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2014 > USA > Economy (I)
Alnetta McKnight lost her job in June,
and her aid ran out
after 20 weeks.
“I worked for 26 years;
I lost my job through no fault of my
own.
This is what I get?”
Photograph:
Mark Courtney for The New York Times
States Cutting Weeks of Aid to the Jobless
NYT
JAN. 21, 2014
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/22/business/states-cutting-weeks-of-aid-to-the-jobless.html
U.S. Economy Grew at 4% Rate
in Second Quarter,
Beating Expectations
JULY 30, 2014
The New York Times
By DIONNE SEARCEY
The United States economy rebounded heartily in the spring after
a dismal winter, the Commerce Department reported on Wednesday, growing at an
annual rate of 4 percent from April through June.
In its initial estimate for the second quarter, the government cited major gains
in inventories for private businesses as well as exports and personal
consumption spending that added to the growth. Economists, who had been hoping
for a full reversal of the first quarter’s decline, were thrilled with the
second quarter’s numbers. The consensus forecast for G.D.P. was 3 percent.
“Fantastic,” Douglas Handler, chief United States economist for IHS Global
Insight Analysis, said of the second-quarter G.D.P. increase, which further
cemented views that the decrease in America’s overall output during the first
quarter was most likely a fluke tied in large part to unusually stormy winter
weather and other anomalies. Any dip in gross domestic product outside an
official recession is considered rare.
During the first quarter, output shrank by 2.1 percent, less than had been
reported, according to the Commerce Department’s newly revised G.D.P. figures,
also released on Wednesday. The department had previously said first-quarter
output decreased 2.9 percent.
“The really ugly G.D.P. report for the first quarter was likely the result of
mostly one-off events,” Bob Baur, chief global economist for Principal Global
Investors, wrote in a note to clients before Wednesday’s release.
In a note to clients, Paul Ashworth, chief United States economist for Capital
Economics, said increases in consumption were driven by a surge in durable goods
consumption. He also said state and government spending picked up, offsetting
declines in the first quarter. “For once, the public sector wasn’t a drag on the
economy,” his note said.
More optimism for the economy came on Wednesday as ADP, the payroll processing
company, said private employers added 218,000 jobs in last month, which was down
from 281,000 in June. It was the fourth straight month of job gains above
200,000. While ADP’s numbers offered reason to be hopeful, the company’s figures
cover only private businesses and often do not track with the government’s jobs
report, which will be released Friday. Also, the Conference Board said on
Tuesday that consumers were more upbeat about the economy than they had been in
about seven years.
Also on Wednesday, the Commerce Department was revising figures dating to 1999.
Economists were hoping those revisions would adjust for numerous data
irregularities in past quarters brought on by events like changes in health care
spending related to the Affordable Care Act.
While the economy seems generally to be bouncing back from the recession,
overall growth remains lackluster. Wages have failed to rise significantly, an
area of concern that Janet L. Yellen, chairwoman of the Federal Reserve, noted
when she appeared before Congress this month.
Second-quarter earnings for many companies have been mixed. Home prices are
rising at the slowest pace in more than a year. Many economists say the mediocre
housing market and underwhelming labor conditions are the driving forces behind
the Fed’s plan to keep interest rates low into next year.
“We made up some of the ground lost in the first three months of this year, but
there’s nothing in today’s data to indicate that the economy is growing more
strongly than it has for the past couple of years,” the Economic Policy
Institute, a left-leaning nonprofit group focused on low- and middle-income
workers, said in a release Wednesday.
More important economic data will be released this week. Besides the Labor
Department’s latest figures on unemployment and payrolls to be announced Friday,
the Federal Reserve’s policy-making committee continues meeting on Wednesday,
with the central bank announcing its latest plans on Wednesday afternoon.
U.S. Economy Grew at 4% Rate in Second
Quarter, Beating Expectations,
NYT, 30.7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/31/business/economy/
us-economy-grew-4-in-second-quarter.html
Fast-Food Workers
Intensify Fight for $15 an Hour
JULY 27, 2014
The New York Times
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
ADDISON, Ill. — As labor gatherings go, this one was highly
unusual — 68 workers arrived on charter buses from St. Louis, 100 from New York
City and 180 from Alabama, Georgia and the Carolinas. Fifty flew in from Los
Angeles and two dozen from Seattle.
These were not well-paid carpenters or autoworkers heading to their annual
convention, hoping to sneak in a round of golf. Rather they were fast-food
workers — 1,200 of them — from McDonald’s, Burger King and other chains, eager
to pursue their ambitious goal of creating a $15-an-hour wage floor for the
nation’s four million fast-food workers.
Crowding over the weekend into an expo center in this suburb west of Chicago,
many wore boldly lettered T-shirts proclaiming “We Are Worth More” and “Raise Up
for $15.”
“If we win $15, that would change my life,” said Cherri Delisline, 27, a single
mother who earns $7.35 an hour after 10 years as a McDonald’s cashier in North
Charleston, S.C. “I get paid so little money that it’s hard to make ends meet,
and I’ve had to move back in with my mother.”
It was by far the largest gathering of fast-food workers, and it was largely
underwritten by the Service Employees International Union, a powerhouse with two
million members known for unionizing hospital workers, home care aides and
janitors. Mary Kay Henry, the union’s president, said the S.E.I.U. has adopted
the fast-food workers’ cause to lift low-wage workers and combat income
inequality.
Knowing how to rally a crowd, Ms. Henry said in her keynote speech, “A selfish
few at the top are using their power to hold down wages, no matter how much that
hurts families and communities across the country.”
She attacked the C.E.O.s of McDonald’s and Yum Brands, which owns KFC, Taco Bell
and Pizza Hut, for receiving executive compensation of more than $10 million a
year. They make more than twice as much in a day as many fast-food workers earn
in a year.
Glenn Spencer, executive director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Workforce
Freedom Initiative, asserted that the S.E.I.U. wasn’t pumping $15 million into
the fast-food campaign merely out of beneficence.
“You don’t put that kind of money in just to have a sense of altruism,” he said.
“You have a plan for how that transfers into new members.”
The S.E.I.U. does hope to somehow unionize throngs of fast-food workers, but
those efforts may prove difficult given that most fast-food employees are
scattered among thousands of different franchised restaurants. Moreover, the
franchisees and fast-food chains are likely to mount a fierce battle against
unionization.
The two-day convention, with 150 tables spread across the expo center’s floor,
highlighted the campaign’s growth since November 2012, when 200 workers went on
a one-day strike at 60 fast-food restaurants in New York. In its most recent
strike in mid-May, workers walked out at restaurants in 150 cities nationwide,
with solidarity protests held in 30 countries. The focus increasingly includes
unionizing; the movement’s motto has become “$15 and a union.”
“My sense is there’s been a recognition on the part of the S.E.I.U. that to get
the labor movement out of the very deep rut it’s in, it’s going to take more
than an individual local organizing drive — that this is a moment to do a
large-scale, high-visibility effort to alter the climate for labor,” said Janice
R. Fine, a professor of labor relations at Rutgers University. “They have taken
a sector like fast food where the conditions are well known: low wages,
part-time hours, irregular hours, often no benefits.”
In a high-stakes move, fast-food workers, backed by the S.E.I.U., have brought
several cases before the National Labor Relations Board, asking its general
counsel to declare McDonald’s a joint employer of the restaurants run by its
franchisees. If the labor board agrees, that would open the door for the
S.E.I.U. to try to unionize not just three or five McDonald’s at a time, but
dozens and perhaps hundreds.
Business groups oppose such a change. Mr. Spencer said that if the labor board
adopted a broader interpretation, “then you make the corporation sit down at the
table and talk” with the union. S.E.I.U. officials want McDonald’s and its
franchisees to agree not to fight unionization efforts.
McDonald’s declined to comment on the weekend convention, held four miles from
its headquarters. The main target of the movement’s attacks and unionization
talk, McDonald’s says it provides competitive pay and benefits and opportunities
for many workers. The National Restaurant Association has repeatedly criticized
the call for a $15 fast-food wage, saying it would result in higher menu prices
and cuts in employment.
Ms. Henry said the fast-food campaign has already paid off. She cited its
influence in creating an atmosphere for Seattle to approve a $15 minimum wage
and for San Francisco and Chicago to be weighing similar measures. In early
July, the S.E.I.U. signed a contract for 20,000 cafeteria workers, custodians
and other service workers for the Los Angeles school district that will raise
their pay, now often $8 or $9, to $15 an hour by 2016.
“The fast-food movement is producing real gains in the wages of our members,”
Ms. Henry said, declining to disclose how much money her union has spent on
underwriting the campaign — or the convention.
With the midterm elections approaching, Mr. Spencer said the union gets another
benefit from the fast-food campaign, which is spurring efforts to raise the
minimum wage in many states. “There’s clearly a political dimension here,” he
said. “The S.E.I.U. is trying to rally the Democratic base for November.”
Francis O’Donnell, owner of a Buffalo Wings & Rings franchised restaurant near
the White Sox stadium in Chicago, said a $15 wage would be a disaster. “It’s
going to put a lot of businesses out of business,” he said.
Mr. O’Donnell estimated it would increase his payroll costs by 25 percent,
erasing his profit margins. He added, “It would leave me with three choices:
raising my prices, which will hurt customers, or reducing my staff” or shutting
down.
The Rev. William Barber, a minister from North Carolina who has mobilized
liberal protests there, gave a fiery speech with a different view.
Citing Franklin Roosevelt’s Depression-era advice, he told the workers: “You
have to stay in the $15 fight until it is a reality. When you raise people’s
wages and it raises the standard of living and you increase purchasing power,
you actually not only do the right thing morally, but you do the right thing
economically, and the whole country is blessed.”
Throughout the convention, one overarching strategy was to say the fast-food
movement was an economic justice movement comparable to the civil rights
movement — a strategy the service employees used to unionize tens of thousands
of cleaning workers in its “Justice for Janitors” campaign. Inspired by the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr., the fast-food workers debated and discussed using
nonviolent civil disobedience to step up pressure on the fast-food companies.
“They’re already slowly killing us with the way they’ve got us living,” said
Terrence Wise, a Burger King worker in Kansas City, Mo., who served as M.C. for
much of the convention. “Are we going to stand up?” he asked. “I want to see who
is willing to do whatever it takes, who is willing to get arrested.”
After his pleas, the workers voted unanimously to conduct a wave of civil
disobedience actions.
Adriana Alvarez, a McDonald’s worker from Chicago, was ready to answer the call.
“It’s awesome to see all these people here,” she said. “I’m ready to take the
next step.”
A version of this article appears in print on July 28, 2014, on page B1 of the
New York edition with the headline: Fast-Food Workers Intensify Fight for $15 an
Hour.
Fast-Food Workers Intensify Fight for $15 an
Hour, NYT, 27. 7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/28/business/
a-big-union-intensifies-fast-food-wage-fight.html
Facebook’s Profit Propelled by Mobile
JULY 23, 2014
The New York Times
By VINDU GOEL
SAN FRANCISCO — Once again demonstrating its mastery of the
mobile computing wave, Facebook dazzled Wall Street on Wednesday by posting
significant growth in revenue and profits for the second quarter, driven largely
by ads shown in the news feeds of a billion Facebook users checking the service
on their mobile phones.
Shareholders celebrated, sending the stock of the company to a record high in
after-hours trading.
But Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, wasn’t basking in what he
modestly described as a “good quarter.” Instead, he was looking ahead to the
next wave.
In a conference call with investors, Mr. Zuckerberg warned that the company
would be spending heavily for years on newer services like private messaging,
virtual reality and Facebook search without any near-term prospects of making
money from them.
“We think it is going to be years of work before those are huge businesses for
us,” he said. “I really can’t underscore this enough that we have a lot of work
to do. We could take the cheap and easy approach and put ads in and do payments
and make money in the short-term, but we’re not going to do that.”
Right now, he doesn’t have to.
Facebook, based in Menlo Park, Calif., said it had about 1.32 billion monthly
users around the world in June, with more than a billion of those people using
the service at least partly on mobile devices.
Revenue was $2.91 billion, up 61 percent from $1.81 billion during the same
period last year. Net income was $791 million, or 30 cents a share, compared
with $333 million, or 13 cents a share, a year ago. The company’s operating
profit margin hit a record 48 percent in the second quarter, reflecting
increased cost efficiencies.
Mobile devices accounted for nearly two-thirds of Facebook’s revenue, which at
this point mostly comes from ads shown on the Facebook website and apps.
However, the company is beginning to supplement that with ads on other sites.
“These are just phenomenal numbers,” said Ben Schachter, an Internet analyst
with Macquarie Capital. “The core business is so strong that it’s buying them
time to be more conservative and deliberate in bringing out new products.”
Analysts had expected Facebook to report revenue of $2.8 billion. Wall Street
had also projected that the company would post a profit of 32 cents a share,
after excluding compensation-related expenses, according to consensus estimates
collected by several services. On that basis, the company blew past the
expectations with a profit of 42 cents a share, up from 19 cents a year earlier.
The quarter’s results sent Facebook shares up 5.6 percent in after-hours trading
to more than $75, well above its highest closing price.
In the conference call, Facebook executives offered few details about the
performance of nascent products like new video ads that play automatically in
the news feed, image ads on its Instagram photo-sharing app or its experiments
in mobile payments.
But Mr. Zuckerberg did get enthusiastic about Oculus VR, a maker of virtual
reality headsets that Facebook bought for $2 billion in a deal that closed this
week.
“We can help define what the next generation of computing is going to be.
Virtual reality, augmented reality, will play into this in an important way,” he
said.
The Oculus purchase and Facebook’s proposed $19 billion purchase of WhatsApp,
the leading text messaging app, are examples of the kind of long bets Mr.
Zuckerberg is making without expecting any immediate returns.
Richard Greenfield, an analyst with BTIG Research, said that investors would be
patient because Facebook was trying to reinvent display advertising, making it a
formidable rival to Google, the king of search ads.
“They are clearly focusing on the quality of the creative, getting more into
video, doing things like Instagram ads, that have real emotional connection with
users,” he said. “I think they’re just trying to temper expectations so that
expectations don’t get ahead of themselves.”
Indeed, Facebook continues to gain ground in digital advertising, particularly
in mobile.
The company accounted for 5.8 percent of the world’s estimated $120 billion in
digital ad revenues in 2013, and it captured 17.77 percent of mobile ad
spending, according to the research firm eMarketer.
This year, eMarketer predicts, Facebook will garner nearly 8 percent of the
world’s digital ad revenue and 22.3 percent of mobile ad revenue, which the firm
projects will nearly double globally as people turn increasingly to phones as
their primary on-ramp to the Internet.
