For the first time since 1948, female unemployment rates have reached double digits, reported WBUR-FM, an affiliate of NPR. In April, 18 percent of Wisconsin women were unemployed, double the rate of men, according to Wisconsin Public Radio. Black and Latinx women are also in an economically more precarious and worse position than are white and Asian women, based on research from the Economic Policy Institute.
Daily Cardinal
December 9, 2020
According to research from the Economic Policy Institute, in 2019, public school teachers earned nearly 20% less in weekly wages than other college-educated workers.
Yahoo Finance
December 9, 2020
An examination of federal data by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) shows that income rose for the top 1 percent of earners by 160 percent between 1979 and 2019, compared to only 26 percent for those in the bottom 90 percent of wage earners. Both groups, however, were dwarfed by those in the top 0.1 percent of incomes, who saw their wages skyrocket by 345.2 percent during the same time.
Teamsters
December 9, 2020
Infrastructure investment is not only a smart move politically. Recent research by the Economic Policy Institute found up to 12.9 million new jobs could be created by investing in infrastructure and clean energy and rebalancing trade. Enhancing Buy America policies will only enhance those estimates.
Alliance for American Manufacturing
December 9, 2020
A recent report from the Economic Policy Institute found that reinstating the expired $600 weekly jobless benefit could save or create 3.3 million jobs and boost personal income by more than $290 billion over the next year.
CNBC
December 9, 2020
According to a study conducted by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), Microsoft issued a report in 2012 that distorted the future reality of computing-related occupations. Microsoft’s report stated that there would be a shortage of 1.2 million developers needing to fill computing related-positions that required at least a bachelor’s degree between 2010 and 2020. Microsoft continued on to say that in the United States, 40,000 Americans graduate with bachelor’s degrees in computer science each year, leaving many of the projected future jobs unfilled.
Medium
December 9, 2020
“The expiration of vital pandemic unemployment insurance (UI) benefits on December 26 will leave 12 million workers without a safety net, and over four million others will have already exhausted their benefits by this cutoff,” Elise Gould, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute, wrote in a blog post last week. “This spells trouble not only for workers and their families who are desperately trying to keep a roof over their heads and put food on the table—especially with the eviction moratorium also set to expire on December 31—but also for the recovery itself.”
Common Dreams
December 9, 2020
During the last economic expansion, from 2009 to 2019, average yearly wages for the bottom 90% of workers rose 8.7% after adjusting for inflation, according to an analysis of Social Security Administration data by the liberal Economic Policy Institute (EPI). Meanwhile, pay for most of the top 10% rose 13.2% – while earnings for the top 1% jumped 20.4%.
“It’s a clear story of disempowerment of workers,” said Lawrence Mishel, co-author of the study and a distinguished fellow at EPI.
USA Today
December 9, 2020
For the first time since 1948, female unemployment rates have reached double digits, reported WBUR-FM, an affiliate of NPR. In April, 18 percent of Wisconsin women were unemployed, double the rate of men, according to Wisconsin Public Radio. Black and Latinx women are also in an economically more precarious and worse position than are white and Asian women, based on research from the Economic Policy Institute.
Daily Cardinal
December 9, 2020
Contracts that require workers to bring job-related claims in private arbitration rather than court are particularly widespread in California, where about two-thirds of private employers use them, compared with 54% nationwide, according to a 2018 study from the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute.
That higher rate in California is a consequence of companies reacting to the state’s worker protective employment laws, the study said. Arbitration agreements are often paired with clauses that waive a worker’s right to join class or collective actions.
Bloomberg Law
December 8, 2020
Also, the assertion that trade deficits are not debt and are good for the economy is flawed. According to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), trade deficits have eliminated nearly 5 million good-paying manufacturing jobs over the past two decades and 90,000 factories.
Industry Week
December 8, 2020
When it comes to outcomes for Black-owned businesses during the COVID-19 recession, the statistics are also grim: analysis by the Economic Policy Institute found that 28 percent of Black-owned businesses were in industries with the largest total job losses relative to just 20 percent of white-owned businesses. Although Black-owned businesses only represent a minority of all businesses, they are disproportionately likely to operate in sectors most severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and associated shutdowns.
Brookings Institution
December 8, 2020
In a recent tweet, Tlaib said: “The next aid bill, COVID-19, must provide for direct payments to the people,” Tlaib said in a recent tweet.
Their latest comments came along with a report that revealed a discrepancy in wage growth between the top 1 percent and the bottom 90 percent of earners.
Tlaib shared a message from Democratic Congressman-designate Jamaal Bowman, who will represent New York’s 16th District, with figures from the Economic Policy Institute on this point and said “Stop looting us.
