By Robert Reich
What does the Supreme Court’s April 2 “McCutcheon” decision this week have to do
with the April 4 jobs report, showing 192,000 new jobs for March?
Connect the dots. More than five years after Wall Street’s near
meltdown the number of full-time workers is still less than it was in
December 2007, yet the working-age population of the U.S. has increased by 13
million since then.
This explains why so many people are still getting nowhere.
Unemployment among those 18 to 29 is 11.4 percent, nearly double the national
rate.
Most companies continue to shed workers, cut wages, and horde their cash because they don’t have enough customers to warrant expansion. Why? The vast middle class and poor don’t have enough purchasing power, as 95 percent of the economy’s gains go to the top 1 percent.
Most companies continue to shed workers, cut wages, and horde their cash because they don’t have enough customers to warrant expansion. Why? The vast middle class and poor don’t have enough purchasing power, as 95 percent of the economy’s gains go to the top 1 percent.
That’s why we need to:
(2) raise the minimum wage,
(3) create jobs by repairing roads, bridges, ports, and much of
the rest of our crumbling infrastructure,
(4) add teachers and teacher’s aides to now over-crowded
classrooms, and
(5) create “green” jobs and a new WPA for the long-term
unemployed.
And pay for much of this by raising taxes on the top, closing tax
loopholes for the rich, and ending corporate welfare.
But none of this can be done because some wealthy people and big
corporations have a strangle-hold on our politics. “McCutcheon” makes that
strangle-hold even tighter.
Connect the dots and you see how the big-money takeover of our democracy has led to an economy that’s barely functioning for most Americans.
Connect the dots and you see how the big-money takeover of our democracy has led to an economy that’s barely functioning for most Americans.