“If you’re just out there fishing for new customers, Facebook is by far the most
efficient channel,” said Bob Buch, chief executive of SocialWire, a San
Francisco company that helps retailers market on Facebook.
One long-running concern is whether Facebook users are tiring of the service and
turning to other apps. In the United States, the company’s websites and apps
account for about one out of every six minutes that people spend online,
according to comScore data.
Facebook said that about 63 percent of its users logged on daily in June,
roughly the same as at the end of the first quarter.
Melissa Parrish, vice president and research director at Forrester Research,
said Facebook clearly did well last quarter. Her one complaint was that the
company was essentially selling display ads and doing little to help marketers
capitalize on the social connections of Facebook users. But “I suppose I’m being
a bit of a tiger mom,” she said. “My kids are getting all A’s, and I’d really
like to see them get all A-pluses.”
A version of this article appears in print on July 24, 2014,
on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Facebook’s Profit
Propelled by Mobile.
Facebook’s Profit Propelled by Mobile, NYT,
23.7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/24/technology/
facebooks-profit-soars-past-expectations-fueled-by-mobile-ads.html
A 401(k) for All
JULY 22, 2014
The New York Times
The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Contributor
By GENE B. SPERLING
SANTA MONICA, Calif. — ONE compelling way to turn the ongoing
national discussion on wealth inequality into a tangible policy to help
Americans increase their wealth and savings would be to fix what I have long
called our “upside-down” tax incentive system for retirement savings. In its
current form, it makes higher-income Americans triple winners and people earning
less money triple losers.
How so? First, the federal government’s use of tax deductibility to encourage
savings turns our progressive structure for taxing income into a regressive one:
While earners in the highest income bracket get a 39.6 percent deduction for
savings, the hardest-pressed workers, those in the lowest tax bracket, get only
a 10 percent deduction for every dollar they manage to put away.
Second, while less than 1 percent of lower- and moderate-income Americans can
put aside enough to fully “max out” their benefits on I.R.A. contributions,
higher-income Americans can maximize their return on savings by sampling from a
menu of tax-preferred savings options. A business owner could theoretically
benefit from a 401(k), a SEP I.R.A. of up to $52,000 and a state-based 529
program that allows tax-free savings for college education.
Finally, a far larger share of upper-income Americans get matching incentives
for savings from their employers. Members of Congress and the White House staff,
for example, get an 80 percent match for saving 5 percent of their income. But
while half of Americans earning more than $100,000 get an employer match, only 4
percent of those earning under $30,000 and less than 2 percent of those making
under $20,000 get any employer match for saving.
The results are stunning. Last year, of the $137 billion in tax benefits that
went to encourage retirement savings, three times more went to the top 10
percent of taxpayers than to the bottom 60 percent. The top 5 percent of
taxpayers get more tax relief for savings than the bottom 80 percent. If the
main justification for savings incentives is to help workers overcome
shortsightedness about the benefits of long-term accumulated savings, how is it
defensible to focus so many of our resources on those best poised to save
anyway?
One intermediate step would be to replace our regressive system of relying on
tax deductibility with a flat tax credit that would give every American a 28
percent tax credit for savings, regardless of income. But why should we stop
there? If we know that 401(k)’s with automatic payroll deductions and matching
incentives work beautifully for those with access to them, why would we not
institute a 401(k) for everyone?
A government-funded universal 401(k) would give lower- and moderate-income
Americans a dollar-for-dollar matching credit for up to $4,000 saved annually
per household. Upper-middle-class Americans could get at least a 60 percent
match — doubling the incentive they get today. The match would be open to
workers even if their employers were already matching, which would encourage
employers to keep contributing to savings. The match would also be available
through I.R.A. contributions for those who were self-employed or who wanted to
keep saving even while they were temporarily not working.
Employers would have to provide automatic payroll deductions for their employees
(while allowing those who still wanted to opt out to do so). Setting the default
at “opting in” would ensure that workers did not miss out on the match provided
by a universal 401(k). The government could set requirements for low fees,
transparency and safety to allow for vigorous competition in the private sector
while allowing individual savers access to a version of the plan that members of
Congress use for their own retirement savings.
Costs need not be a roadblock. Among many ways to do it, moderate reforms to the
estate tax could allow married couples to leave up to $7 million to their heirs
tax-free (instead of the current $10.7 million) while generating over $200
billion in resources over the next decade, which could be used to help tens of
millions of savers build their own estates. Even if a universal 401(k) ended up
costing the government more than expected, it would still increase national
savings overall if the public incentives led to additional private savings.
While President Clinton put forward a similar USA Account proposal in 1999 and
President Obama has promoted automatic savings proposals since 2009, these ideas
have gotten lost in partisan debates on fiscal and Social Security reform.
But with the economy recovering and many Americans beginning to focus on
rebuilding lost nest eggs, politicians on all sides should see something they
like in a policy that would both reduce wealth inequality and encourage
individual wealth creation.
Gene B. Sperling was director of the National Economic Council from 1996 to 2001
and again from 2011
until March of this year.
A version of this op-ed appears in print on July 23, 2014,
on page A25 of the New York edition with the headline:
A 401(k) for All.
A 401(k) for All, NYT, 22.7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/23/opinion/a-401-k-for-all.html
Jury Awards $23.6 Billion
in Florida Smoking Case
JULY 19, 2014
The New York Times
By FRANCES ROBLES
MIAMI — A jury in northwestern Florida awarded a staggering $23
billion judgment late Friday against the country’s second-largest tobacco
company for causing the death of a chain smoker who died of lung cancer at the
age of 36.
The company, the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, promised a prompt appeal.
Michael Johnson Sr. died in 1996 after smoking for more than 20 years. In 2006,
his widow, Cynthia Robinson, of Pensacola, sued R. J. Reynolds the maker of the
Kool brand cigarettes her husband had smoked, arguing that the company had
deliberately concealed the health hazards its product caused.
The four-week trial ended Wednesday. The jury deliberated for 18 hours over two
days, first awarding $17 million in compensatory damages and then emerging at 10
p.m. Friday with a $23.6 billion punitive judgment.
“When they first read the verdict, I know I heard ‘million,’ and I got so
excited,” Ms. Robinson said in a phone interview Saturday. “Then the attorney
informed me that was a ‘B’ — billion. It was just unbelievable.”
She said Mr. Johnson, a longshoreman and hotel shuttle bus driver to whom she
was married from 1990 until his death six years later, began smoking around age
13. He often lit a fresh cigarette with the butt end of another.
“He really did smoke a lot,” she said.
He had two children, who are now 23 and 29.
“The damages awarded in this case are grossly excessive and impermissible under
state and constitutional law,” J. Jeffery Raborn, vice president and assistant
general counsel for R. J. Reynolds, said Saturday in a statement. “This verdict
goes far beyond the realm of reasonableness and fairness and is completely
inconsistent with the evidence presented. We plan to file post-trial motions
with the trial court promptly and are confident that the court will follow the
law and not allow this runaway verdict to stand.”
Such efforts by the industry are often successful. In October 2002, a Los
Angeles jury awarded $28 billion in punitive damages against Philip Morris USA.
In August 2011, an appeals court reduced the punitive damages to $28 million.
The Florida case was among the thousands of the so-called “Engle progeny” cases
that stemmed from a 2006 court decision ruling that smokers could not file
class-action suits but were free to do so individually.
That decision reversed a $145 billion verdict in a class action awarded in 2000
on behalf of a Miami Beach pediatrician, Howard A. Engle. An appeals court
voided the award, saying it was excessive and the cases of individual smokers
were too disparate to be considered as a class.
The plaintiffs petitioned the Florida Supreme Court, which upheld the
decertification of the class but permitted individuals to sue, which set the
stage for Ms. Robinson’s lawsuit.
Friday’s verdict was the highest granted to an Engle progeny case.
Ms. Robinson was represented by Christopher M. Chestnut, based in Georgia, and
Willie E. Gary and Howard M. Acosta, both based in Florida.
“The jury just got it,” Mr. Chestnut said. “The jury was outraged with the
concealment and the conspiracy to conceal that smoking was not only addictive
but that there were deadly chemicals in cigarettes.”
He said the jury seemed most persuaded by 1994 C-Span footage of tobacco
industry executives claiming smoking did not cause cancer and was not addictive,
and by 60-year-old internal documents showing the company knew otherwise.
Scott P. Schlesinger, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., lawyer who has sued big tobacco
but was not involved in the Robinson case, said a verdict this large is not
typical.
“There have not been multibillion-dollar punishments in the Engle cases for one
reason: We are afraid to ask for them. We are afraid of what will happen in the
appellate process,” he said. “This verdict is important because it goes back to
an ongoing saga that goes back to 1990. People have been filing suit one by one,
and we have been winning about 70 percent of them.”
Correction: July 19, 2014
An earlier version of this article misstated the location of Willie E. Gary, a
lawyer for Cynthia Robinson. He is based in Florida, not Georgia.
A version of this article appears in print on July 20, 2014, on page A17 of the
New York edition with the headline: Jury Awards $23.6 Billion in Florida Smoking
Case.
Jury Awards $23.6 Billion in Florida Smoking
Case, NYT, 19.7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/20/business/
jury-awards-23-6-billion-in-florida-smoking-case.html
Microsoft to Lay Off Thousands,
Most From Nokia Unit
JULY 17, 2014
The New York Times
By NICK WINGFIELD
SEATTLE — Microsoft is trying to shake the effects of middle age.
The company, which is now 39 years old, said on Thursday that it was laying off
up to 18,000 employees, in an attempt at reinvigoration. The cuts are the first
major change made by Satya Nadella, the company’s new chief executive, who said
Microsoft needed to be more nimble and focused.
The job cuts would be the largest in the company’s history, representing about
14 percent of its work force. Most of the cuts will come from the Nokia mobile
phone business Microsoft acquired this year.
While Microsoft still makes profits that executives at other companies would be
ecstatic to have, it has been beaten on the biggest new trends in tech,
including mobile, Internet search and cloud computing. As a result, it is
regularly left out of conversations about companies defining the next generation
of technology, outflanked and overshadowed by companies like Apple, Google,
Facebook and Amazon.
Cutting jobs does not mean the company will suddenly begin creating products
that people love. And the cuts did not suggest a sharp shift in strategy. But it
is a start of something new, in the view of many Microsoft critics, and one that
could help the company concentrate on the businesses where it is likely to have
the most impact.
“I think this is a jolt to the culture, which is really needed,” said George F.
Colony, the chief executive of Forrester Research, a technology research firm.
“It was frozen in place, and lacked new creativity and innovation.”
Microsoft has announced several bold plans meant to inject new dynamism into the
company in recent years, including reorganizations, new products and
acquisitions. Most of those changes did not produce the edge it wanted. The
question yet to be answered with the latest move is whether Mr. Nadella’s
leadership, and the scope of the change, will break that pattern.
Mr. Nadella has improved employee morale since taking over the company in
February, partly by pledging big changes. He made a quick decision on a stalled
project, releasing Microsoft’s lucrative Office applications for the iPad. And
he departed from past practice at the company by making its Windows operating
system free for mobile devices to improve its market share.
Investors have bought into his vision. The company’s stock, which languished
during the tenure of Steven A. Ballmer, the company’s previous chief executive,
is up about 22 percent since Mr. Nadella assumed the top job. On Thursday, its
shares hit a 14-year high.
But critics of Microsoft, including many former employees, believe the company
has become overly bureaucratic and slow moving. The company has grown to 127,000
employees worldwide, up from 57,000 a decade ago. Apple, which is just a year
younger than Microsoft, has about 85,000 employees, nearly half of them in its
retail stores. During the first three months of this year, Apple’s revenue and
profit were each roughly double Microsoft’s.
“Having a clear focus is the start of the journey, not the end,” he said in the
email. “The more difficult steps are creating the organization and culture to
bring our ambitions to life.”
He added: “The first step to building the right organization for our ambitions
is to realign our work force.”
Some investors were hoping for an even bolder move by Mr. Nadella, including
trimming some product lines. The company’s investments in the search engine and
video game businesses have come under particularly harsh scrutiny, raising
questions about whether the company would be better off narrowing its focus to
other more lucrative markets.
Mr. Nadella did, however, take a scalpel to some projects that were especially
far afield from its primary business. The company said it planned to shut down
Xbox Entertainment Studios, a group in Santa Monica, Calif., that was dedicated
to producing original television programming for viewing on Microsoft’s video
game system. Microsoft said it would complete some programs that were already
underway, including two series based on the Halo game franchise.
The biggest chunk of job losses, though — about 12,500 — will
come because of the Nokia deal. Mr. Nadella has singled out Microsoft’s mobile
business as one of his top priorities, but the layoffs announced on Thursday
amount to a significant retrenchment in one area of that market.
The vast majority of the jobs being eliminated will come from the Nokia groups,
though some will come from overlap at Microsoft resulting from the deal.
Microsoft said 1,100 job cuts would come from Finland, and 1,800 from a Nokia
factory in Hungary. The result is that Microsoft is letting go of nearly half of
the 25,000 people who joined the company from Nokia.
That deal, the brainchild of Mr. Ballmer, has been unpopular among some
Microsoft employees and investors, who view it as a dangerous adventure into
hardware, a business beyond Microsoft’s expertise. On paper, the deal sounded
like a compelling effort to emulate the elegance of Apple’s products by bringing
mobile hardware and software development together under one roof.
Google tried something similar with its acquisition of Motorola Mobility. After
a couple years of lackluster handset sales, however, it sold Motorola to Lenovo
in January.
“It is particularly important to recognize that the role of phones within
Microsoft is different than it was within Nokia,” Stephen Elop, a former Nokia
chief executive who now runs the devices group at Microsoft, said in an email to
employees on Thursday. “Whereas the hardware business of phones within Nokia was
an end unto itself, within Microsoft all our devices are intended to embody the
finest of Microsoft’s digital work and digital life experiences, while accruing
value to Microsoft’s overall strategy.”
Nokia’s handset sales have fallen for years, despite a partnership with
Microsoft that put its Windows Phone operating system on Nokia smartphones. Mr.
Nadella has said he is still committed to making hardware. But the depth of the
Nokia cuts suggest he wants to minimize the risks in the smartphone market, said
Rick Sherlund, an analyst at Nomura Securities.
“This wasn’t his acquisition,” Mr. Sherlund said. “This was Ballmer’s
acquisition.”
Mark Scott contributed reporting from London.
A version of this article appears in print on July 18, 2014, on page B1 of the
New York edition with the headline: Microsoft To Lay Off Thousands.
