Bad wages in the US

The city of Coral Gables is not exempt from the impact of lower wages in the US.  The city cannot grow based solely on large-scale corporate profits, but should have a broad base of support from the consumer and the wider community.  Evidence is clear that wages have been stagnate for a decade or more and the rich are getting richer.

…data…[on wages and productivity]… underscore that there is a bigger story than public versus private compensation and a more penetrating set of questions to ask than who has more than whom. The ability of the economy to produce more goods and services has not translated into greater compensation for either group of workers. Why has pay fared so poorly overall? Why did the richest 1% of Americans receive 56% of all the income growth between 1989 and 2007, before the recession began (compared with 16% going to the bottom 90% of households)? Why are corporate profits 22% above their pre-recession level while total corporate sector employees’ compensation (reflecting lower employment and meager pay increases) is 3% below pre-recession levels? The answers lie in an economy that is designed to work for the well off and not to produce good jobs and improved living standards.1

Essentially, economic policy has not supported good jobs over the last 30 years or so. Rather, the focus has been on policies that were thought to make consumers better off through lower prices: deregulation of industries, privatization of public services, the weakening of labor standards including the minimum wage, erosion of the social safety net, expanding globalization, and the move toward fewer and weaker unions. These policies have served to erode the bargaining power of most workers, widen wage inequality, and deplete access to good jobs. In the last 10 years even workers with a college degree have failed to see any real wage growth. [Underlining and emphasis added.]

via The sad but true story of wages in America.

Apt Description, Political Marketing in Miami-Dade and Coral Gables

I like this description of politics in Washington.

I think that the same perceptions applies to local government, Miami-Dade and Coral Gables.  Clearly, sharp commentary and strong questions are not welcome in local government forums.

The city is beautiful (except now for the horrible snails) and the politics are easy where you can get away with just about any sort of distortion of the truth in the commission chamber and in the election campaign.

Washington has become a city of ideological marketing, where those who would note that the emperors have no facts are unwelcome in their own newsrooms. It is a city where access matters most and those who ask tough questions don’t get access.

via tax.com: Breaking News: Tax Revenues Plummeted.

Bad News for Unemployment in Florida

If you think that unemployment is going to improve soon in Florida, you are wrong.

If you think that the South Florida economy is going to grow enough, you are wrong.

If you think that the Miami-Dade economy will improve greatly, you are wrong.

If you think that local governments will be able to return to happy go lucky spending and taxing, you are wrong.

Adding to this perspective is Governor Scott’s push to gut government regulation in Florida and undermine social spending for medicaid, education, the environment, child protection and growth management, poses huge demands on local county and municipal governments in South Florida.

The future is not bright for this region, especially if the world economy gets an oil shock, slowing or depressing regional trade.

…economic growth must be stronger to make a noticeable dent in unemployment, which was 9 percent last month. The economy would need to grow 5 percent for a whole year to significantly bring down the unemployment rate. Economic growth of just 3 percent a year would hold the unemployment steady and keep up with population growth.

Looking ahead the economy is expected to grow by 3.2 percent this year, according to an AP Economy Survey.

via State spending cuts slow US economic growth in Q4.

Carol Browner, Obama’s energy and climate ‘czar’ leaving

The departure of Carol Browner is explained simply–the utter failure of the climate change policy of the Obama administration.  The US, and especially Florida and Coral Gables, will certainly pay a high price for the lack of a response to global warming, sea rise, weather pattern changes, effects on agriculture, etc.

the catastrophic failure of the administration to pass a climate bill — heck, the failure to even get a vote in the Senate or one…speech from the President on the gravest threat to the health and well-being of our children and future generations — must have taken its toll.  And that’s without factoring in months and months of dealing with the BP oil disaster or the prospect of two years of a hostile House of climate zombies.

via Breaking: Carol Browner, Obama’s energy and climate ‘czar’, to leave White House « Climate Progress.