The relief measure authorized a $600 weekly benefit enhancement for all unemployed workers because states don’t have the staffing capabilities to determine each worker’s salary individually and replace that salary, said Heidi Shierholz, the director of policy at the Economic Policy Institute and the Department of Labor’s former chief economist during the Obama administration. The $600 number was settled on because it would make the average American worker whole, she told Law360 Tuesday.
Law360
June 10, 2020
Los datos recopilados por el Economic Policy Institute muestran que los trabajadores negros son más propensos a tener empleos de primera línea, como en el transporte público, el cuidado de niños y el cuidado de la salud. Y menos de 1 de cada 5 trabajadores negros pueden trabajar desde su hogar, lo que aumenta su riesgo de contraer el virus.
AARP Blog
June 10, 2020
“The human suffering and lost productive potential represented by these numbers is immeasurable,” said Heidi Shierholz, a former chief economist at the Labor Department and now head of policy at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington.
Thompson Reuters
June 10, 2020
The Economic Policy Institute reports that Black and Poor Americans face higher risks of unemployment as they comprise a disproportionately higher percentage of essential workers. Black Americans also disproportionately lack health insurance. Wide-scale unemployment has contributed to a change in consumer spending habits, and coupled with supply chain disruptions has led to even limited options when it comes to nutritious and affordable foods.
Medium
June 10, 2020
The income gap remains wide even though African Americans have vastly upgraded their educational attainment: The proportion of black Americans with a high school diploma has surged from 54% in 1968 to 92% in 2018. The share with a college degree rose from 9% to 23% over that period, according to government figures compiled by the Economic Policy Institute.
The Associated Press
June 10, 2020
SCOTT HORSLEY, BYLINE: Friday’s jobs report was a welcomed surprise for many observers. But encouraging as it is to see some people going back to work, the report also triggered alarm bells. Elise Gould of the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute worries lawmakers might see those 2 1/2 million jobs added in May and forget about the 19 million other jobs that were lost in March and April.
NPR
June 10, 2020
“None of what we’re seeing should come as a surprise,” says Valerie Wilson, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a think-tank which recently published a report on the impact of the virus on African-Americans. “If you’ve been alert and attentive to these inequalities over the generations, you can almost predict how any crisis is going to play out.”
Financial Times
June 10, 2020
Two reports from the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute published in back-to-back years found “no evidence at all” of labor shortages in the top H-2B occupations. And in its editorial, the pro-immigration New York Times concluded that labor shortage claims don’t stand up. The Times, applying Econ 101 basics, wrote that when labor is scarce, unemployment falls, and wages rise. The Times noted that H-2B workers are subject to exploitation and unemployment “is high in the major H-2B fields, which include landscaping, groundskeeping, construction, hospitality and seafood processing, while wages in those fields have long been flat or declining.”
Korea Times
June 10, 2020
VOX
June 10, 2020
McDonald’s did not bother to note in the video that for years, it paid lobbyists millions of dollars to combat the push for a $15 federal minimum wage. Lower wages are at the heart of the systemic oppression McDonald’s notes in the ad. Currently, there is a 30% pay gap between white and Black workers across the U.S, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
Ad Week
June 10, 2020