September as imports rose to their highest level in almost a year, which could probably see third-quarter growth estimates trimmed.


Other data on Thursday suggested the labor market continued to gradually improve in November. New applications for jobless benefits fell a bit last week, but the decline in claims for the week ended November 2 was less than previously reported.


The trade gap increased 8.0 percent to $ 41.8 billion, the largest since May, the Commerce Department said.


Economists polled by Reuters had expected the shortfall on the trade balance to widen a bit to $ 39.0 billion in September.


When adjusted for inflation, the trade gap widened to $ 50.4 billion, also the largest since May, from $ 47.4 billion the prior month. This measure goes into the calculation of gross domestic product.


The increase in the so-called real trade deficit in September suggested the government will probably lower its initial third-quarter GDP estimate.


Trade contributed 0.31 percentage point to the economy’s 2.8 percent annualized growth pace in the July-September quarter.


“Third-quarter GDP growth will need to be revised lower,” said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics in Toronto.


The three-month moving average of the trade deficit, which irons out month-to- month volatility, increased to $ 39.7 billion in the three months to September from $ 37.3 billion in the prior period.


In a separate report, the Labor Department said initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 339,000. Claims for the prior week were revised to show 5,000 more applications received than previously reported.


Economists polled by Reuters had expected first-time applications to fall to 330,000 last week.


The four-week moving average for new claims, which irons out week-to-week volatility, dropped 5,750 to 344,000.


JOBS RECOVERY STILL GRADUAL


Lackluster domestic demand is preventing the labor market from generating stronger jobs growth that would decisively lower the unemployment rate.


Employers added 204,000 new jobs to payrolls last month, but a 16-day government shutdown temporarily pushed the jobless rate up by a tenth of a percentage point to 7.3 percent, the Labor Department reported last week.


U.S. financial markets were little moved by the reports as traders awaited a Senate panel confirmation hearing of Federal Reserve chairman nominee Janet Yellen.


The U.S. central bank last month stuck to its $ 85 billion monthly bond buying program aimed at stimulating the economy through low interest rates. No change is expected until early next year as the economy struggles to gain speed and inflation pressures remain benign.


In a second report the labor department said productivity rose at a 1.9 percent annual rate in the third quarter.


Unit labor costs – a gauge of the labor-related cost for any given unit of output – fell at a 0.6 percent rate in the third quarter, underscoring the lack of wage-related inflation pressures in the economy.


While trade has supported the economy’s recovery, slowing global demand is eroding export growth.


Exports of goods and services slipped 0.2 percent to $ 188.9 billion in September. That was the third straight month of declines.


In September, exports to the 27-nation European Union increased 5.6 percent. Exports to the EU in the first nine months of the year were down 2.7 percent compared to the same period in 2012.


Exports to China rose 3.4 percent. Exports to that country were up 5.0 percent for the first nine months of 2013.


Imports rose 1.2 percent to $ 230.7 billion, the highest level since November last year. Imports of automobiles and parts were the highest on record.


But with consumer spending having slowed significantly, some of the imported goods could end up piling up in warehouses.


That could make businesses reluctant to keep on rebuilding stocks and the slowdown in inventory accumulation would undercut fourth-quarter GDP growth.


Imports from China increased in September, lifting the contentious U.S. trade deficit with China to a record $ 30.5 billion.


(Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)






Reuters: Business News




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Thursday, November 7, 2013

VIDEO: Economy Posts Surprise GDP Growth







A strong reading for the nation’s economic growth masked underlying weakness. Kathleen Madigan discusses the outlook.













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VIDEO: Economy Posts Surprise GDP Growth

VIDEO: Economy Posts Surprise GDP Growth









A strong reading for the nation’s economic growth masked underlying weakness. Kathleen Madigan discusses the outlook.













Thanks for checking us out. Please take a look at the rest of our videos and articles.







To stay in the loop, bookmark our homepage.







VIDEO: Economy Posts Surprise GDP Growth

Friday, October 18, 2013

Florida Teen Tweets Selfie With Pregnant Teacher "Going Into Labor"

florida, teen, tweets, selfie, with, pregnant, teacher, Florida Teen Tweets Selfie With Pregnant Teacher “Going Into Labor”

Florida high school student Malik Whiter has gone bonkers viral to the tune of 20,000+ retweets after posting a selfie while his pregnant teacher was experiencing contractions.



Millennials, man. Millennials.


The teacher, Susana Halleck, was on the phone telling her mother the situation was under control. (And it turned out that she wasn’t going into labor just yet as well.)