Microsoft to Lay Off Thousands, Most From
Nokia Unit, NYT, 17.7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/18/business/
microsoft-to-cut-up-to-18000-jobs.html
Hiring Is Strong
and Jobless Rate Declines to 6.1%
JULY 3, 2014
The New York Times
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ
American companies are finally getting comfortable enough with
the economy’s prospects to add new workers at a very healthy pace, after years
of saying they lacked the confidence to hire people aggressively during a fitful
recovery.
Employers added 288,000 jobs in June, the Labor Department said Thursday, the
fifth month in a row that hiring has topped the 200,000 mark. The unemployment
rate dipped to 6.1 percent last month, the best reading since September 2008,
when the collapse of Lehman Brothers turned what had been a mild recession into
an economic rout.
Since then, many segments of the economy have rebounded — including corporate
profits, Wall Street and the housing market — even as payrolls inched higher at
a grindingly slow rate. Now, these broader economic gains are prompting
businesses to actually hire significantly more workers in response to growing
demand, rather than taking half steps, like adding hours to stretch existing
work forces.
The prospect of stronger economic growth, with healthier consumer spending as
more Americans find work, helped to lift the stock market to new highs. On
Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average closed above 17,000 for the first
time, while the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index recorded a new high and the
tech-heavy Nasdaq hit its highest level since the go-go days of 2000.
Despite the broad gains, the economy is still a long way from its peak before
the housing bubble burst and the recession began at the end of 2007. The
broadest measure of unemployment, which includes people who are working part
time because full-time positions are not available, stands at 12.1 percent. And
the proportion of Americans in the labor force has been stuck for three straight
months at 62.8 percent, a 36-year low, and is down sharply from 66 percent in
2008.
But the recent healthy level of hiring looks more sustainable than it has in
years. Factoring in June’s increase and upward revisions for estimated hiring in
April and May, employers added an average of 231,000 workers a month in the
first half of 2014, the best six-month run since the spring of 2006. “We’re
clicking on all cylinders in terms of job growth,” said Dean Maki, chief United
States economist at Barclays.
Just as significant as the headline figures, Mr. Maki said, is that June’s
hiring was broad-based, as industries as varied as health care, manufacturing,
financial services and retailing all added workers. “Every major sector showed
job growth in June, including the private service sector, where the bulk of jobs
in the U.S. are created,” Mr. Maki said.
In an important turnabout, there were encouraging gains not just in well-paid
white-collar professions, or in low-wage sectors like retail and restaurants,
but also in the vast middle tier of jobs that enable workers to gain a foothold
in the middle class. For example, manufacturers hired 16,000 workers, while
transportation companies added 17,000 employees and the long-dormant public
sector saw an addition of 26,000 positions.
“It’s definitely a strong report,” said Guy Berger, United States economist at
RBS. “There really aren’t that many clouds.”
Despite the stock market jump, the more robust rate of hiring is making some
traders nervous that the Federal Reserve will be forced to start raising
short-term interest rates earlier than had been expected to ward off any risk of
higher inflation. The drop in the unemployment rate to near 6 percent comes
months earlier than the Fed had expected; the central bank had predicted it
would take until the end of the year for the jobless rate to reach that level.
While the Fed’s program of buying bonds to stimulate the economy is on track to
end in October, most economists have been predicting the first increases in
short-term rates would not come until the summer or early fall of 2015. Now,
some experts like Paul Ashworth of Capital Economics say the Fed could move as
soon as March.
Despite such concerns, there was little hint of accelerating wage inflation in
the data in June, a crucial trend that the Fed watches to gauge the broader
danger of higher inflation. Wages are up just 2 percent from the period a year
earlier, in line with the inflation rate today as well as the overall rate of
salary increases over the last four years.
Some of the recent job gains represent a catch-up for employers that put off
hiring during a bumpy 2013. The initial weakness in the first quarter of 2014
delayed it further, as the economy shrank 2.9 percent during a bitter winter and
a downward swing for inventories.
Roger Hargens, chief executive of Accumold, an Ankeny, Iowa, maker of small,
highly specialized components for medical device firms and other manufacturers,
had hoped to begin hiring more aggressively last year. But after the delay of a
big order last fall, he waited instead.
The last few months have been strong enough to persuade him to take the plunge.
Orders in June hit their best level ever, with much of the demand coming from
overseas customers. Accumold’s products include the exterior plastic shells of
hearing aids, as well as the tiny tools used by doctors to remove cataracts or
perform laparoscopic surgery.
Accumold added three workers last month at its facility in the Des Moines
suburbs, and the company plans to hire another 10 to 20 employees in the second
half of the year, bringing the total work force to just under 200 people. By the
end of 2015, Mr. Hargens hopes to employ 220 to 230 people at his company, where
the typical production worker earns about $17 an hour while people with
technical expertise often make at least $25 an hour.
“We’re starting to scale up in a big way,” said Mr. Hargens, who is heading to
Europe on Monday to meet with customers in Switzerland, France and Britain. “We
had to hold off, but now we’re back on track.”
As the story of Accumold suggests, the 70 million American workers with a high
school diploma or some college, who make up the largest group in the work force,
are finally seeing some of the gains only college graduates had enjoyed earlier
in the recovery.
Unemployment among high school graduates fell to 5.8 percent in June from 6.5
percent a month earlier, and joblessness among people with some college or an
associate degree fell to 5 percent, from 5.5 percent in May. The unemployment
rate among college graduates increased 0.1 percentage point to 3.3 percent.
Mr. Maki, the Barclays economist, said that among workers with only a high
school diploma, employment was actually falling at this point in 2013 by 16,000
a month on a yearly basis. Now, he said, employers are adding 29,000 high school
graduates a month.
“We’re seeing more significant gains among those who have less than a college
degree,” Mr. Maki said. “The trend is beginning to shift.”
Correction: July 3, 2014
An earlier version of this article stated incorrectly the day that
administration officials reacted to the jobs data. It was Thursday, not Friday.
A version of this article appears in print on July 4, 2014, on page A1 of the
New York edition with the headline: Hiring Is Strong And Jobless Rate Declines
to 6.1%.
Hiring Is Strong and Jobless Rate Declines to
6.1%, NYT, 3.7.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/04/business/
jobs-data-for-june-released-by-labor-department.html
The War on Workers
The Supreme Court Ruling on Harris v. Quinn
Is a Blow for Unions
JULY 2, 2014
The New York Times
The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Contributors
By CYNTHIA ESTLUND and WILLIAM E. FORBATH
UNIONS have never been uncontroversial in American society, but
the battles over labor have grown fiercer in recent years: Witness the fight
over public-employee unions in Wisconsin, or the 2012 decision by Michigan
voters to join the ranks of “right to work” states.
On Monday a 5-to-4 majority of the Supreme Court fired its own salvo in the war
on unions. Though its decision in Harris v. Quinn was narrow, saying that, in
some cases, unions could not collect fees from one particular class of public
employees who did not want to join, its language suggests that this may be the
court’s first step toward nationalizing the “right to work” gospel by embedding
it in constitutional law.
The petitioners in Harris were several home-care workers who did not want to
join a union, though a majority of their co-workers had voted in favor of
joining one. Under Illinois law, they were still required to contribute their
“fair share” to the costs of representation — a provision, known as an “agency
fee,” that is prohibited in “right to work” states.
The ability of unions to collect an agency fee reflects a constitutional balance
that has governed American labor for some 40 years: Workers can’t be forced to
join a union or contribute to its political and ideological activities, but they
can be required to pay for the cost of the union’s collective bargaining and
contract-administration activities.
The majority in Harris saw things differently. Making workers pay anything to a
union they oppose is in tension with their First Amendment rights — “something
of an anomaly,” in the words of the majority. But the real anomaly lies in
according dissenters a right to refuse to pay for the union’s services —
services that cost money to deliver, and that put money in the pockets of all
employees.
Once selected by a majority of workers in a bargaining unit, a union becomes the
exclusive representative, with a duty to fairly represent all of them. That is
the bedrock of our public and private sector labor laws.
Unless everyone is required to pay for those services, individual workers can
easily become “free riders,” taking the benefits of collective representation
without paying their fair share of the costs. Not only dissenters but any
employee who wants to save a buck can “free ride.” The net result may be that
the union cannot afford to represent workers effectively, and everyone suffers.
Consider the home-care providers at issue in Harris. These workers, who are in
one of the fastest-growing and lowest-paid occupations in America, are generally
employed solely by individual customers, even when their wages came from public
funds like Medicaid. Alone, they were stuck with low pay and meager benefits,
and states faced labor shortages and high turnover.
Several years ago Illinois, like several other states, took on the role of joint
employer, along with individual customers, of the care workers. That enabled
them to vote on joining a union. They did so, and as a result nearly doubled
their wages and secured state-funded health insurance, as well as training and
safety provisions.
All of Illinois’s in-home care providers benefit from union representation.
Until Monday, all were required to pay a modest fee for those services. But now
workers can “free ride.”
While a majority declined to strike down agency-fee arrangements for
“full-fledged” public employees, as the petitioners had requested, and as unions
had feared, the majority makes clear that such fees now rest on shaky
constitutional ground, at least in the public sector, and are vulnerable to
broader attack in the future.
The ability of unions to survive rests on whether they solve the “free rider”
problem. That is why mandatory fees have been a critical battleground for unions
and their antagonists for over 70 years. The antagonists have won many of those
battles, beginning with the state-level “right-to-work” laws that bar any
mandatory union fees.
The First Amendment framework used by the “right to work” movement — and now by
much of the Supreme Court — to mount this attack is something old masquerading
as something new. Similar arguments were made during the 19th century, when
rising inequalities between individual workers and increasingly large-scale
industrial employers led workers to invent unions and collective bargaining. For
decades, employers found a willing ally in the court: When Congress or state
legislatures passed laws protecting workers’ freedom to organize and bargain
collectively, the court struck them down in the name of “liberty of contract.”
This changed in the 1930s, when the New Deal court finally conceded the
constitutional bona fides of “industrial democracy” through majority rule. But
now the court’s conservative majority has taken a bold step backward, recasting
the individualist crusade as a battle between compelled speech and the right to
refrain from speech — between individual dissent and collective compulsion. But
in substance it is the same old fight between the right of workers to bargain
collectively and the individual liberty of contract.
Unions are already reeling. At a time when workers are losing economic ground,
we should be looking for ways to strengthen their ability to join with
co-workers and bargain collectively to improve their lot. Instead, the court in
Harris sided with those who seek to weaken it further.
Cynthia Estlund is a professor of law at New York University.
William E. Forbath is a professor of law and history at the University of Texas,
Austin.
A version of this op-ed appears in print on July 3, 2014, on page A23 of the New
York edition with the headline: The War on Workers.
The War on Workers, NYT, 2.7.2014
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/03/opinion/
the-supreme-court-ruling-on-harris-v-quinn-is-a-blow-for-unions.html
Limiting Rights:
Imposing Religion on Workers
JUNE 30, 2014
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The Opinion Pages | Editorial
The Supreme Court’s deeply dismaying decision on Monday in the
Hobby Lobby case swept aside accepted principles of corporate law and religious
liberty to grant owners of closely held, for-profit companies an unprecedented
right to impose their religious views on employees.
It was the first time the court has allowed commercial business owners to deny
employees a federal benefit to which they are entitled by law based on the
owners’ religious beliefs, and it was a radical departure from the court’s
history of resisting claims for religious exemptions from neutral laws of
general applicability when the exemptions would hurt other people.
The full implications of the decision, which ruled in favor of employers who do
not want to include contraceptive care in their company health plans, as
required by the Affordable Care Act, will not be known for some time. But the
immediate effect, as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted in a powerful dissent,
was to deny many thousands of women contraceptive coverage vital to their
well-being and reproductive freedom. It also invites, she said, other
“for-profit entities to seek religion-based exemptions from regulations they
deem offensive to their faiths.”
The case involved challenges by two companies, Hobby Lobby, a chain of arts and
crafts stores, and Conestoga Wood Specialties, a cabinet maker, to the perfectly
reasonable requirement that employer health plans cover (without a co-payment)
all birth control methods and services approved by the Food and Drug
Administration. The main battleground was the Religious Freedom Restoration Act
of 1993, which says government may not “substantially burden a person’s free
exercise of religion” unless the burden is necessary to further a “compelling
government interest” and achieves it by “the least restrictive means.”
As a threshold matter, Justice Samuel Alito Jr., read the act’s religious
protections to apply to “the humans who own and control” closely held companies,
an interpretation contradicted by the statute’s history, context, and wording.
He then found that the contraceptive coverage rules put a “substantial burden”
on the religious owners, who objected to some of the items on the F.D.A.’s list
based on the incorrect claim they induce abortions.
It’s hard to see that burden. Nothing in the contraceptive coverage rule
prevented the companies’ owners from worshiping as they choose or advocating
against coverage and use of the contraceptives they don’t like.
Nothing compels women to use their insurance on contraceptives. A woman’s choice
to use or not to use them is a personal one that does not implicate her
employer. Such decisions “will be the woman’s autonomous choice, informed by the
physician she consults,” as Justice Ginsburg noted. There also is no requirement
that employers offer employee health plans. They could instead pay a tax likely
to be less than the cost of providing insurance to help cover government
subsidies available to those using an insurance exchange. That did not convince
Justice Alito and his colleagues on the court’s right flank, who bought the
plaintiffs’ claim that providing health coverage to employees was part of their
religious mission.
The majority’s finding that the government’s contraception coverage rules were
not the “least restrictive” way to carry out the broad and complex health reform
was also unpersuasive.
Mr. Alito’s ruling and a concurrence by Justice Anthony Kennedy portray the
decision as a narrow one without broader application, like denying vaccine
coverage or job discrimination. But that is not reassuring coming from justices
who missed the point that denying women access to full health benefits is
discrimination.
A version of this editorial appears in print on July 1, 2014, on page A20 of the
New York edition with the headline: The Justices Endorse Imposing Religion on
Employees.
Limiting Rights: Imposing Religion on Workers,
NYT, 30.6.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/01/opinion/the-supreme-court-
imposing-religion-on-workers.html
Making Everything Shipshape
As Panama Canal Expands,
West Coast Ports Scramble
to Keep Big Cargo Vessels
JUNE 27, 2014
The New York Times
By DIONNE SEARCEY
TACOMA, Wash. — As construction crews 5,000 miles away are
working to widen the Panama Canal to allow much larger ships to sail straight to
the East Coast, this historic port city and others along the West Coast are
doing everything they can to avoid becoming superfluous.
The Port of Tacoma is determined to keep up its rich import business, which can
be traced to the 1880s when chests of tea from Asia arrived at its docks and
headed to the East Coast by rail. Port officials know that by the time the
Panama Canal opens in 2016, an even newer, larger fleet of cargo ships will be
plying the oceans and will be so big they will not be able to squeeze through
even the wider channel.
