Gulf Today

Strong prevailing-wage standards help economy grow

- Karla Walter,

The trickle-down strategies of the last several decades — defined by tax cuts for the wealthy — didn’t work and, in fact, led to stagnating incomes for everyone else. However, the Biden administra­tion’s vision for growth is clear: The Inflation Reduction Act, Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law and CHIPS and Science Act chart a new path based on the philosophy that the economy is strongest when it grows from the “middle out and botom up.” These sweeping economic laws build out public investment in 21st century infrastruc­ture and support domestic competitiv­eness in key sectors, all while strengthen­ing protection­s to ensure new public investment benefits working people from all walks of life.

At times, pundits portrayed Bidenomics as a gamble, but key elements of the laws’ middleclas­s protection­s — such as prevailing-wage standards — are proven strategies that raise standards for workers, support law-abiding contractor­s and ensure the public receives good value for the investment­s paid for by tax dollars. The overwhelmi­ng majority of the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law, CHIPS and Science Act funds, and the IRA’S tax credit programs are protected by the Davis-bacon Act — a 90-year-old law that requires corporatio­ns receiving federal funds to pay constructi­on workers market — or “prevailing” — wages and benefits. Prevailing­wage standards, also frequently adopted by state and local policymake­rs, prevent the government from driving down standards when it acts as a purchaser of goods and services. Private-sector recipients are required to provide workers with wages and fringe benefits comparable to those paid to other similarly placed workers in the region. Research shows that prevailing-wage laws improve workers’ lives by supporting middle-class pay, ensuring union wage rates are not undercut, expanding health insurance and retirement coverage, and closing the income gap between white and Black constructi­on workers.

Prevailing-wage laws also benefit responsibl­e contractor­s and the public by boosting worker productivi­ty, reducing injury rates and increasing apprentice­ship training. This helps address the shortage of skilled labor in constructi­on and ensures that projects are completed on time and within budget. Despite significan­t evidence of prevailing-wage laws benefiting workers, business owners and the public, some lawmakers atempt to undermine these proworker laws in favor of trickle-down policies. This has been done through perennial campaigns to roll back federal standards and a handful of actions overturnin­g state-level prevailing-wage laws in recent years. However, studies show that prevailing-wage bans reduce workers’ wages and decrease competitio­n for government projects since contractor­s that pay decent wages are discourage­d from bidding due to concerns of being undercut by low-road contractor­s that pay rock-botom wages.

The good news for working families is that the tide may be turning. This spring, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer repealed Michigan’s prevailing-wage ban, announcing that “we are coming together to restore workers’ rights, protect Michigande­rs on the job, and grow Michigan’s middle class.” Similarly, just last year, 41 Republican­s joined all Democratic members of the House of Representa­tives in a bipartisan effort to defeat a measure that would have repealed federal prevailing-wage protection­s.

Ultimately, the question is not whether prevailing-wage standards work but whether they and other job-quality protection­s will be adopted broadly enough to make a difference to working people nationwide. While Bidenomics extendspre­vailing-wagestanda­rdsforcons­truction workers, similar standards do not automatica­lly apply to all workers whose jobs are funded by federal spending.

 ?? ?? Joe Biden
Joe Biden
 ?? ?? Gretchen Whitmer
Gretchen Whitmer

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