There’s so much to love here, from Whiter’s sheer joy and winning smile to his teacher’s “Oh my god I cannot have a baby in math class” expression. The image is already inspiring parodies of Malik taking selfies at what might charitably be described as inappropriate times (credits to Gawker commenters):







And of course this happened in Florida, America’s unsecured junk. Because where else?


Image Credit: Gawker



Tom McKay
Tom McKay

Tom McKay is a Politics Editor at PolicyMic. Tom graduated with a B.A. in Political Science from the New College of Florida in 2011. He wrote an extensive thesis on the organizational aspects of domestic paramilitary and terrorist organizations in Northern Ireland, Palestine, and Sri Lanka. Post-graduation, Tom served as a staffer for Clyde Williams for Congress and worked as a campaign consultant for Hoboken Mayor Dawn Zimmer. In addition to writing about politics, Tom is a certified NAUI SCUBA diver, spicy food challenge winner, Futurama fanboy, and gets easily lost in the city below 1st St.





PolicyMic



Florida Teen Tweets Selfie With Pregnant Teacher "Going Into Labor"

Thursday, October 17, 2013

VIDEO: Global Slavery Index Finds 29M People Still Enslaved









It’s hard to imagine slavery still exists on a wide scale, but a landmark study suggests it still grips 29 million people worldwide.













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VIDEO: Global Slavery Index Finds 29M People Still Enslaved

Monday, September 23, 2013

Child Labor Is Down, But 168M Children Still Work, U.N. Says





Near Islamabad, Pakistan, 6-year-old Jabro Mounir was arranging bricks this summer — part of his daily work at a brick-making facility. He earns a little less than $ 2 per day.



Muhammed Muheisen/AP

Near Islamabad, Pakistan, 6-year-old Jabro Mounir was arranging bricks this summer — part of his daily work at a brick-making facility. He earns a little less than $ 2 per day.



Near Islamabad, Pakistan, 6-year-old Jabro Mounir was arranging bricks this summer — part of his daily work at a brick-making facility. He earns a little less than $ 2 per day.


Muhammed Muheisen/AP



The trend is good:



“The global number of child laborers has declined by one third since 2000.”




But:



That still means there are an estimated 168 million child laborers around the world, and more than half “are involved in hazardous work” involving such things as dangerous machinery and harmful chemicals.




Those are the topline conclusions of a new International Labor Organization report. The U.N. agency says that “even the latest improved rate of decline is not enough to achieve the goal of eliminating the worst forms of child labor by 2016.”


According to the report, though:



“This recent progress is very welcome news, as there were fears that the social hardship caused by the global economic crisis of 2008-2009 and its aftermath could result in an increase in the number of families resorting to child labor in order to make ends meet.”




It also adds that:



“The decline in child labor has taken place against the backdrop of a sustained global movement against child labor involving a multiplicity of actors and efforts at a variety of levels. The report identifies a number of actions that have driven progress, including political commitment of governments, increasing number of ratifications of the ILO Convention No. 182 on the Worst Forms of Child Labor and the parallel surge of the ILO Convention No. 138 on the Minimum Age for Admission to Employment, the two principal legal pillars for the global fight against child labor, sound policy choices, as well as solid legislative frameworks.”




The largest number of children — about 78 million — work in the Asia-Pacific region, the ILO says.


The Wall Street Journal adds that “activists have attributed at least part of the decline to stepped-up pressure from big consumer-product companies that feared getting caught with underage workers abroad.”




News



Child Labor Is Down, But 168M Children Still Work, U.N. Says

Friday, September 6, 2013

Record 90.5 Million Out Of Labor Force As Half A Million Drop Out In One Month


zerohedge.com
September 6, 2013


While the Establishment survey data was ugly due to both the miss and the prior downward revisions in the NFP print, the real action was in the Household survey, where we find that the number of people not in the labor force rose by a whopping 516,000 in one month, which in turn increased the total number of people outside the labor force to a record 90.5 million Americans.



And what is even worse, the Labor Force Participation Rate declined from 63.4% to 63.2%: the is the lowest print since August 1978!



Whether or not this means the Fed will continue QE at this point is largely irrelevant: what is more relevant is that the Fed so far has failed miserably at its core mandate: to boost real employment.


This article was posted: Friday, September 6, 2013 at 8:33 am


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Record 90.5 Million Out Of Labor Force As Half A Million Drop Out In One Month

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Weekly Address: Commemorating Labor Day


August 31, 2013 | 2:46 | Public Domain


President Obama discusses Labor Day and reflects on the contributions of the working men and women in our country.


Download mp4 (100MB) | mp3 (6MB)



President Obama’s Weekly Address



Weekly Address: Commemorating Labor Day

Monday, September 2, 2013

New Life for Labor


WASHINGTON — Could this Labor Day mark the comeback of movements for workers’ rights and a turn toward innovation and a new militancy on behalf of wage-earners?