So Tacoma, Seattle and other ports are spending billions to be ready to receive
the ships and keep themselves competitive in the overall scramble for foreign
trade.
“The ships continue to get bigger, the cranes need to get bigger, and the docks
need to be able to handle them,” said Trevor Thornsley, senior project manager
for the Port of Tacoma, as he stood along the jagged rebar and broken concrete
of a $22 million renovation to shore up the port’s Pier 3.
The work in Tacoma, a major port in this state that likes to call itself the
most trade-dependent in the nation, is among dozens of projects being completed
in port cities across the United States in response to major changes in the
world of container imports from Asia.
“Everybody in the supply chain from the manufacturer to the end consumer — that
entire supply chain is changing,” said Tay Yoshitani, chief executive of the
Port of Seattle. “The port industry is trying to make adjustments.”
Traditionally, America’s West Coast ports have been the gateway to the rest of
the country for the growing supply of goods from China and Hong Kong. The ports
in Tacoma, Seattle, Oakland, Los Angeles, Long Beach and elsewhere offer much
shorter sailing times than Gulf Coast and East Coast ports. But for shippers of
some goods, the web of logistics, including trucks and railroads, ends up being
less expensive if they go through the Panama Canal.
Even though the West Coast ports are viewing the project to widen the Panama
Canal as a major threat, it may not be their biggest challenge, said John
Martin, who works as an economic consultant for several ports.
Most imminently, officials at the West Coast ports are concerned about
negotiations underway for a union contract, which expires on Tuesday and affects
nearly 20,000 dockworkers at 29 ports. In 2002, during contract negotiations,
talks broke down and resulted in a bitter battle that shut down shipping along
the West Coast for 10 days and sent cargo ships to other ports of call, some of
them permanently.
Craig Merrilees, a spokesman for the International Longshore and Warehouse
Union, said that contract talks were positive and on track. John Wolfe, the
chief executive of the Port of Tacoma, said that while port officials did not
have a role in the talks, he, too, was optimistic. “We’ve been down this road
before,” Mr. Wolfe said. “We’re all in this together.”
Besides the union concerns, ports are bracing for an onslaught of changes in the
shipping world.
While the widened Panama Canal will allow an all-water route for big ships to
the East Coast, the project — originally scheduled to open this year — has been
plagued with construction delays. And the authorities have yet to announce toll
charges for passing ships. In the end, it might be too expensive for some ships
to use.
It is also possible that railroads that move goods from West Coast ports could
lower fees to make it more economical for ships to avoid the Panama Canal route.
“The uncertainty as to what’s going to happen with rates is huge,” said Mr.
Martin, the consultant, who is president of Martin Associates.
At the same time, sailing patterns may shift as Asian manufacturing continues to
move from China to countries to the south, like Singapore and Vietnam, which are
actually closer by sea to East Coast ports through the Suez Canal than to West
Coast ports across the Pacific.
A new competitive threat has emerged 500 miles north of the United States border
with Canada. Tacoma and Seattle are losing market share to the Port of Prince
Rupert in British Columbia, just six years old and already doing brisk business
with goods headed for the Midwest United States. While the port is nearly at
capacity, the Canadian government continues to make major investments in it and
is also pursuing a plan to build an export facility for liquefied natural gas
that would tap a gas pipeline that is in the works.
For trade with China, Prince Rupert’s appeal is proximity. Prince Rupert is two
to three days closer than the western coast of the United States, helping ships
cut fuel costs. Another major factor is that Canada’s railroads are offering
bargain rates to ship goods from Prince Rupert to Midwestern cities, analysts
said. While the railways and truck lines in Canada have a history of labor
instability, cargo carriers sailing into the country can avoid taxes levied by
the United States government.
Here at the Port of Tacoma, the biggest threat in the past has been the port
just 30 miles away in Seattle. The two ports have fought back and forth for
decades over shipping business. But the new competition from Canada and
elsewhere has brought an unusual alliance.
This year, the two ports for the first time sought permission from the Federal
Maritime Commission to share information on operations and rates without
violating federal antitrust laws. The ports now are coordinating lobbying
tactics as well as construction projects to make sure they’re not duplicating
efforts, officials said, and are researching other ways to cooperate.
“In the past 60 years we’ve truly been cutthroat,” said Stephanie Bowman, a
commissioner for the Port of Seattle. “We’ve been able to work together and put
aside our historical competition.”
In Seattle, the port’s facilities already have undergone $1.2 billion in
upgrades through 2012 and plans have been approved for an additional $5 million
to upgrade Terminal 5 to get ready for big ships. Tacoma’s Pier 3 project will
make it sturdy enough to handle the monster cranes needed to reach across wide
berths and unload the big ships.
The expenditures are a gamble. No one knows for sure whether enough of the big
ships will come to Seattle and Tacoma to offset the investments in the ports.
But Steve Sewell, economic development director for Washington State’s maritime
industry, said the preparations were worth it.
“You have to make some investments,” Mr. Sewell said, “and take some risks.”
A version of this article appears in print on June 28, 2014,
on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline:
Making Everything Shipshape.
Making Everything Shipshape, NYT, 27.6.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/28/business/
as-panama-canal-expands-west-coast-ports-scramble-to-keep-big-ships.html
Student Borrowers and the Economy
JUNE 10, 2014
The New York Times
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The Opinion Pages | Editorial
President Obama took an important step this week when he
signed an executive order providing relief to millions of struggling student
loan borrowers and urged Congress to pass a student loan refinancing bill that
is scheduled for a vote in the Senate on Wednesday. Both the executive order and
the refinancing bill speak to a grave problem that has trapped recent college
graduates and threatens the long-term health of the economy.
This problem has its roots in the financial crisis, which destroyed trillions of
dollars in household savings and home equity that families might otherwise have
used to pay for college. (Even before the recession, the state colleges, which
educate about 70 percent of the nation’s students, reacted to state budget cuts
by raising tuition.) With no other choice, students and their families financed
college by relying more heavily on student loans. According to the federal
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, student debt has doubled since 2007 and
now stands at about $1.2 trillion.
Stagnant wages and a tough job market have made it difficult for borrowers to
repay these debts. According to federal statistics, for example, about seven
million of the nation’s 40 million student loan borrowers are in default. The
people in this large and growing pariah class have difficulty getting jobs or
credit, or renting apartments. But borrowers who narrowly earn enough to make
loan payments are not much better off; they have to put off car purchases and
bunk with their parents because they can’t afford rents, and they can’t even
begin to think about saving for retirement.
As an official from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau told a Senate
hearing earlier this month, student debt is having a kind of “domino effect,”
damaging other areas of the economy. And unless federal policy makers intervene
in a muscular way, this generation of student borrowers could become a long-term
drag on the economy.
The executive order signed on Monday will help up to five million student loan
borrowers. It will expand access to the federal government’s Pay as You Earn
program, which allows borrowers to arrange affordable payments and qualify for
loan forgiveness. It requires the Department of Education to evaluate more
stringently how well the companies that collect federal loans keep borrowers out
of default. Most significantly, it requires the department to help people who
have defaulted rehabilitate their records through a program allowing lower
payments.
Homeowners, businesses and individuals can take advantage of low interest rates
to refinance their debts. Student borrowers, however, have few such options. The
Senate bill, known as the Bank on Students Emergency Loan Refinancing Act, would
create a fund — paid for by a new minimum tax on millionaires and billionaires —
that would be used to help people with federal or private student loans
refinance those loans at lower interest rates.
The bill might pass the Senate, but House Republicans will oppose any such tax.
Still, by bringing the matter to a vote, Senate Democrats underscore the need to
do something about dire indebtedness among recent graduates, and also give
members of their party a potent issue on which to run in the midterm elections.
Even if the refinancing bill were to become law, it would represent only part of
the solution. To get a handle on this problem, Congress needs to reconfigure the
student aid system to prevent the most vulnerable student borrowers from falling
too deeply into debt in the first place.
A version of this editorial appears in print on June 11, 2014,
on page A22 of the New York edition with the headline:
Student Borrowers and the Economy.
Student Borrowers and the Economy, NYT,
10.6.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/11/opinion/
student-borrowers-and-the-economy.html
Seattle Approves $15 Minimum Wage,
Setting a New Standard for Big Cities
JUNE 2, 2014
The New York Times
By KIRK JOHNSON
SEATTLE — The City Council here went where no big-city
lawmakers have gone before on Monday, raising the local minimum wage to $15 an
hour, more than double the federal minimum, and pushing Seattle to the forefront
of urban efforts to address income inequality.
The unanimous vote of the nine-member Council, after months of discussion by a
committee of business and labor leaders convened by Mayor Ed Murray, will give
low-wage workers here — in incremental stages, with different tracks for
different sizes of business — the highest big-city minimum in the nation.
“Even before the Great Recession a lot of us have started to have doubt and
concern about the basic economic promise that underpins economic life in the
United States,” said Sally J. Clark, a Council member. “Today Seattle answers
that challenge,” she added. “We go into uncharted, unevaluated territory.”
But some business owners who have questioned the proposal say that the city’s
booming economy is creating an illusion of permanence. The fat times and the
ability to pay higher wages, they warn, will not go on forever.
“We’re living in this bubble of Amazon, but that’s not going to go on,” said Tom
Douglas, a prominent restaurateur in Seattle, referring to the local boom in
jobs and economic growth from hiring at Amazon, the online retailer, which has
its headquarters here. Mr. Douglas said the new law will inevitably result in
costs being passed on to consumers. “There’s going to be some terrific price
inflation,” he said.
The measure has the support of Mr. Murray, who ran last year on a pledge to
raise the wage to $15 and made it one of his first priorities in office.
Cheers and jeers repeatedly erupted in the City Hall meeting room, which was
packed with supporters of the plan, who often interrupted speakers in the
90-minute debate before the vote with chants.
“We did it — workers did this,” said Kshama Sawant, a socialist who campaigned
for a $15 minimum wage when she was elected to the Council last year. Ms. Sawant
sought to accelerate the carrying out of the measure and to strip out a lower
youth wage training rate, but the council rejected her proposals.
The vote, economists and labor experts said, accentuates the patchwork in wages
around the country, with places like Seattle — and other cities considering
sharply higher minimum pay, including San Diego, Chicago and San Francisco —
having economic outlooks increasingly distinct from those in other parts of the
nation. Through much of the South, especially, the federal minimum of $7.25
holds fast.
Eight states plus the District of Columbia have already increased their minimum
wages this year, the most to have done so in a single year since 2006, and at
least eight other states and municipalities could put minimum wage ballot
measures before voters by November. But it is the scale of ambition that is
catching the attention of economists, labor leaders and business owners.
“In past rounds of minimum wage increases, proposals sought chiefly to restore
the value of the minimum wage lost to inflation over the decades,” said Paul
Sonn, the general counsel and program director at the National Employment Law
Project, a New York-based group that supports raising the minimum wage. The
increases in places like Seattle, Mr. Sonn said, go beyond playing catch-up.
“The $15 proposals make real gains,” he said.
Economists who study the minimum wage are not sure of the effect of having
sharply different levels — in some places, it is twice that of others. Though
records are a bit uncertain, people who track minimum wage law say the range of
mandated minimums, lowest to highest, is the largest it has been since a
national minimum was established by Congress in 1938.
“Nobody has studied a doubling of the minimum wage — that’s outside our
experience,” said Dale Belman, a professor of labor and industrial relations at
Michigan State University and co-author of a coming book about the minimum wage.
Individual workers and business owners in and around Seattle are unsure of the
implications. Washington State already has the highest state minimum wage in the
nation, $9.32, but more than 24 percent of Seattle residents earn hourly wages
of $15 or less, according to the city, and approximately 13.6 percent of Seattle
residents live below the federal poverty level.
Under the plan approved on Monday, the hourly wage will rise to $15 by 2017 for
employers with more than 500 workers that do not provide health insurance, and
by 2018 for those large employers who do. The minimum will be phased in through
2021 for smaller employers.
In its early years, the law allows employers to include tips as part of a
workers’ compensation in reaching the minimum, but that provision is phased out
over time.
“The short-term side of it says it’s attractive,” said Mickey Adame, a bartender
who works in Bellevue, Washington’s fifth-largest city, which is just outside
Seattle, and the new $15 wage boundary. “But I think people in Seattle aren’t
going to tip as much, knowing the servers are getting paid $15,” added Mr.
Adame, who lives in Seattle and is trying to start a music record label called
Sounder Music, for which his tip jar, he said, is crucial. “If I had to pick an
answer, I would say I think I’ll make more in Bellevue.”
Ms. Sawant, in her comments to the Council and the crowd, did not take the tone
of someone who was savoring a victory. The fight for workers’ rights and
economic fairness, she said, is not over.
“We have fought to the last day, the last hour, against all the loopholes
demanded by business,” she said. “The attempts of business to undermine $15 will
continue,” she said, as would the battle to “turn the tide against corporate
politics.”
She added: “$15 in Seattle is just a beginning. We have an entire world to win.”
A version of this article appears in print on June 3, 2014
on page A15 of the New York edition with the headline:
Seattle Approves $15 Minimum Wage,
Setting a New Standard for Big Cities.
Seattle Approves $15 Minimum Wage,
Setting a New Standard for Big Cities,
NYT, 2.6.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/03/us/
seattle-approves-15-minimum-wage-setting-a-new-standard-for-big-cities.html
Children Don’t Belong in Tobacco Fields
MAY 17, 2014
The New York Times
SundayReview | Editorial
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
A new report from Human Rights Watch paints a grim picture of
child labor in the United States, something that most Americans probably believe
was banned years ago. Children as young as 7 are working on tobacco farms in
North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia, and many are said to suffer
from the symptoms of acute nicotine poisoning.
There are no good estimates of how many youngsters work on tobacco farms, but
Human Rights Watch said it interviewed 140 children, most of whom work alongside
their parents, who are migrant farmworkers, during the summer and on weekends.
Their stories, some recorded on video, highlight gaping flaws in how America
regulates child labor on farms. Under federal laws and regulations, children can
work on any farm, not just those owned by their families, outside school hours
and in hazardous conditions if their parents let them. And there are no
restrictions on how many hours they can work. By contrast, the government has
far stricter rules for teenagers who work in retail stores and restaurants.
There is little doubt that the work is backbreaking and dangerous. Some of the
children interviewed by Human Rights Watch say they often vomit, lose their
appetites, have nausea and suffer from headaches — symptoms associated with
nicotine poisoning. The children absorb nicotine through their skin when they
handle tobacco leaves in the process of cutting, weeding and harvesting plants.
One 13-year-old in North Carolina, Elena G., told Human Rights Watch: “I felt
like I was going to faint. I would stop and just hold myself up with the tobacco
plant.”
