On Thursday, September 12, 2013, I will be co-hosting with the United Way of Northern New Jersey a conference called "Building Resilience for ALICE Households: Strengthening the Social and Economic Fabric of Society".
EVENT SYNOPSIS
The John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University invites you to join a community-wide discussion to consider the size, scope, and impact of financially unstable households, dubbed ALICE, and their key role in New Jersey’s economy.
ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed), a study of the true face of financial hardship in New Jersey, is the result of a collaboration between United Way of Northern New Jersey and Dr. Stephanie Hoopes Halpin, director of the New Jersey DataBank at Rutgers University. ALICE represents men and women of all ages and races who get up each day to go to work, but are unsure if they’ll be able to put dinner on the table each night. They are our child care workers, mechanics, home health aides, store clerks, and office assistants — workers who make our economy
run. This project revealed that one in four (770,000) households in New Jersey walks this financial tightrope, unable to afford the state’s high cost of living, one emergency from falling into poverty.
Building Resilience for ALICE Households will envision fresh public, corporate, and economic policies to strengthen New Jersey’s future. New data will be presented showing the economic effects of Superstorm Sandy on these fragile households. The impact of Sandy will demonstrate ALICE’s inability to weather a crisis — a perilous situation not only for these families but also for the entire community.
Please join us in stimulating a fresh dialogue among community leaders about how, together, we can provide ALICE with more opportunities to succeed.
TIME AND LOCATION
10:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. (lunch will be provided)
John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development
Roosevelt-Perkins Room (second floor)
30 Livingston Avenue
New Brunswick, NJ
MODERATOR & KEYNOTE SPEAKER: CHRISTINE ROMANS
Christine Romans is the host of Your Money, CNN's Saturday and Sunday business program. In addition, Romans reports on the economy, politics, and international business for CNN’s morning shows. Her reporting is also regularly featured on CNN International. She is the author of two books: How to Speak Money (Wiley, 2011) and Smart is the New Rich (Wiley, 2010).
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS
10:00 - 10:30 a.m.
Registration
10:30 - 11:30 a.m.
ALICE project and data overview, including new findings related to Superstorm Sandy
12:00 - 1:00 p.m.
Panel discussion & solutions strategy session
1:00 - 2:00 p.m.
Keynote address: Christine Romans
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Summation & closing remarks
REGISTRATION
Space is limited and registration is required. Click here (https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?llr=f67ndndab&oeidk=a07e7uq695jfef09acd)
to register today!
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
America's Great Divide
On July 22nd, I followed up my CNBC Street Signs (7/5/13) segment on the June Jobs Report
(http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000180895&play=1 ) with an appearance on Power Lunch with
Peter Henry, Dean of the Stern Business School at NYU. Our segment (http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000184816) discussed the "Great Divide" between Wall Street and Main Street.
Here are my extended thoughts on the issue.
Q. Will the "Great Divide" widen?
Unfortunately, there is a good chance that we could see a third surge in income inequality. We saw increases in income inequality during the 1980s and from 2001 to 2007. Why a new surge?
-We are in the midst of an anemic recovery, especially for youth, minorities and the less educated.
-We are over 30 months into the recovery. Almost 40% of the jobless are classified as long-term.
-Including those that are part-time, but want full-time work, raises the jobless rate to over 14%.
-Over the past 12 months, jobless rates have fallen, but largely due to labor force departure.
-A large portion of private sector jobs have been created in industries with below average earnings.
-Women and minorities have borne the brunt of the over 600,000 job cuts in the public sector.
Q. What role is policy playing in helping to generate a new surge in inequality?
We are making policy decisions that are slowing investments in what the UN calls "Human Priorities." These are the building blocks of life: education, training, community resources, and social safety nets. Specifically:
–State and local governments continue to cut back services and employment.
–Diminished Congressional political will to invest in job creation.
–Sequestration will place a drag on economic growth.
–$1.2 trillion across the board spending cuts over 10-year period
–$85 billion in auto cuts started March 1, 2013
–Our conscious decision to weaken the social safety net is adding more economic “systemic risk” to low to moderate income families. Job loss, natural disasters, and other economic shocks are having greater immediate, short and long-term impacts.
I have said this in early post and opinion pieces and I will say it again. As the sage auto tech said, "You can pay me now, or pay me later."
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Co-Host on Ebru TV's Fresh Outlook: Rolling Jubilee, Obamacare, the Fiscal Cliff and European Austerity
Recently, Ebru TV gave me the opportunity to co-host their one-hour weekly politics and economics show. We discussed the Occupy Movement's Rolling Jubilee, Europe's Austerity, the U.S.'s Fiscal Cliff, and Obamacare. I hope to serve as co-host in the near future.
“Fresh
Outlook,” Co-host, Ebru TV, (11/17/12),
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxttrvVM8QI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HCf102a_DRk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXfRAB_sYBA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8cNFC80IR1Q
Meet ALICE, NJs 1.1 Million Vulnerable Households
I introduce viewers to NJ's 1.1 million households who are A.L.I.C.E (Asset Limited Income Constrained Employed). I discuss the causes and consequences of having one-third of your state's residents vulnerable to economic shocks and natural disasters.
"A.L.I.C.E." (11/23/12),
http://ebrutoday.com/topics/finance/956-a-l-i-c-e.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3UGB2ig4YI.
"A.L.I.C.E." (11/23/12),
http://ebrutoday.com/topics/finance/956-a-l-i-c-e.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3UGB2ig4YI.