Suggesting this is not the same as a foolish and romantic optimism that foresees an instant union revival.


What’s actually happening is more interesting.


Precisely because no one in organized labor expects the proportion of private-sector workers in their ranks to rise sharply anytime soon, unions, workers themselves and others who believe that too many Americans receive low wages are finding new ways to address long-standing grievances.


At play here is “Stein’s Law,” named after the late conservative economist Herb Stein who shrewdly declared: “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” The steadily declining share of our economy that goes to wages is one of those things.


As New York Times labor writer Steve Greenhouse has noted, until 1975, “wages nearly always accounted for more than 50 percent of our nation’s GDP.” But in 2012 they fell to a record low of 43.5 percent. Those who make the economic engine run are receiving less of what they produce. And it’s not because employees aren’t working harder, or smarter. From 1973 to 2011, according to the Economic Policy Institute, employee productivity grew by 80.4 percent while median hourly compensation after inflation grew by just 10.7 percent.


Last Thursday’s one-day strike of fast-food workers in dozens of cities is one of the new forms of labor creativity aimed at doing something about this. The folks who serve your burgers are demanding that instead of an average fast-food wage of $ 8.94 an hour, they ought to be paid $ 15. Assuming two weeks of unpaid vacation, this works out to $ 30,000 a year, hardly a Ronald McDonald’s ransom.


The protests have the benefit of putting low-wage workers in the media spotlight, a place they’re almost never found in a world more interested in the antics of Miley Cyrus and Donald Trump. “They want a raise with those fries,” the New York Daily News cheekily led its story on the strike.


Key unions are helping to organize these efforts, but they don’t necessarily expect formal union recognition. They want to raise wages, which is what could happen if the public responds. Companies have been frantically painting themselves green to attract environmentally conscious customers. Employers might discover, to paraphrase the old McDonald’s slogan, that their workers deserve a break today if consumers (who are also workers themselves) started pressuring them to be more employee-friendly.


The fast-food campaign feeds into efforts to hike the current $ 7.25-an-hour minimum wage nationwide and to enact higher “living wages” in localities around the country. In Long Beach, Calif., as my colleague Harold Meyerson reported recently in The American Prospect, voters last November overwhelmingly enacted a measure to boost the hourly pay of some 2,000 of the city’s hotel employees to $ 13.


Because construction of the hotels had been made possible by government economic development assistance, the Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy, a union-supported group, argued that taxpayers had a right to expect a return on their dollars in the form of decent pay for local citizens. Voters agreed.


This is part of a larger strategy to insist that tax dollars not be used in ways that hold down wages. Thus did the group Good Jobs Nation file a complaint this summer alleging that food franchises at federal buildings in the nation’s capital have ignored minimum-wage and overtime laws. The overall objective, as the National Employment Law Project has suggested, should be to use federal contracts, concessions and subsidies as leverage toward a higher-wage economy.


There’s a new idea that brings these approaches together: “Pre-distribution.” The term was coined by Yale political scientist Jacob Hacker as an alternative to “redistribution” that involves “government taxes and transfers that take from some and give to others.”


Redistribution is necessary, but Hacker thinks that a more promising long-term solution is to begin changing “the way in which the market distributes its rewards in the first place.” We need a fairer distribution “even before government collects taxes or pays out benefits.”


The genius of the labor movement has always been its insistence that if the law genuinely empowered workers to defend their own interests, the result would be a more just society requiring fewer direct interventions by government. This Labor Day could be remembered as the moment when that idea rose again. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



New Life for Labor

Your Labor Day Syria Reader, Part 1: Stevenson and Lofgren

In the wake of President Obama’s (welcome) decision to seek Congressional authorization before striking Syria, long-time Congressional defense-policy expert Charles Stevenson offers these guidelines about what Congress should actually do:


President Obama’s request for congressional authorization for retaliatory strikes in Syria creates tough choices for members of Congress. Do they want to assert their constitutional role in war powers by taking decisive action, or do they want to play political games? Does a majority want to support action, oppose it, or try to set limits and conditions?


The best model for congressional action is the law they passed in 1983 authorizing participation in the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon, the only time Congress specifically authorized force under the War Powers Act. Public Law 98-119 has several features that should be part of any measure on Syria:


- It declared the action is part of the War Powers Act process, thus reasserting that mostly ignored law as a proper basis for action.


- It limited U.S. military participation to a peacekeeping mission as President Reagan had promised — that the U.S. forces would not engage in combat.