Most cigarette companies do not insist that the farms they buy tobacco from
refrain from employing children. Worse still, in 2012 the Obama administration
abandoned regulations that would have restricted children younger than 16 from
“participating in the cultivation, harvesting and curing of tobacco” after
Republican lawmakers opposed the proposal by falsely claiming that the rules
would keep children from working on family farms.
The Human Rights Watch report should be a loud alarm for the tobacco industry
and lawmakers in Washington. Philip Morris International says it is working to
eliminate the use of child labor for a list of hazardous tasks on the roughly
500,000 farms around the world that it buys tobacco from, but most other
companies have not made similar commitments. For example, a spokesman for Altria
told NPR recently that restrictions on young people “handling or coming into
contact with tobacco is counter to a lot of farming practices that currently
take place in the U.S.” All cigarette companies should use their buying power to
make sure tobacco growers stop hiring children under 18 to work in their fields.
But the country cannot simply rely on industry promises. The tobacco companies’
long history of marketing their products to teenagers is good reason to question
their commitments on health issues. Congress and the Obama administration should
change the law to restrict child labor in hazardous agricultural work.
A version of this editorial appears in print on May 18, 2014,
on page SR10 of the New York edition with the headline:
Children Don’t Belong in Tobacco Fields.
Children Don’t Belong in Tobacco Fields,
NYT, 17.5.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/18/opinion/sunday/
children-dont-belong-in-tobacco-fields.html
A Better Economy, Still Far From Good
MAY 4, 2014
The New York Times
The Opinion Pages | Editorial
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The good news from last week’s economic reports is this: April
was the best month for job growth in quite a while. Employers added 288,000
jobs, bringing the average for the last three months to a respectable 238,000.
But let’s keep this milestone in perspective: wages remained flat, nearly 10
million unemployed people are looking for jobs, and millions more have become so
disenchanted that they have given up on finding work altogether. That the
unemployment rate fell to 6.3 percent in April from 6.7 percent a month earlier
is due mainly to the fact that the number of people looking for jobs fell. The
percentage of Americans 16 and over who are working or looking for work was just
62.8 percent, the lowest level since the late 1970s.
Moreover, even if job growth continued at last month’s solid, steady pace, the
country would not have a labor market as healthy as the one it had before the
recession started in December 2007 until the end of 2016, according to
calculations by Heidi Shierholz of the Economic Policy Institute in Washington.
Put differently, it would take the economy nine years to recoup the jobs lost
during the recession plus those needed to employ new workers during the slow
recovery.
The economic recovery that began in June 2009 has been the weakest the country
has experienced since World War II, according to an analysis by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. But it did not have to be. Lawmakers in Washington
have repeatedly undermined the recovery by emphasizing deficit reduction rather
than economic growth. They have also stood in the way of proposals that would
have helped the unemployed and workers at the lowest rungs of the economy.
To take two recent outrages, the Republican-controlled House has refused to take
up a measure passed by the Senate that would reinstate extended unemployment
benefits to people who have been out of work for six months or more. The
long-term unemployed make up more than one-third of everyone who is classified
as unemployed — those out of work and looking for a job — but helping them
strikes legislators like Tom Cole of Oklahoma as “pie in the sky.”
And last week, Senate Republicans blocked a vote on a bill that would have
raised the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, from $7.25 an hour, which
would help the working poor while providing a much-needed boost to the economy.
But Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee, would have you believe
that giving the poorest workers a raise is a “stale, bankrupt, ineffective
policy.”
People like Mr. Cole and Mr. Alexander speak as if the formal end of the
recession five years ago put everything right. But everything is not right for
the millions of Americans whose jobs, wages and livelihoods disappeared in those
dark days.
A version of this editorial appears in print on May 5, 2014,
on page A22 of the New York edition with the headline:
A Better Economy, Still Far From Good.
A Better Economy, Still Far From Good, NYT,
4.5.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/05/opinion/
a-better-economy-still-far-from-good.html
The Truth About the Pay Gap
APRIL 9, 2014
The New York Times
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Women are the primary or co-breadwinner in 6 out of 10
American families. That makes the economic imperative of addressing the wage gap
between women and men important, as is every step President Obama can take in
that direction.
On Tuesday, Mr. Obama recognized “Equal Pay Day,” the date that symbolizes how
far into this year a woman must work on average to catch up with what an average
man earned for the previous year, by signing two executive orders to help reduce
the persistent pay disparities.
One order prohibits federal contractors from retaliating against employees for
sharing salary information with co-workers. The other directs the Labor
Department to adopt regulations requiring federal contractors to report salary
data to the agency, including sex and race breakdowns, that can be used to
better target government enforcement.
Mr. Obama’s action will apply to about 26 million Americans who work for federal
contractors, more than 20 percent of the nation’s work force. Greater
transparency could have a significant impact, giving employers incentive to
correct unfair pay discrepancies by making it more likely that employees will
find out if they are being shortchanged.
Threaded through the political fight over pay fairness is a continuing debate
about the size of the pay gap. Mr. Obama and others often cite 77 cents as what
women make on average for every $1 earned by men — a figure that critics say is
an exaggeration.
In fact, it is a rough, but important, measure of overall workplace inequality.
It is not a comparison of what men and women are paid for performing the same or
comparable jobs. But, in representing the full-time wages of a working woman
against that of a full-time working man, it reflects overt discrimination as
well as more nuanced gender-based factors, like the fact that women are
disproportionately concentrated in the lowest-paying fields and not
well-represented in higher-paying fields. Of course, 77 cents is not the only
measure. But there is no doubt that the pay gap is real.
The Pew Research Center last year found that women earned 84 percent of what men
earned in its study of the hourly wages of all workers, including those who work
part time. Similarly, a 2013 review by the Economic Policy Institute of annual
hourly wages for men and women with college degrees, including salaried and
hourly workers, found that the men earned on average $33.71 per hour and the
women just $25.35 an hour.
On what grounds? If Senate Republicans are willing to block consideration of the
Paycheck Fairness Act -- doesn't that essentially say they...
Even controlling for hours, occupations, marital status, and other relevant
factors, college-educated women earn less than their male counterparts,
according to a recent study by the American Association of University Women. And
a study issued this month by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research reported
that women’s median earnings are lower than men’s in nearly every occupation,
including the most common occupations for full-time working women, like
elementary- and middle-school teaching and nursing.
Some Republicans have chided Mr. Obama for pointing out the wage gap when the
White House has one of its own. Female White House staff members make 88 cents
on average for every $1 male employees earn, the American Enterprise Institute
discovered. Jay Carney, the White House spokesman, has awkwardly noted that that
is better than the national average and that men and women in the same positions
earn the same salary.
But instead of becoming defensive and trying to explain away the discrepancy,
Mr. Obama should simply say the White House has to do better and present the lag
for what it is: more evidence that the problem persists even in workplaces
committed to equal treatment.
On Wednesday, Senate Republicans blocked consideration of the Paycheck Fairness
Act, which would apply the changes ordered by Mr. Obama for federal contractors
to the entire American work force as well as make some other important updates
to the federal Equal Pay Act. The outcome was entirely predictable. Republicans
also stopped the bill in 2010 and 2012. But wage injustice matters to all
Americans, regardless of party, and those who stand in the way of fairness do so
at their political peril.
A version of this editorial appears in print on April 10, 2014,
on page A24 of the New York edition with the headline:
The Truth About the Pay Gap.
The Truth About the Pay Gap, NYT, 9.4.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/10/opinion/the-truth-about-the-pay-gap.html
Obama Signs Measures
to Help Close Gender Gap in Pay
APRIL 8, 2014
The New York Times
By PETER BAKER
WASHINGTON — President Obama on Tuesday signed two executive
measures intended to help close longstanding pay disparities between men and
women as Democrats seek to capitalize on their gender-gap advantage at the
ballot box in a midterm election year.
Mr. Obama, standing in front of a platform of women in a picture-ready ceremony
in the East Room of the White House, said his actions would make it easier for
women to learn whether they had been cheated by employers. He called on Congress
to pass legislation that would take more significant steps.
“America deserves equal pay for equal work,” he said. Noting that it was “Equal
Pay Day,” he said a woman who worked in 2013 had to work this far into 2014 to
catch up to what a man earned by the end of last year.
“That’s not fair,” Mr. Obama said. “That’s like adding another six miles to a
marathon.” He added: “America should be a level playing field, a fair race for
everybody.”
The president, as he has in the past, reiterated that it was “an embarrassment”
that women on average earn 77 cents for every dollar men make. But he made no
mention of a recent study that found that women in his own White House make 88
cents for every dollar men do. Aides have said women earn the same salary as men
of the same rank but that there are more women in lower-paying jobs — an
explanation similar to that often given by private-sector employers.
Some critics have said both of those statistics are misleading because they are
averages of all men and women in all jobs, rather than apples-to-apples
comparisons of men and women in equivalent jobs with equivalent experience. Once
such factors are taken into account, they say, the gap is smaller.
“We all support equal pay for equal work and know there’s a problem that must be
addressed,” said Kirsten Kukowski, national press secretary for the Republican
National Committee. “But many are questioning the Democrats’ motives as they
continue their dishonesty about the issue and their own gender gap.”
The Senate is set to vote on the Paycheck Fairness Act on Wednesday, and a memo
distributed by the Republican National Committee and two other party committees
ahead of the vote noted that it was already illegal to discriminate on the basis
of gender. It said Democrats “always seem to wait for an election year to push
another empty promise.”
The committees released statistics showing pay gaps in the office staffs of
several Democrats up for re-election this year, including Senators Mark Begich
of Alaska, Mark R. Warner of Virginia, Mary L. Landrieu of Louisiana and Kay
Hagan of North Carolina.
Mr. Obama responded to the critics. “Some commentators are out there saying that
the pay gap doesn’t even exist,” he said. “They say it’s a myth. But it’s not a
myth. It’s math.”
The president lambasted Republicans for opposing “any efforts to even the
playing field for working families.” He added: “I don’t know why you would
resist the idea that women should be paid the same as men and then deny that
that’s not always happening out there. If Republicans in Congress want to prove
me wrong, if they want to show that in fact they do care about women being paid
the same as men, then show me. They can start tomorrow.”
Neither of the actions Mr. Obama took on Tuesday would affect the broad American
work force. The executive order he signed bars federal contractors from
retaliating against employees who discuss their salaries and an executive
memorandum he issued instructs the Labor Department to collect statistics on pay
for men and women from such contractors.
But the White House staged a ceremony with the sort of profile usually reserved
for a major bill signing. Aides arranged for Mr. Obama to be introduced by Lilly
M. Ledbetter, who has become a symbol of the pay gap issue since the Supreme
Court ruled that her discrimination case had been filed after the expiration of
a statute of limitations. Congress passed a measure named for her changing the
deadlines for filing such suits and Mr. Obama made it the first bill he signed
after taking office.
Ms. Ledbetter said the executive order signed by Mr. Obama would have made a
difference in her case. “I didn’t know I was being paid unfairly and I had no
way to find out. I was told in no uncertain terms that Goodyear, then and still
a government contractor, fired employees who shared their salary information. It
was against company policy.”
Mr. Obama said Ms. Ledbetter’s case belied the explanations often given for pay
differentials. “You’ll hear all sorts of excuses: ‘Oh, well they’re childbearing
and they’re choosing to do this and they’re this and they’re that and they’re
the other,'” he said.
“She was doing the same job, probably doing better. Same job. Working just as
hard, probably putting in more hours,” Mr. Obama said, “But she was getting
systematically paid less.”
Obama Signs Measures to Help Close Gender
Gap in Pay, NYT, 8.4.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/09/us/politics/
obama-signs-measures-to-help-close-gender-gap-in-pay.html
Charles Keating,
Key Figure in the 1980s Savings
and Loan Crisis,
Dies at 90
APRIL 2, 2014
The New York Times
By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Charles H. Keating Jr., who went to prison and came to
symbolize the $150 billion savings-and-loan crisis a generation ago after
fleecing thousands of depositors with regulatory help from a group of United
States senators known as the Keating Five, has died. He was 90.
The death was confirmed by his son-in-law, Gary Hall.
The S. & L. debacle of the 1980s and 90s, when a thousand institutions collapsed
in an implosion of reckless investments, may be a distant echo in a nation
stricken by economic turmoil. But to millions old enough to have been dragged
through the mess, Mr. Keating is remembered, perhaps unjustly, as the
pre-eminent villain of an era when depositors, many of them older Americans and
naïve investors, lost life savings they had squirreled away in hometown thrifts
they thought were safe.
Mr. Keating, who pleaded guilty to fraud charges, had been a young man of
promise — a Navy flier during World War II, an All-American swimmer in college,
the leader of a national campaign against pornography, a blustery Cincinnati
lawyer and businessman whose brother was an Ohio Congressman.
But in 1984, Mr. Keating, then a 61-year-old Phoenix real estate millionaire,
bought Lincoln Savings & Loan, of Irvine, Calif., for $51 million, double its
net worth. Lincoln, with 26 branches, made small profits on home loans, but
under new state and federal rules it could make riskier investments, and Mr.
Keating began pouring depositors’ savings into real estate ventures, stocks,
junk bonds and other high-yield flings.
In three years, Lincoln’s assets soared from $1 billion to $3.9 billion, and Mr.
Keating was using the business as his personal cash machine, taking $34 million
for himself and his family and $1.3 million more for political contributions,
prosecutors said.
The Federal Home Loan Bank Board, fearing wide collapses in a shaky industry,
finally imposed a 10 percent limit on risky S. & L. investments. By 1987, its
investigators found that Lincoln had $135 million in unreported losses and was
more than $600 million over the risky-investment ceiling. Soon, the F.B.I., the
Securities and Exchange Commission and other agencies were homing in.
Mr. Keating hired Alan Greenspan, soon to be chairman of the Federal Reserve,
who compiled a report saying Lincoln’s depositors faced “no foreseeable risk”
and praising a “seasoned and expert” management. And Mr. Keating called on
Senators Alan Cranston of California, Donald W. Riegle Jr. of Michigan, John
Glenn of Ohio and Dennis DeConcini and John McCain of Arizona, all recipients of
his campaign largess, to pressure the bank board to relax its rules and kill its
investigation.
All five met with regulators, and Edwin J. Gray, then the board chairman, said
four senators — all but Mr. Riegle — “came to me like lawyers arguing for a
client.” He resisted, but was replaced by a chairman more sympathetic to Mr.
Keating, and the board backed off, with disastrous results for depositors and
investors.
For two more years, Lincoln survived. On the books, assets ballooned to $5.46
billion, but billions were in speculative investments and hidden losses soared.