The Congresswoman wrote, “Somebody better get the checks for the stimulus packages ready to be mailed. People need them now.”
Washington Newsday
December 8, 2020
In a recent article co-authored by the campaign and Josh Bivens from the Economic Policy Institute, they write: “If America does not address what’s happening with visionary social and economic policy, the health and well-being of the nation is at stake….What we need is long-term economic policy that establishes justice, promotes the general welfare, rejects decades of austerity and builds strong social programs that lift society from below.”
Poor People's Campaign
December 8, 2020
Without budget aid, state and cities will continue laying workers off, cutting contracts to vendors (including many small businesses), and cutting essential services. Economist Elise Gould of the Economic Policy Institute notes that in November, “public-sector employment continued to decline for the third month in a row.” That’s not only bad for those workers and for public services. It’s bad for the economy, and all of us hoping for an economic recovery.
Forbes
December 8, 2020
A 2018 study by Alexander J.S. Colvin for the Economic Policy Institute estimates that 60 million American workers have signed arbitration contracts with their employers — and that such contracts are more common for low-wage workers.
LA Times
December 8, 2020
The United States has been an outlier on child care long before the coronavirus, Collins said, with price tags far exceeding those in other high-income countries. The average cost of child care for a child under 4 is $9,589 per year, according to New America’s Care Report — more than the average cost of in-state college tuition. It’s much more expensive in big cities: In Washington, D.C., the average cost of care for an infant is more than $24,000.
The Lily
December 8, 2020
Contracts that require workers to bring job-related claims in private arbitration rather than court are particularly widespread in California, where about two-thirds of private employers use them, compared with 54% nationwide, according to a 2018 study from the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute.
That higher rate in California is a consequence of companies reacting to the state’s worker protective employment laws, the study said. Arbitration agreements are often paired with clauses that waive a worker’s right to join class or collective actions.
Bloomberg Law
December 8, 2020
Also, the assertion that trade deficits are not debt and are good for the economy is flawed. According to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), trade deficits have eliminated nearly 5 million good-paying manufacturing jobs over the past two decades and 90,000 factories.
Industry Week
December 8, 2020
When it comes to outcomes for Black-owned businesses during the COVID-19 recession, the statistics are also grim: analysis by the Economic Policy Institute found that 28 percent of Black-owned businesses were in industries with the largest total job losses relative to just 20 percent of white-owned businesses. Although Black-owned businesses only represent a minority of all businesses, they are disproportionately likely to operate in sectors most severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and associated shutdowns.
Brookings Institution
December 8, 2020
In a recent tweet, Tlaib said: “The next aid bill, COVID-19, must provide for direct payments to the people,” Tlaib said in a recent tweet.
Their latest comments came along with a report that revealed a discrepancy in wage growth between the top 1 percent and the bottom 90 percent of earners.
Tlaib shared a message from Democratic Congressman-designate Jamaal Bowman, who will represent New York’s 16th District, with figures from the Economic Policy Institute on this point and said “Stop looting us.
The Congresswoman wrote, “Somebody better get the checks for the stimulus packages ready to be mailed. People need them now.”
Washington Newsday
December 8, 2020
In a recent article co-authored by the campaign and Josh Bivens from the Economic Policy Institute, they write: “If America does not address what’s happening with visionary social and economic policy, the health and well-being of the nation is at stake….What we need is long-term economic policy that establishes justice, promotes the general welfare, rejects decades of austerity and builds strong social programs that lift society from below.”
Poor People's Campaign
December 8, 2020
Without budget aid, state and cities will continue laying workers off, cutting contracts to vendors (including many small businesses), and cutting essential services. Economist Elise Gould of the Economic Policy Institute notes that in November, “public-sector employment continued to decline for the third month in a row.” That’s not only bad for those workers and for public services. It’s bad for the economy, and all of us hoping for an economic recovery.
Forbes
December 8, 2020
A 2018 study by Alexander J.S. Colvin for the Economic Policy Institute estimates that 60 million American workers have signed arbitration contracts with their employers — and that such contracts are more common for low-wage workers.
LA Times
December 8, 2020
The United States has been an outlier on child care long before the coronavirus, Collins said, with price tags far exceeding those in other high-income countries. The average cost of child care for a child under 4 is $9,589 per year, according to New America’s Care Report — more than the average cost of in-state college tuition. It’s much more expensive in big cities: In Washington, D.C., the average cost of care for an infant is more than $24,000.
The Lily
December 8, 2020
Yahoo Finance’s Alexis Christoforous and Sibile Marcellus discuss EPI’s latest report.
Yahoo Finance
December 7, 2020