New York Post

In Biden’s USA, it’s better not to be employed

- STEPHEN MOORE Stephen Moore is an economist with FreedomWor­ks. He is also a co-founder of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity.

THE latest jobs report for August was disappoint­ing. Job growth fell by more than half and was one-third of expectatio­ns. This was partly because of COVID concerns.

But we still don’t have nearly enough adult Americans in the workforce. Why? Government welfare policies are clearly keeping Americans — millions — from taking jobs.

Here is what we know: Across the country, there are between 5 million and 6 million unemployed Americans, but also an all-time record 10.1 million job openings. These are in constructi­on, warehousin­g, retail, manufactur­ing, trucking, business services and so on. These aren’t “dead end” or even minimum-wage jobs in most cases. Open factory and truckdrive­r jobs pay $50,000 to $100,000 a year with benefits.

But economist Casey Mulligan of the University of Chicago has found that when counting all government benefits, a family of four in high welfare-benefit states like New York and Connecticu­t and with two unemployed parents can receive up to $100,000 in cash, food stamps, etc.

Why work? In some cases, workers would see a cut in their income if they returned to their jobs.

Former Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow notes that President Biden and the Democrats in Congress have “done away with the successful bipartisan welfare reforms of the 1990s. Those required work.”

Now, it is almost as if Washington is intentiona­lly discouragi­ng work — even though COVID’s worst is behind us. Biden recently recommende­d that states like New York and New Jersey with high unemployme­nt rates continue to extend bonus unemployme­nt benefits for more months past the Labor Day deadline. He also increased food stamps by 25 percent.

There is another problem facing employers and workers. Inflation is running ahead of wages. So even though wages are up 4 percent, the cost of living is up more than 5 percent. Workers’ paychecks are shrinking as massive government borrowing and the multitrill­ions of dollars of money being printed to fund the spending stampede in Washington sends the price tag for everything from gas to hamburgers to airline tickets higher each week.

In the wake of all this disappoint­ing news, Joe Biden took to the stump on Friday and urged Congress to pass his $4.5 trillion debt bill and $2 trillion tax hike. This would only raise the taxes on those who are working, fan the flames of inflation and pass trillions of dollars more in costs on to our kids. And despite his promises, most of the bill’s spending has nothing to do with job creation.

For years, conservati­ves and even many progressiv­e Democrats advocated a policy of “make work pay.” Now we have a de facto federal and state policy of “make not working pay.” And that is why small-business employers can’t get workers back on the job.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States