Meanwhile, Lincoln talked many customers into replacing federally insured
deposits with high-yielding bonds from Lincoln’s parent, American Continental, a
Keating corporation that was drowning in losses.
Bond buyers were not told the condition of American
Continental, or that its bonds were uninsured, prosecutors said. A witness in a
lawsuit years later produced a Lincoln memo, telling its bond salesmen to
“remember [that] the weak, meek and ignorant are always good targets.”
In 1989, American Continental went bankrupt and an insolvent Lincoln was seized
by the government. Some 23,000 customers were left holding $250 million in
worthless bonds, the life savings of many, and taxpayers paid $3.4 billion to
cover Lincoln’s losses. It was the largest of 1,043 S. & L. failures between
1986 and 1995 that, authoritative studies show, cost taxpayers $124 billion and
the savings and loan industry $29 billion. The government sued Mr. Keating for
$1.1 billion, but he said he was broke.
Convicted of fraud, racketeering and conspiracy in state and federal trials, Mr.
Keating went to prison for four and a half years. Both verdicts were overturned
on appeals in 1996. California dropped its case, and on the eve of a federal
retrial in 1999, Mr. Keating, who always insisted he had done nothing wrong,
pleaded guilty to four counts of wire and bankruptcy fraud and was sentenced to
time already served.
The Keating Five — all Democrats except Mr. McCain — also insisted they had done
nothing improper. The Senate Ethics Committee concluded in 1991 that none had
violated laws, but said Senators Cranston, DeConcini and Riegle had interfered
with the bank board’s inquiry and rebuked them, Mr. Cranston in the harshest
terms. Senators Glenn and McCain were cleared, but criticized for “poor
judgment.”
Mr. Keating, a 6-foot-5-inch beanpole who walked with a swagger, never minced
words about buying political influence. Asked once whether his payments to
politicians had worked, he told reporters, “I want to say in the most forceful
way I can: I certainly hope so.”
Charles Humphrey Keating Jr. was born in Cincinnati on Dec. 4, 1923. He attended
Catholic schools and became an accomplished swimmer. He joined the Navy in World
War II and became a fighter pilot, but was never deployed to a combat theater.
After the war, he enrolled in law school at the University of Cincinnati, won
various collegiate swimming championships and was named an All-American. In
1948, he received a law degree and began practice in Cincinnati.
In 1949, he married the former Mary Elaine Fette. They had five daughters and a
son. In the 1950s, Mr. Keating organized Catholic men’s groups to fight
pornography and founded Citizens for Decent Literature, which under various
names grew to 300 chapters and 100,000 members nationally. He became known as a
stern moralist, and in 1969 was named by Richard M. Nixon to the President’s
Commission on Obscenity and Pornography.
With his brother, William, he founded a law firm in 1952. (William was a
congressman from 1971 to 1974 and later chairman of The Cincinnati Enquirer.) By
the late 1950s, the law firm’s principal client was Carl H. Lindner Jr., a
businessman who formed American Financial Corporation in 1960 as a sprawling
conglomerate. Mr. Keating left law practice in 1972 to become American
Financial’s executive vice president.
In the 1970s, the S.E.C. accused American Financial of irregularities; Mr.
Lindner and Mr. Keating admitted no wrongdoing but agreed to violate no fraud
statutes. After a falling out with Mr. Lindner, Mr. Keating moved to Phoenix in
1976 to run American Continental, a real estate spinoff he acquired from
American Financial. By the early 1980s, it was a major home builder in Phoenix
and Denver.
Mr. Keating thus acquired millions just as the government lifted rules that had
long limited the scope of investments S. & L.’s could make with depositors’
money. Lincoln became a cash cow for Mr. Keating’s investments, prosectors said,
and its failure a metaphor for an age of excess.
In recent years, he had lived in Phoenix, working occasionally as a real estate
consultant. In their book, “Trust Me: Charles Keating and the Missing Billions,”
(Random House, 1993), Michael Binstein and Charles Bowden said: “He did not
simply rob a bank. He broke a bank with his dreams.”
A version of this article appears in print on April 2, 2014,
on page A25 of the New York edition with the headline:
Charles Keating, Key Figure in the 1980s Savings
and Loan Crisis, Dies at 90.
Charles Keating, Key Figure in the 1980s
Savings and Loan Crisis,
Dies at 90, NYT, 2.4.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/02/business/
charles-keating-key-figure-in-the-1980s-savings-and-loan-crisis-dies-at-90.html
Murray L. Weidenbaum,
Reagan Economist,
Dies at 87
MARCH 21, 2014
The New York Times
By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr.
Murray L. Weidenbaum, who as President Ronald Reagan’s first
chief economic adviser elevated government regulation of business to the
forefront of public policy debate, but resigned unhappy about the
administration’s budget-making, died on Thursday in St. Louis. He was 87.
His son, Jim, confirmed the death.
Mr. Weidenbaum, a Bronx-born economist, was fond of saying, “Don’t just stand
there, undo something.” And he did, beginning in 1981, when the newly
inaugurated Mr. Reagan appointed him chairman of the Council of Economic
Advisers.
Reducing the size of government and lightening its regulatory hold on the
private sector — including the banking, broadcasting and the food and drug
industries — became a large theme of the Reagan presidency, which began with
inflation still running in double digits and the economy heading into recession.
Deregulation, the White House believed, would help stimulate the economy by
reducing the government rules and restrictions that industries say hamper their
ability to expand and create jobs. But the policy’s critics feared that an
unfettered private sector could be dangerous to the economy and the public
interest.
At the heart of what came to be known as Reaganomics was the proposition that
the nation could be restored to economic health through fiscally stimulating tax
cuts — the essence of supply-side economic theory — and by restricting the money
supply to contain inflation. Critics of the administration called that
combination contradictory.
Mr. Weidenbaum, a wry and slightly rumpled figure who had long shuttled between
government and academic posts, previously at Washington University in St. Louis,
proved to be one of the administration’s least doctrinaire members, neither
full-throated supply-sider nor strict monetarist.
“I was sympathetic to both,” Mr. Weidenbaum said in a 2011 telephone interview
for this obituary. But neither side “thought I was one of them.”
He was also a prominent advocate of federal revenue-sharing, involving
no-strings payments to states and localities. As an assistant secretary of the
Treasury under President Richard M. Nixon, he had led a revenue-sharing
initiative, which was briefly effective. But he wound up helping President
Reagan dismantle the program when revenue sharing did not displace a
proliferation of separate grants and payments to state and local governments
voted for by Congress.
Though fiscally conservative, Mr. Weidenbaum was more moderate than some of his
peers in the White House. He was generally aligned with administration
pragmatists like the budget director, David A. Stockman, and the chief of staff,
James A. Baker III. They favored compromising with Democrats in Congress on
raising tax revenue and cutting military spending because of their concern about
deficits.
Internal battles over budget deficits were a hallmark of the administration in
those years.
Mr. Weidenbaum, in the 2011 interview, said he left the administration after a
year and a half precisely because he was unhappy with the 1983 budget, and chose
to quit rather than defend it before Congress.
Stepping down in August 1982, a time when Mr. Reagan’s popularity had plummeted
and the country was sinking into a deep recession, Mr. Weidenbaum was replaced
by Martin S. Feldstein.
“After fighting the good fight, I quietly folded my tent and returned to St.
Louis,” Mr. Weidenbaum said.
But he left satisfied. In an Op-Ed article in The New York Times afterward, he
wrote that the administration had “achieved significant progress in carrying out
its economic recovery program” and that its deregulation efforts had been
successful.
“For the first time in decades, no new major regulatory activities were enacted
or promulgated,” he wrote. “In fact, many burdensome regulations were modified
or rescinded.”
Mr. Weidenbaum also expressed general satisfaction with the administration’s
policy in a 2005 memoir, “Advising Reagan: Making Economic Policy, 1981-82.”
“It seems clear that, on balance, Reaganomics was a success,” he wrote. “The
president’s policies had injected a new sense of realism into the decision
making in the private sector,” as both management and workers paid more
attention to controlling costs and raising productivity.
Murray Weidenbaum (the first syllable rhymes with “feed”) was born on Feb. 10,
1927, into a liberal Democratic household in the Bronx. He graduated from
Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn and the City College of New York, where he
was elected president of the student body on a platform of “Wine, Women and
Weidenbaum.”
Mr. Weidenbaum received a master’s degree from Columbia University, then joined
the New York State Department of Labor as a junior economist. At the time, like
his family, he held union-friendly views, and saw labor as the little guy at the
mercy of big business. But he grew disillusioned with the labor cause after
being assigned to a statistical analysis of a master contract for the Teamsters
union. His encounter with an independent trucker who had vainly sought to
negotiate on his own was a pivotal moment.
“The roles were reversed,” he said. “The little employer was dealing with the
giant union.”
Laid off under New York State’s “last in, first out” policy, he found work in
Washington at the Bureau of the Budget. During a leave to pursue doctoral work
at Princeton, he met Phyllis Green. They married in 1954.
Besides his son, Jim, he is survived by two daughters, Laurie Stark and Susan
Juster-Goldstein, and six grandchildren.
After marriage, he began a life characterized by the title of a 2009
autobiographical monograph, “Vignettes From a Peripatetic Professor,” moving
among academia, government, industry and research institutes in Washington and
elsewhere.
Mr. Weidenbaum had an early, formative stint in the military industry. The
General Dynamics Corporation in Fort Worth hired him as an economist and had him
analyze the operations of the B-58 supersonic bomber. Moving to Boeing, in
Seattle, he developed forecasts of the military market.
The jobs exposed him to the numerous rules military contractors were subject to,
underscored by the full-time presence of inspectors stationed in the factories.
“There’s more government regulation of the defense industry than any other,” Mr.
Weidenbaum said in the 2011 interview, adding that complaints were seldom voiced
for fear of offending the main customer, the government itself.
After Boeing, he moved to the Stanford Research Institute in California to
continue studying the military industry.
That was followed by a turn in Washington as the staff director of President
Lyndon B. Johnson’s Council of Economic Advisers.
He moved to St. Louis in early 1975 when Washington University created the
Center for the Study of American Business and recruited him to be its first
director. He was there when Mr. Reagan lured him back to the White House.
Mr. Weidenbaum later served on boards and government commissions, including one
on clean air initiatives formed by President George H. W. Bush, and he continued
as director of the Washington University business institute. In 2001 it was
renamed the Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government and Public Policy.
The center gave him a platform from which to express his views on deficit
spending — “I conclude that deficits do not matter, but that Treasury borrowing
and money creation surely do” — and on military spending and other economic
matters. It also gave him an opportunity to display his dry sense of humor.
Speaking at the center’s annual policy conference in October 1982, he remarked,
“At a time when, alas, economist jokes are in vogue, I would like to add my
favorite wisecrack about our profession: If all the economists in the world were
laid end to end, it might be a good thing.”
A version of this article appears in print on March 22, 2014,
on page A22 of the New York edition with the headline:
Murray L. Weidenbaum, Reagan Economist, Dies at 87.
Murray L. Weidenbaum, Reagan Economist,
Dies at 87,
NYT, 21.3.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/22/business/
murray-l-weidenbaum-reagan-economist-dies-at-87.html
Extra Pay for Extra Work
MARCH 12, 2014
The New York Times
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The Opinion Pages|Editorial
For the first 40 years of its existence, a worker’s right to
time-and-a-half for overtime, established by federal law in 1938, operated as
intended. It guarded against exploitation and inequality by ensuring that extra
hours meant extra pay.
Since the mid-1970s, however, that right has been severely eroded. The law gives
the Labor Department the authority to update the salary threshold and job
descriptions that define who is eligible for overtime pay. The last meaningful
update was in 1975, when the Ford administration raised the salary threshold
significantly to account for inflation.
In 2004, rule changes by the Bush administration, which remain in force today,
basically locked in the law’s by-then outdated and inadequate salary threshold,
while giving employers more leeway to define workers in ways that make them
ineligible for overtime pay.
President Obama’s directive to the Labor Department to revamp the nation’s
overtime rules is an opportunity to undo the damage. By reasserting a meaningful
right to overtime, it could lift pay for an estimated five million workers a
week and, in the process, help to mitigate the wage stagnation and income
inequality that increasingly plague the American economy.
The most important change the department can make is to raise the salary
threshold — the pay level below which all hourly and salaried workers are
guaranteed overtime pay. Today’s threshold, $455 a week, is unacceptably low,
barely above the poverty level for a family of four. The Labor Department should
set the new threshold at around $1,000 a week, which is where it would be if it
simply had been adjusted for inflation since 1975.
White House officials told reporters on Tuesday that the president will also ask
the department to write rules to end the widespread business practice of
misclassifying workers as administrators, supervisors or managers — designations
that can exempt workers from overtime protection. But raising the salary
threshold is even more important, because doing so would automatically grant
overtime protection to many workers who are misclassified, without having to
clarify or redefine their job duties.
Given that rule-making is a laborious process, updating the overtime rules could
easily take longer than the roughly two-and-a-half years that Mr. Obama has left
in office. The president would thus do well to instruct the Labor Department to
focus solely on raising the salary threshold, if needed, to get reform enacted
promptly.
Mr. Obama knows that it is not enough to say that Americans deserve a raise. He
is also urging Congress to raise the federal minimum wage and has signed an
executive order requiring federal contractors to pay their employees at least
$10.10 an hour. New overtime rules are of a piece with those efforts, but, to
make a difference, they need to get done — and soon.
A version of this editorial appears in print on March 13, 2014,
on page A26 of the New York edition with the headline:
Extra Pay for Extra Work.
Extra Pay for Extra Work, NYT, 12.3.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/13/opinion/extra-pay-for-extra-work.html
The Inflation Obsession
MARCH 2, 2014
The New York Times
The Opinion Pages|Op-Ed Columnist
Paul Krugman
Recently the Federal Reserve released transcripts of its
monetary policy meetings during the fateful year of 2008. And, boy, are they
discouraging reading.
Partly that’s because Fed officials come across as essentially clueless about
the gathering economic storm. But we knew that already. What’s really striking
is the extent to which they were obsessed with the wrong thing. The economy was
plunging, yet all many people at the Fed wanted to talk about was inflation.
Matthew O’Brien at The Atlantic has done the math. In August 2008 there were 322
mentions of inflation, versus only 28 of unemployment and 19 of systemic risks
or crises. In the meeting on Sept. 16, 2008 — the day after Lehman fell! — there
were 129 mentions of inflation versus 26 mentions of unemployment and only four
of systemic risks or crises.