- It provided expedited, no filibuster rules for considering subsequent amendments to the law.


The best test of the Obama policy would be a simple up-or-down vote on a joint resolution authorizing the attack but limiting its purpose and scope.  If that is not enough, if some members want to promote a policy of military aid to the Syrian opposition or a no-fly zone, let them vote on that and abide by the results. If it’s too much, let them vote that way and deny the President the support he seeks.


If Congress can’t come together and agree on a common policy, they will forfeit their claims to war powers.



Another long-time Congressional defense- and budget- policy expert often quoted here before, Mike Lofgren, adds these thoughts:


1. The administration’s declassified intelligence summary of the chemical weapons incident  reads like a White House lawyer’s advocacy brief rather than a neutral assessment of evidence. Some of it is just circular reasoning, asserting as fact that which ought to be proven. Also, it uses up a paragraph refuting a hypothetical which was never a significant issue: no serious person, to my knowledge, ever asserted that a gas attack never happened….  Otherwise, the paper says, in effect, “we have the intelligence back-up, but you, the public can’t see it. Trust us.” That really worked out well in the past, didn’t it? 
 
2. There is at least a non-negligible chance this is a false flag operation (cui bono, of course); also a non-negligible chance it occurred because of a break-down of command and control during a vicious civil war, or because Assad cannot control the actions of some of his allies like Hezbollah. But so what…


Attacking Syria is simply not in the US national interest; and absent an objective assessment from a neutral inspection team, and absent a UN resolution, the US has no legitimate authority under any law or treaty to act unilaterally. Period. The US Government claims it is upholding international norms; but in so acting it is violating those very same norms. The US has in the recent past violated international norms on aggressive war, torture, rendition of POWs, assassination, use of chemical weapons (phosphorous, napalm, etc.), land mines, ad infinitum. The US acting in this manner is like a serial wife beater judging a case of spousal abuse.


 
3. Obama appears to believe he can replicate Bill Clinton’s “drive-by shootings” with cruise missiles during the 1990s. They didn’t really achieve much, but they did allow the commander in chief to “act presidential,” etc. But we know Hezbollah is in Syria, and a US strike could result in Hezbollah’s launching missile attacks against Israel. That is a very thinkable scenario, and would automatically transform a limited strike into a very messy regional crisis. Once you cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, the notion of careful calibration is amateurish.
 
4. Many have criticized Obama’s “red lines” statement as poor policymaking, like writing a post-dated check and not worrying whether someone would cash it. Obama was buying time, while simultaneously narrowing his future options. His domestic negotiations proceed exactly like that: he accepted the sequester he didn’t want to buy time for the debt limit increase. Obama negotiated with himself on the fiscal cliff deal, and thereby retained the vast majority of the Bush tax cuts when they would have expired anyway.


Placing the Syria decision upon Congress is wise, given the alternative, but it also amounts to buying time… It only remains to be seen whether Obama is really such a poor politician who can be driven to results he doesn’t want (which raises the question of how he won two cut-throat presidential elections campaigns); or, alternatively, if the foreign and domestic political outcomes of the last five years were outcomes he actually wanted…. 
 
5. There is something troubling but difficult to define at the heart of Obama’s performance in office. It was epitomized by his rhetorical display during the March on Washington, at the precise moment his administration was announcing, “we’re going to bomb Syria, and there’s nothing anyone can do to stop us.” And yet there Obama was, trying to gain moral capital by associating himself with Martin Luther King, the apostle of nonviolence, who denounced the Vietnam war in harsh and specific terms…. Perhaps, like Louis Napoleon, Obama is “a sphinx without a riddle,” but at all events he is baffling.



To address Lofgren’s question #4: I don’t think these results — sequester and serial debt-ceiling emergencies, Afghanistan surge, Syrian involvement, etc — were the outcomes Obama was hoping for. So how has he ended up here, despite the skills shown in two presidential-election victories?


In large part I think it is because of the often-discussed reality that current GOP positioning makes it harder for them to win national elections, but easy to have an outsized obstructionist impact in Congress. “Outsized” through the combination of gerrymandering in the House (Democratic House candidates, as a group, got more votes than Republicans overall, but the Republicans have a big House majority) and filibustering in the Senate. “Obstructionist” because the only perceived threat to most GOP incumbents is from the right. Obama’s political skills and instincts are skewed in a similar way: better matched to national elections than to the day-by-day trench warfare of dealing with this kind of Congress. He is strongest where the GOP is weakest, and vice versa.


Later today, a very detailed overview of Syrian prospects by William Polk — plus even more from Holland, Michigan! 






    








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Your Labor Day Syria Reader, Part 1: Stevenson and Lofgren