Lodi News-Sentinel

No: Labor has lost much in past 4 decades: Fed threatens recent gains

- MARK WEISBROT Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, and the president of Just Foreign Policy.

This Labor Day, the vast majority of Americans who need to work for a living still have a long way to go before they recover what they have lost over the past four decades.

The real inflation-adjusted median wage is only about 10 percent above what it was in 1979.

As economist Dean Baker has noted, we can also see part of this transforma­tion of the United States into a more shamefully unequal society if we look at the distributi­on of national income between profits and labor.

If not for this redistribu­tion from wages to profits from 2000-2016, the average worker today would have an additional $4,000 per year in annual income.

This historic redistribu­tion of income and wealth was the result of choices made by our political leaders and decision-makers. Among them:

• They chose to maintain higher levels of unemployme­nt and interest rates than necessary.

• They subjected workers to increasing­ly harsh internatio­nal competitio­n while protecting highly paid profession­als and CEOs.

• They increased protection­ism for patent holders, including pharmaceut­ical companies who charge tens of thousands of dollars for cancer drugs that would sell for a small fraction of these prices in competitiv­e markets.

• They changed labor law so that unions' bargaining power would be reduced to levels not seen for most of the 20th century.

The Trump administra­tion claims that workers' long night is over, as evidenced by the current headline unemployme­nt rate of 3.9 percent; and that it is responsibl­e for the historical­ly low unemployme­nt.

But this reduction in unemployme­nt is the continuati­on of an economic recovery that began under the Obama administra­tion, and is overwhelmi­ng the result of policy decisions by the Federal Reserve, not the president or Congress.

Beginning in December 2008, the Fed kept short-term interest rates near zero for seven years and also created trillions of dollars during much of this period to push down long-term rates.

The Fed is the main determinan­t of the rate of unemployme­nt; but what the Fed giveth, the Fed taketh way. The Fed began to reverse these policies in 2015; it has raised rates twice this year and is expected to raise them two more times before the year is over.

The Fed has had no valid reason for these interest rate hikes. The Fed targets an inflation rate of 2 percent, but its preferred measure of inflation is still at 1.9 percent. And inflation has been below target for almost all of the past 9 years.

Most Americans don't know this, but when the Fed raises interest rates it is intentiona­lly slowing the rate of job creation, in order make unemployme­nt higher than it would otherwise be; and thereby putting downward pressure on wages.

Since World War II, the Fed has caused all of the recessions in the US except for the last two, which were caused by the bursting of the stock market bubble in 2000 and then the housing bubble in 2007.

Most immediatel­y, the Fed threatens to reverse much of the gains in employment that we have made in the current economic expansion, even though real wages did not even grow over the past year.

For the longer term, Trump and his congressio­nal allies have moved to continue the march towards greater inequality: for example with the tax give-away to corporatio­ns and the rich and Trump's selection of anti-labor and right-wing judges for the federal courts, increasing inequality in education, and other policies.

Reversing labor's losses over the past four decades will therefore require blocking the Fed from increasing unemployme­nt — or worse, tipping the economy into recession and then undoing some of the structural changes that have created such obscene levels of inequality.

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