Historians of the Great Depression have long marveled at the folly of policy
discussion at the time. For example, the Bank of England, faced with a
devastating deflationary spiral, kept obsessing over the imagined threat of
inflation. As the economist Ralph Hawtrey famously observed, “That was to cry
‘Fire, fire!’ in Noah’s flood.” But it turns out that modern monetary officials
facing financial crisis were just as obsessed with the wrong thing as their
predecessors three generations before.
And it wasn’t just a bad call in 2008. Much supposedly informed opinion has
remained fixated on the supposed threat of rising prices despite being wrong
again and again. If you spent the last five years watching CNBC, or reading the
Wall Street Journal opinion pages, or for that matter listening to prominent
conservative economists, you lived in a constant state of alarm over runaway
inflation, which was coming any day now. It never did.
What accounts for inflation obsession? One answer is that obsessives failed to
distinguish between underlying inflation and short-term fluctuations in the
headline number, which are mainly driven by volatile energy and food prices.
Gasoline prices, in particular, strongly influence inflation in any given year,
and dire warnings are heard whenever prices rise at the pump; yet such blips say
nothing at all about future inflation.
They also failed to understand that printing money in a depressed economy isn’t
inflationary. I could have told them that, and in fact I did. But maybe there
was some excuse for not grasping this point in 2008 or early 2009.
The point, however, is that inflation obsession has persisted, year after year,
even as events have refuted its supposed justifications. And this tells us that
something more than bad analysis is at work. At a fundamental level, it’s
political.
This is fairly obvious if you look at who the inflation obsessives are. While a
few conservatives believe that the Fed should be doing more, not less, they have
little if any real influence. The overall picture is that most conservatives are
inflation obsessives, and nearly all inflation obsessives are conservative.
Why is this the case? In part it reflects the belief that the government should
never seek to mitigate economic pain, because the private sector always knows
best. Back in the 1930s, Austrian economists like Friedrich Hayek and Joseph
Schumpeter inveighed against any effort to fight the depression with easy money;
to do so, warned Schumpeter, would be to leave “the work of depressions undone.”
Modern conservatives are generally less open about the harshness of their view,
but it’s pretty much the same.
The flip side of this antigovernment attitude is the conviction that any attempt
to boost the economy, whether fiscal or monetary, must produce disastrous
results — Zimbabwe, here we come! And this conviction is so strong that it
persists no matter how wrong it has been, year after year.
Finally, all this ties in with a predilection for acting tough and inflicting
punishment whatever the economic conditions. The British journalist William
Keegan once described this as “sado-monetarism,” and it’s very much alive today.
Does any of this matter? It’s true that the Fed hasn’t surrendered to the
sado-monetarists. Notably, it didn’t panic in 2011, when another blip in
gasoline prices briefly raised the headline rate of inflation, and Republicans
began inveighing against the “debasement” of the dollar.
But I’d argue that the clamor from inflation obsessives has intimidated the Fed,
which might otherwise have done more. And it has also been part of a general
climate of opposition to anything that might address our continuing jobs crisis.
As I suggested, we used to marvel at the wrongheadedness of policy makers during
the Great Depression. But when the Great Recession struck, and we were given a
chance to do better, we ended up repeating all the same mistakes.
A version of this op-ed appears in print on March 3, 2014,
on page A25 of the New York edition with the headline:
The Inflation Obsession
The Inflation Obsession, NYT, 2.3.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/03/opinion/krugman-the-inflation-obsession.html
Small Business,
Joining a Parade of Outsourcing
FEB. 15, 2014
The New York Times
By PHYLLIS KORKKI
Going abroad for cheap labor isn’t just for big businesses
anymore. Thanks to the rise of online job marketplaces, small businesses are
increasingly using foreign contract workers to lower their costs.
It’s a trend that has the potential to redistribute global wealth, say a group
of researchers in a recent working paper published by the National Bureau of
Economic Research.
For businesses hiring people for one-time projects in areas like software
development, website design, customer service and translation, there is no
longer a need to stay local. A company in New York can arrange for someone in
Uzbekistan to create its website, for example. And chances are that the Uzbek
worker will be willing to work for much less pay than a comparable one in New
York.
But finding those people and dealing with payment isn’t something that a typical
business has time to handle. That’s where online marketplaces like oDesk, Elance
(which recently merged with oDesk), Freelancer and Guru come in. They post
workers’ skills and portfolios, solicit and publish reviews, and arrange for
payment, taking a cut of each transaction.
Launch media viewer
Michael Waraksa
ODesk created its online marketplace in 2005, and the company has grown quickly
since then. The number of employers billing on the site per quarter rose by more
than 900 percent from 2009 to 2013; in that same period, the number of working
freelancers per quarter rose about 1,000 percent.
Activity on these sites consists mainly of companies in high-income countries
hiring workers in low-income ones, said Ajay Agrawal, a professor of
entrepreneurship at the University of Toronto and one of the authors of the
study. Contractors in low-income countries with the right skills can receive a
substantial wage boost by participating in an online marketplace, he said. “They
can go on the platform and see which jobs are in most demand and learn those
skills.”
Contractors from Bangladesh and the Philippines, for example, “earn
significantly more than local minimum wages, perhaps partly explaining their
disproportionate use of the platform,” according to the paper. Technology skills
tend to command higher wages. On average, software developers were able to make
around $16 an hour, whereas administrative support paid $4, the paper said.
(Projects can also be performed at a fixed rate instead of an hourly one.)
But might an American business hesitate to hire someone halfway across the globe
— especially in a non-English-speaking country? The quality of work produced
will always be an issue for online marketplaces, wherever the workers are based.
That’s why the ratings and reviews on the sites are so important.
Amanda Pallais, an assistant professor of economics and social studies at
Harvard, ran an experiment involving oDesk transactions. It showed that on
average, contractors who had ratings with their profiles greatly increased their
earnings and rates of employment. (This was the case even though negative
ratings were included in the averages.)
The digital outsourcing of contract work is “good for American small business —
that’s who’s really using this,” Professor Agrawal said. It’s also helping to
raise the standard of living for workers in developing countries. The rise of
these marketplaces will increase global productivity by encouraging “better
matching between employers and employees,” he said.
The trend isn’t so good for freelancers in the United States and other
high-income countries, who can’t compete against a contractor in, say, the
Philippines, who bids $5 an hour for a tech-related job. It’s similar to the
effect that occurred when American companies began outsourcing their work to
factories abroad — and one that is likely to be debated as online labor
continues to grow.
A version of this article appears in print on February 16, 2014,
on page BU3 of the New York edition with the headline:
Small Business, Joining a Parade of Outsourcing.
Small Business, Joining a Parade of
Outsourcing, NYT, 15.2.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/16/business/
small-business-joining-a-parade-of-outsourcing.html
Don’t Sell Cheap U.S. Coal to Asia
FEB. 12, 2014
The New York Times
By MICHAEL RIORDAN
EASTSOUND, Wash. — FROM where I live on Orcas Island in Puget
Sound, north of Seattle, I can see Cherry Point across the wind-whipped waters
of the Salish Sea. This sandy promontory jutting into Georgia Strait has become
the focus of heated debate here in the Pacific Northwest.
Peabody Energy, Carrix and other corporations hope to build a shipping terminal
at Cherry Point to export nearly 50 million metric tons of coal to Asia
annually. They ballyhoo the jobs the terminal may bring to our region but say
nothing about the profits they will reap from selling subsidized coal.
Opponents decry the prospect of the dirty, smelly, noisy trains blocking
railroad crossings all across Washington State as they transport coal here from
the Powder River Basin in Montana and Wyoming. They also warn that coal dust
from the terminal will pollute nearby waters and harm our dwindling populations
of herring, threatened Chinook salmon and endangered killer whales.
But much larger issues of national and global concern are at stake. The
low-sulfur Western coal, strip-mined from federal lands, is valuable public
property. The federal government’s leasing of these lands at low cost to strip
miners made some sense a few decades ago when the United States needed
low-sulfur coal to reduce the amount of sulfur dioxide that was being emitted by
coal-burning power plants and causing acid rain. But today, as utilities convert
to cheap natural gas and American coal use declines, mining companies are
seeking customers in China, Japan and Korea.
Shipping this subsidized coal to Asian countries to help them power their
factories, which undercut American manufacturers, makes little sense. Yes, this
coal will help those countries produce cheap consumer goods for sale in stores
across the United States. But it will also promote the continued transfer of
industrial work to Asia, especially if the Trans-Pacific Partnership goes
through. Is that good for American workers?
The coal is extracted from federal lands so cheaply that taxpayers should be
outraged. A 2012 study by the nonprofit Institute for Energy Economics and
Financial Analysis concluded that the government’s failure to obtain fair market
value for coal mined in the Powder River Basin had deprived taxpayers of almost
$1 billion annually over the past 30 years. Last year, the Interior Department’s
inspector general similarly reported that the agency was failing to collect
sufficient lease payments. And last week, the Government Accountability Office
concluded that the coal leasing program run by the Bureau of Land Management
operates without sufficient oversight to ensure that fair lease prices are being
paid and does not fully account for export sales in evaluating these fees.
“Taxpayers are likely losing out so that coal companies can reap a windfall and
export that coal overseas, where it is burned, worsening climate change,” said
Senator Edward J. Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat, who requested the study.
When coal companies can strip mine Western coal for less than $10 a ton and sell
it in Asia for nearly 10 times as much, lucrative profits can be banked all
along the global supply chain. No wonder the Australian coal company Ambre
Energy is planning to build two coal terminals on the Columbia River. In all,
those terminals and the one proposed for Cherry Point could ship 100 million
metric tons of coal to Asia annually.
Asian nations hungry for energy have much looser pollution regulations and will
pay dearly for coal, despite its noxious impacts on health and the environment.
The health impact of coal emissions has recently become obvious in China, where
this pollution contributed to 1.2 million premature deaths in 2010, according to
the Global Burden of Disease study, published in The Lancet, a British medical
journal.
And this pollution is unfortunately not confined to Asia. Wafted aloft on winds
blowing across the Pacific, it reaches North America, depositing fine particles,
mercury and other toxins on land and in water. Carbon dioxide emitted by burning
coal adds inexorably to the global overburden of greenhouse gases warming the
planet. Projected exports from Cherry Point alone could result in over 100
million metric tons of carbon dioxide annually. The gas has already begun to
boost the acidity of near-shore waters, threatening Washington’s shellfish
industry.
The billions of tons of coal burned in Asia every year contribute markedly to
global warming. Should the United States be selling them subsidized coal and
encouraging this impending disaster?
Our nation needs a new, transparent, clean-energy policy that no longer turns a
blind eye to the many negative impacts of coal burning — or to companies trying
to sell coal to other nations playing catch-up in the global economy. A
cornerstone of this policy must be the rational use of our vast reserves of
Western coal as we ramp down the overuse of what is, by far, the dirtiest fossil
fuel.
Is our economy to become a resource economy like Australia’s, exporting mineral
wealth to Asia in return for mining and shipping jobs, plus cheap consumer
goods? Should we support this Faustian bargain by selling our coal so
inexpensively? What kinds of jobs and living conditions do we really want to
foster, and where? These are questions a rational and much-needed, 21st-century
energy policy would address.
A great and growing plume of carbon dioxide continues to rise over Asia as
transnational corporations are shifting manufacturing operations overseas. We
can take a resolute stand at Cherry Point and begin to halt this boondoggle. A
good first step would be one Senator Markey advocates: a moratorium on new coal
leases.
Michael Riordan, a physicist,
is the author of “The Hunting of the Quark.”
A version of this op-ed appears in print on February 13, 2014,
on page A27 of the New York edition with the headline:
Don’t Sell Cheap U.S. Coal to Asia.
Don’t Sell Cheap U.S. Coal to Asia, NYT,
12.2.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/13/opinion/dont-sell-cheap-us-coal-to-asia.html
Conflict in Oil Industry, Awash in Crude
FEB. 12, 2014
The New York Times
By CLIFFORD KRAUSS
HOUSTON — T. Boone Pickens has personified the nation’s oil
industry for more than a generation. So when he made an offhand comment at a
conference here a few weeks ago expressing reservations about lifting the
nation’s ban on exports of crude oil, he startled some of his old allies in the
business.
Scott Sheffield, chief executive of Pioneer Natural Resources and one of the top
oil executives in the state, picked up the phone to have a chat. “We had lunch
and he made sense,” said Mr. Pickens, who has since revised his position.
Chalk one up for the oil producers, who have begun lobbying the Obama
administration, Congress and the public to let them export the bounty of crude
oil flowing out of new shale fields across the country.
Opposing them are their erstwhile cousins, the independent refiners, who insist
that they need abundant, economical domestic supplies of oil so they can compete
with foreign refiners.
It is a rare clash in a deeply guarded industry that involves arguments over
national security, pricing at the pump and, after all is said and done, who will
get a bigger share of earnings from the current drilling rush.
“What we have here is a food fight for the profits that will come either from
exports of crude oil or exports of refined products,” said Amy Myers Jaffe,
executive director of energy and sustainability at the University of California,
Davis, who testified before Congress recently in favor of lifting the ban. “It’s
like an argument inside a family business but one that could result in huge
market distortions that can either hurt the consumer or our national security.”
Producers like Mr. Sheffield warn that a mounting glut of certain grades of oil
in some regions of the country will eventually force a halt to unprofitable
drilling if exports are not allowed.
“Nobody wants the collapse of the oil industry,” Mr. Sheffield said in an
interview. “You would be importing crude oil from the Middle East all over
again.”
On the other side of the debate are some of the nation’s biggest refiners, who
argue against unlimited exports of crude oil even as they export increasing
amounts of refined products like diesel and gasoline. To their way of thinking,
the oil producers are merely trying to increase their profits at the expense of
American consumers.
“They are seeking the highest price available,” Bill Day, a vice president at
the Valero Energy Corporation, a large independent refiner, said of the
producers. “If anything, unlimited exports would raise the price of American
crude to the international level, which is why the producers want this step to
begin with.”
The debate began in earnest two months ago when Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz
suggested at a New York energy conference that it might be time for the country
to reconsider the export ban that was instituted in the 1970s, when OPEC oil
embargoes threatened the American economy. Congress at the time made oil exports
illegal except for some shipments to Canada. The ban on exports of Alaskan North
Slope crude was lifted in 1996.
The topic has renewed interest thanks to the oil industry’s reversal of fortunes
in recent years. Only seven years ago the country’s domestic oil production
appeared to be in a downward spiral. But with the advent of new extraction
techniques, entire new fields were opened, replacing oil imports from unfriendly
or unruly places like Venezuela and Nigeria.
Suddenly parts of the Midwest and Gulf of Mexico regions are overflowing with
superior grades of crude, leading to a slump in prices and a gap of as much as
$10 between American oil benchmark prices and the dominant world Brent price.
