http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/oecofailureandlowpayjobs.htm
Are you good at flipping burgers ,
waiting tables or stocking shelves? Are you proficient with a cash
register? Do you enjoy doing mindless work for very low pay? If you
answered yes to any of those questions, then you are probably going to fit in
very well in the new U.S. economy. According to a report that has just
been released by the National Employment Law Project, 58 percent of the jobs
that have been created since the end of the recession have been low paying
jobs. So exactly what is a low paying job? Well, the National
Employment Law Project defines it as a job with an hourly wage between $7.69
and $13.83. But of course you can't pay a mortgage or support a family on
$13.83 an hour. Even if you got full-time hours the entire year, you
would make less than $28,000 on an annual basis. The federal poverty
level for a family of five is $27,010. So needless to say, most of these
new jobs are not paying enough to support a middle class lifestyle. This
represents an economic failure on a fundamental level. Our economy is
producing very few good jobs that enable people to be able to raise families
and live the American Dream. The ranks of "the working poor"
are exploding and the number of Americans that are dependent on the government
is sitting at an all-time record. Sadly, if current
trends continue things are going to get a lot worse.
The numbers compiled
by the National Employment Law Project are absolutely stunning. Most
of the jobs lost during the recent recession were mid-wage jobs, and most of
the jobs created since then have been low wage jobs. This represents a
fundamental shift in our economy. Just check out these figures....
-21 percent of
the jobs lost during the last recession were low wage jobs paying between $7.69
and $13.83 an hour.
-58 percent of
the jobs created since the end of the recession have been low wage jobs paying
between $7.69 and $13.83 an hour.
-60 percent of
the jobs lost during the last recession were mid-wage jobs paying
between $13.84 and $21.13 an hour.
-22 percent of
the jobs created since the end of the recession have been mid-wage jobs paying
between $13.84 and $21.13 an hour.
But even the high end of the
mid-wage pay scale is not that great.
If you make $21.13 an hour and
you work full-time hours for the entire year you will end up making about
42,000 for an entire year.
Yes, that can probably support a
family of four in most areas of the country, but you really have to scrimp and
save to do it.
And keep in mind that 80
percent of all the jobs being created now pay at that level or less.
Welcome to the new U.S. economy.
It really stinks for workers.
The truth is that there has been
a fundamental cultural change in our economy. Workers are no longer valued.
They are viewed as expensive liabilities that should be disposed of as rapidly
as possible once their usefulness has ended.
There is very little loyalty to
workers these days, and most big corporations do not really care about the
quality of the lives of their workers. The number of companies offering
health insurance to their workers continues to decline (and thanks to Obamacare
that decline is accelerating even further), and the number of companies
offering pension plans to their workers continues to decrease as well.
At this point, less than 25 percent of all
jobs in the United States are good jobs, and that number continues to shrink.
Is this because the big
corporations are not making enough money?
Not at all.
In fact, corporate profits have
been setting all-time records in recent years....
Meanwhile, wages as a percentage
of the economy are at an all-time low....
So why is this happening?
Well, I already talked about the
fundamental cultural shift that is happening. Companies simply do not
care about their workers like they used to. America is becoming a very
cold place.
Another major factor is that
millions upon millions of our good jobs have been shipped overseas thanks to
the emerging one world economy.
In the old days, U.S.
corporations were more or less forced to hire American workers and the wages
earned from a typical manufacturing job could easily support a growing family.
That has entirely changed now.
The big corporations no longer
need American workers to make stuff. They can just close up shop and move
their facilities to the other side of the globe where it is legal to pay slave
labor wages to very desperate workers.
And now there is greatly
increased competition for the jobs that we still have in this country because
so many of our jobs have disappeared.
If you don't like how your
employer is treating you that is just too bad. In most cases your
employer would have absolutely no problem finding a replacement for you.
In fact, there are probably thousands of people in your community that are
desperate for a job such as yours.
So what does all of this mean?
It means that the decline of the
middle class in America is going to get a lot worse.
American families are rapidly getting poorer. Real median household income
has fallen another 4.8 percent since the last recession
ended.
Meanwhile, the cost of living
continues to go up and American family budgets are being stretched to the
limit.
In a previous article, I noted that 62
percent of all middle class Americans say that they have had to reduce household spending
over the past year.
Things have fundamentally
changed. The days of endless prosperity for the middle class are gone for
good. You are going to have to adjust.
At this point, 77 percent of all Americans are living
paycheck to paycheck at least some of the time.
If you are relying solely on a
job for the financial survival of your family, then you are probably in a
similar situation.
Do you know why they call it a
"job"?
It is because you will mostly
likely end up living "Just Over Broke"
for most of your life.
A major shift in our economy is
happening.
We are transitioning from an
"employment economy" to an "ownership economy".
Most Americans that are
currently working for others are not going to have a bright economic future.
That may sound harsh, but it is
the truth.
Even if you are still one of the
fortunate Americans that still has a good job, you need to start thinking about
what you are going to do when you lose that job someday.
The system is failing, and if
you have blind faith that it is always going to take care of you and provide a
job for you then you are likely to be bitterly disappointed someday.