Recent Thoughts on the Job Market and Fiscal Cliff
The 6 point drop in December's Consumer Confidence should cause Congress and the Administration to re-dedicate themselves to forging a short-term compromise.
Here are three pieces where I describe the impacts on Main Street if we don't get to "YES".
Would Fiscal Cliff Stall Job Growth? (12/27/12)
http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/2059100488001/would-fiscal-cliff-stall-job-growth/?playlist_id=937116503001.
“America’s Fiscal Cliff,” Ebru Today, (11/14/12),
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bt81MTqZyI&feature=g-all-u.
“Hiring Rally Ahead?” Fox Business News, (11/8/2012), http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/1956162854001/hiring-rally-ahead/.
Here are three pieces where I describe the impacts on Main Street if we don't get to "YES".
Would Fiscal Cliff Stall Job Growth? (12/27/12)
http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/2059100488001/would-fiscal-cliff-stall-job-growth/?playlist_id=937116503001.
“America’s Fiscal Cliff,” Ebru Today, (11/14/12),
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bt81MTqZyI&feature=g-all-u.
“Hiring Rally Ahead?” Fox Business News, (11/8/2012), http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/1956162854001/hiring-rally-ahead/.
Monday, November 5, 2012
What’s at Stake Tomorrow? An Economist’s Perspective
Tomorrow your vote will
determine whether we continue a thirty-year trend toward an “à la carte society.”
What is an à
la carte society? It is a society where goods are priced, ordered, and purchased separately. Participation
in an à
la carte society is based on having the income, and for some items the wealth
to purchase what you want. Of course, as a Ph.D. carrying economist, I believe
that people should be able to purchase the type and amount of goods that they need
and want.
My concern
is that the goods which encompass the building blocks of life, such as access
to basic education, quality health, and child care and soon, elder care, and a safe
neighborhood are increasingly being priced and provided separately in the
market place.
The
decoupling of health insurance from one’s place of employment is well
documented. Increased residential segregation based on race, ethnicity and class has reduced access to quality
schools and safe neighborhoods. Republicans are proposing to remove the
guarantee of Medicare and replace it with a voucher, and privatize Social
Security. During the first Presidential debate, Governor Romney said that he
will reduce funding to PBS, a long-time leader in providing early childhood
education and truly “balanced and thoughtful” news.
Many
low-income families and an increasing number of middle-income families don’t
have the income and wealth to privately purchase these basic needs.
When and how did the à la carte society emerge? It emerged in the 1980s when we allowed
policy makers to roll back worker protection laws, deregulate the economy, and
privatize public goods that historically had provided Americans with a basic set
of protections.
These policy shifts coincided with two investment slowdowns (the 1980s and 2000-2007) in the
building blocks of life or what the United Nations call human priorities: public
investments in education and training, social safety nets, income maintenance
programs, community centers and parks.
The problem with placing more human priority
investments on the à la carte portion
of the menu is that we will not be equipping people with the tools to compete.
The two surges in income equality that resulted during these periods are well
documented.
The “Great Recession”, the weak jobs recovery, our
past choices to slow human priority investments, and the potential to trend
further toward an à la carte society
has sown the seeds for a new surge in income inequality.
Today, over 40 percent of unemployment spells remain
long-term. Over 8 million Americans work part-time, but want full-time
employment. Another 2 million have stopped searching but would take a job if
one was offered.
If these seeds of inequality germinate, it will mean
on November 6th, we chose to trend further toward an à la carte society. It will mean that we chose to structurally
disconnect the underemployed and long-term unemployed from the economy. It will
mean that in the future, we have to invest even more resources to reconnect
them.
What’s an American to do? Vote. Why?
The policies being offered provide very different visions
for America. Both will generate economic growth, but have very different
approaches on how to create “broad-based prosperity.” The Republican’s vision
wants more of the building blocks to economic security to be à la carte, while the Democrat’s
vision wants them to be widely available.
We must stop kicking the can down the road on health
and retirement security. By delaying reform, we are losing the flexibility that
would allow changes that have smaller adjustment costs for current and future
generations. Stalling will raise the likelihood that these guarantees become à la carte options.
President Obama needs a mandate to break
Washington’s partisan budget logjam. In 2008, many thought that just electing Obama
would bring change. Democrats forgot about the “blue dogs”. They forgot about
the number of Democrats in competitive districts. Further, Senate Democrats did
not have a filibuster proof majority. Continued stalemate will slow economic
growth.
Finally, former Speaker of the House, Tip O’Neill
coined the phrase that “all politics is local.” Today, “all economics is local.”
The “downstream” impacts of efforts to place more human priority investments on
the à la carte portion of the
menu will be greater as you move down the ballot from the presidential election
to your local town council and school board elections.
Make sure that you and your friends are engaged at all levels
of the ballot. Vote.
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
The August Jobs Report: Are we better off than 4 years ago? 1 year ago?
Here are links to my commentary on last Friday's jobs report. Is the
US economy better off than four years ago? Than 1 year ago?
New York Times - Conversation with Catherine Rampell
http://www.nytimes.com/video/playlist/business/1194811622255/index.html#100000001766564
EBRU TV - Conversation with Bryan Jenkins
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ad2X14ppoaY&feature=plcp
US economy better off than four years ago? Than 1 year ago?
New York Times - Conversation with Catherine Rampell
http://www.nytimes.com/video/playlist/business/1194811622255/index.html#100000001766564
EBRU TV - Conversation with Bryan Jenkins
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ad2X14ppoaY&feature=plcp
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