Even under current restrictions, crude exports are growing quickly. Shipments to
Canada have already roughly tripled since 2012 to around 200,000 barrels a day.
Some analysts say they think that figure will double by the end of the year.
While the entire oil industry has profited from all the domestic production,
which has increased by about 60 percent to eight million barrels a day since
2005, refiners have particularly benefited. American refiners became darlings of
Wall Street by buying cheaper domestic crude and now export 3.4 million barrels
a day of gasoline, diesel and other refined products, mostly to Latin America
and Europe.
Not surprisingly, both the producers and the refiners say they are on the side
of consumers and national security, and each side has academic and consultancy
reports to back up its position.
The producers argue that if they could freely export, they would increase world
oil supplies, forcing down the international Brent benchmark crude price, which
in turn would reduce the price of gasoline at the pump. “The American consumer
is held captive by the restrained market,” said Jack Ekstrom, a vice president
at the Whiting Petroleum Corporation, a major producer in the North Dakota
Bakken shale field. “When you have additional supplies coming on to market, the
price naturally comes down.”
Executives at the refineries, which struggled for decades, counter that adding
another million barrels of United States oil of daily supply to a global market
of 90 million barrels a day will make little difference. Instead, they say,
domestic crude prices will climb higher and with them gasoline prices.
“The export ban works,” Graeme Burnett, chairman of Monroe Energy, which
operates Delta Air Lines’ refinery in Trainer, Pa., told a Senate Energy
Committee hearing last month. “We still have a long way to go to protect against
oil market volatility and achieve true energy independence.”
Refinery executives concede that they cannot argue against free trade when they
are exporting products themselves. Michael C. Jennings, chief executive of the
HollyFrontier Corporation, said in an interview that he could support ending the
oil export ban as long as other regulations that he said penalize the refiners,
including federal mandates for the refining of expensive biofuels, were also
reformed.
Such sweeping energy reforms are not likely to be enacted by Congress soon. But
in their talks with Commerce Department officials and members of Congress,
refiners and producers appear to be closing in on some short-term compromises.
Some executives have suggested that Commerce Department officials could approve
swaps of lighter American crudes to Mexico for their heavier sour crudes without
violating current oil export regulations. That would give the producers another
market and give refiners more oil to process.
There appears to be growing support for recharacterizing condensates, the
hydrocarbon liquids used for petrochemical production, from crude to natural gas
liquids, so they might be exported under current regulations. That would ease
gluts in Rocky Mountain and South Texas fields where drilling has already
slowed.
And perhaps more oil could be sent to countries with free trade agreements with
the United States.
Such compromises, some executives say, could look something like the
arrangements for export of liquefied natural gas from the United States. While
gas producers supported exports and some chemical companies opposed them, the
Obama administration responded by approving export terminals slowly to gauge the
impact on domestic energy prices in the future.
“The middle ground could probably be accomplished without any additional
legislation,” said Stephen H. Brown, a vice president for federal government
affairs at the Tesoro Corporation, a major Texas refiner, “and I think that is
what this administration is probably hoping for.”
Such actions by the Commerce Department, Mr. Sheffield said, could be a “relief
valve that would push off the problem for another two years.”
But after that, he and other executives said, the country will probably again
face a glut of high-quality crudes if current production trends continue.
A version of this article appears in print on February 13, 2014,
on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline:
Conflict in Oil Industry, Awash in Crude.
Conflict in Oil Industry, Awash in Crude,
NYT, 12.2.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/13/business/
energy-environment/an-oil-industry-awash-in-crude-argues-over-exporting.html
The Case for a Higher Minimum Wage
FEB. 8, 2014
The New York Times
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The political posturing over raising the minimum wage
sometimes obscures the huge and growing number of low-wage workers it would
affect. An estimated 27.8 million people would earn more money under the
Democratic proposal to lift the hourly minimum from $7.25 today to $10.10 by
2016. And most of them do not fit the low-wage stereotype of a teenager with a
summer job. Their average age is 35; most work full time; more than one-fourth
are parents; and, on average, they earn half of their families’ total income.
None of that, however, has softened the hearts of opponents, including
congressional Republicans and low-wage employers, notably restaurant owners and
executives.
This is not a new debate. The minimum wage is a battlefield in a larger
political fight between Democrats and Republicans — dating back to the New Deal
legislation that instituted the first minimum wage in 1938 — over government’s
role in the economy, over raw versus regulated capitalism, over corporate power
versus public needs.
But the results of the wage debate are clear. Decades of research, facts and
evidence show that increasing the minimum wage is vital to the economic security
of tens of millions of Americans, and would be good for the weak economy. As
Congress begins its own debate, here are answers to some basic questions about
the need for an increase.
WHAT’S THE POINT OF THE MINIMUM WAGE? Most people think of the
minimum wage as the lowest legal hourly pay. That’s true, but it is really much
more than that. As defined in the name of the law that established it — the Fair
Labor Standards Act of 1938 — the minimum wage is a fundamental labor standard
designed to protect workers, just as child labor laws and overtime pay rules do.
Labor standards, like environmental standards and investor protections, are
essential to a functional economy. Properly set and enforced, these standards
check exploitation, pollution and speculation. In the process, they promote
broad and rising prosperity, as well as public confidence.
The minimum wage is specifically intended to take aim at the inherent imbalance
in power between employers and low-wage workers that can push wages down to
poverty levels. An appropriate wage floor set by Congress effectively
substitutes for the bargaining power that low-wage workers lack. When low-end
wages rise, poverty and inequality are reduced. But that doesn’t mean the
minimum wage is a government program to provide welfare, as critics sometimes
imply in an attempt to link it to unpopular policies. An hourly minimum of
$10.10, for example, as Democrats have proposed, would reduce the number of
people living in poverty by 4.6 million, according to widely accepted research,
without requiring the government to tax, borrow or spend.
IS THERE AN ALTERNATIVE? No. Other programs, including food
stamps, Medicaid and the earned-income tax credit, also increase the meager
resources of low-wage workers, but they do not provide bargaining power to claim
a better wage. In fact, they can drive wages down, because employers who pay
poorly factor the government assistance into their wage scales. This is
especially true of the earned-income tax credit, a taxpayer-provided wage
subsidy that helps lift the income of working families above the poverty line.
Conservatives often call for increases to the E.I.T.C. instead of a higher
minimum wage, saying that a higher minimum acts as an unfair and unwise tax on
low-wage employers. That’s a stretch, especially in light of rising corporate
profits even as pay has dwindled. It also ignores how the tax credit increases
the supply of low-wage labor by encouraging more people to work, holding down
the cost of labor for employers. By one estimate, increasing the tax credit by
10 percent reduces the wages of high-school educated workers by 2 percent.
There are good reasons to expand the tax credit for childless workers, as
President Obama recently proposed. It is a successful antipoverty program and a
capstone in the conservative agenda to emphasize work over welfare. But an
expanded E.I.T.C. is no reason to stint on raising the minimum wage — just the
opposite. A higher minimum wage could help offset the wage-depressing effect of
a bolstered E.I.T.C., and would ensure that both taxpayers and employers do
their part to make work pay.
HOW HIGH SHOULD IT BE? There’s no perfect way to set the
minimum wage, but the most important benchmarks — purchasing power, wage growth
and productivity growth — demonstrate that the current $7.25 an hour is far too
low. They also show that the proposed increase to $10.10 by 2016 is too modest.
The peak year for the minimum wage was 1968, when its purchasing power was
nearly $9.40 in 2013 dollars, as shown in the accompanying chart. Since then,
the erosion caused by inflation has obviously overwhelmed the increases by
Congress. Even a boost to $10.10 an hour by 2016 (also adjusted to 2013 dollars)
would lift the minimum to just above its real value in 1968. So while it is
better than no increase, it is hardly a raise.
The situation is worse when the minimum wage is compared with the average wages
of typical American workers, the ones with production and nonsupervisory jobs in
the private sector. From the mid-1960s to the early 1980s, when one full-time,
full-year minimum wage job could keep a family of two above the poverty line,
the minimum equaled about half of the average wage. Today, it has fallen to
one-third; to restore it to half would require nearly $11 an hour, a better goal
than $10.10.
The problem is that the average wage, recently $20.39 an hour, has also
stagnated over the past several decades, despite higher overall education levels
for typical workers and despite big increases in labor productivity. People are
working harder and churning out more goods and services, but there’s no sign of
that in their paychecks. If the average wage had kept pace with those
productivity gains, it would be about $36 an hour today, and the minimum wage,
at half the average, would be about $18.
That is not to suggest that the hourly minimum wage could be catapulted from
$7.25 to $18. A minimum of $18 would be untenable with the average hovering in
the low $20s. But it does confirm that impersonal market forces are not the
only, or even the primary, reason for widespread wage stagnation. Flawed
policies and changing corporate norms are also to blame, because they have
allowed the benefits of productivity gains to flow increasingly to profits,
shareholder returns and executive pay, instead of workers’ wages.
DOES IT KILL JOBS? The minimum wage is one of the most thoroughly researched
issues in economics. Studies in the last 20 years have been especially
informative, as economists have been able to compare states that raised the wage
above the federal level with those that did not.
The weight of the evidence shows that increases in the minimum wage have lifted
pay without hurting employment, a point that was driven home in a recent letter
to Mr. Obama and congressional leaders, signed by more than 600 economists,
among them Nobel laureates and past presidents of the American Economic
Association.
That economic conclusion dovetails with a recent comprehensive study, which
found that minimum wage increases resulted in “strong earnings effects” — that
is, higher pay — “and no employment effects” — that is, zero job loss.
Evidence, however, does not stop conservatives from making the argument that by
raising the cost of labor, a higher minimum wage will hurt businesses, leading
them to cut jobs and harming the low-wage workers it is intended to help.
Alternatively, they argue it will hurt consumers by pushing up prices
precipitously. Those arguments are simplistic. Research and experience show that
employers do not automatically cope with a higher minimum wage by laying off
workers or not hiring new ones. Instead, they pay up out of savings from reduced
labor turnover, by slower wage increases higher up the scale, modest price
increases or other adjustments.
Which brings the debate over raising the minimum wage full circle. The real
argument against it is political, not economic. Republican opposition will
likely keep any future increase in the minimum wage below a level that would
constitute a firm wage floor, though an increase to $10.10 an hour would help
tens of millions of workers. It also would help the economy by supporting
consumer spending that in turn supports job growth. It is not a cure-all; it is
not bold or innovative. But it is on the legislative agenda, and it deserves to
pass.
A version of this editorial appears in print on February 9, 2014,
on page SR10 of the New York edition with the headline:
The Case for a Higher Minimum Wage.
The Case for a Higher Minimum Wage, NYT,
8.2.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/09/opinion/sunday/
the-case-for-a-higher-minimum-wage.html
The Post Office Banks on the Poor
FEB. 7, 2014
The New York Times
By MEHRSA BARADARAN
ATHENS, Ga. — PEOPLE like to complain about banks popping up
like Starbucks on every corner these days. But in poor neighborhoods, the
phenomenon is quite the opposite: Over the past couple of decades, the banks
have pulled out.
Approximately 88 million people in the United States, or 28 percent of the
population, have no bank account at all, or do have a bank account, but
primarily rely on check-cashing storefronts, payday lenders, title lenders, or
even pawnshops to meet their financial needs. And these lenders charge much more
for their services than traditional banks. The average annual income for an
“unbanked” family is $25,500, and about 10 percent of that income, or $2,412,
goes to fees and interest for gaining access to credit or other financial
services.
But a possible solution has appeared, in the unlikely guise of the United States
Postal Service. The unwieldy institution, which has essentially been self-funded
since 1971, and has maxed out its $15 billion line of credit from the federal
government, is in financial straits itself. But what it does have is
infrastructure, with a post office in most ZIP codes, and a relationship with
residents in every kind of neighborhood, from richest to poorest.
Last week, the office of the U.S.P.S. inspector general released a white paper
noting the “huge market” represented by the population that is underserved by
traditional banks, and proposing that the post office get into the business of
providing financial services to “those whose needs are not being met.” (I wrote
a paper years ago suggesting just such an idea.) Postal banking has a powerful
advocate in Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, who has
publicly supported the plan.
The U.S.P.S. — which already handles money orders for customers — envisions
offering reloadable prepaid debit cards, mobile transactions, domestic and
international money transfers, a Bitcoin exchange, and most significantly, small
loans. It could offer credit at lower rates than fringe lenders do by taking
advantage of economies of scale.
The post office has branches in many low-income neighborhoods that have long
been deserted by commercial banks. And people at every level of society have a
certain familiarity and comfort in the post office that they do not have in more
formal banking institutions — a problem that, as a 2011 study by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation demonstrated, can keep the poor from using even
the banks that are willing to offer them services.
Many will oppose the idea of a governmental agency providing financial services.
Camden R. Fine, chief executive of the Independent Community Bankers of America,
has already called the post office proposal “the worst idea since the Ford
Edsel.” But the federal government already provides interest-free “financial
services” to the largest banks (not to mention the recent bailout funds). And
this is done under an implicit social contract: The state supports and insures
the banking system, and in return, banks are to provide the general population
with access to credit, loans and savings. But in reality, too many are left out.
It wasn’t always this way. In 1910, President William Howard Taft established
the government-backed postal savings system for recent immigrants and the poor.
It lasted until 1967. The government also supported and insured credit unions
and savings-and-loans specifically created to provide credit to low-income
earners.
But by the 1990s, there were essentially two forms of banking:
regulated and insured mainstream banks to serve the needs of the wealthy and
middle class, and a Wild West of unregulated payday lenders and check-cashing
joints that answer the needs of the poor — at a price.
People need credit to increase their financial prospects — that’s the theory
behind government backing of student loans and mortgages. The Latin root of the
word “credit” is credere — to believe. But belief is something that mainstream
lenders lack when it comes to assessing the creditworthiness of the poor. And
yet establishing credit not only allows individual families and communities to
grow wealth, but also allows our economy to do so. Everyone benefits.
There is, of course, a certain irony in the post office, cash-strapped and maxed
out on credit, looking to elbow in on the business of check-cashing and
payday-loan storefronts. And while the U.S.P.S. white paper stresses that its
own offerings, rates and fees would be “more affordable,” a note of alarm is
raised when it highlights the potential bonanza that providing financial
services to the financially underserved could yield, stating that the result
could be “major new revenue for the Postal Service” estimated at $8.9 billion a
year. It’s a plan that could indeed save the post office, which last year
recorded a $1 billion operating loss.
In this potential transaction between an institution and a population that are
both in need, it would be wise to look back a century ago, at the last time a
similar experiment was conducted. In 1913, the chief post office inspector,
Carter Keene, declared that the postal savings system was not meant to yield a
profit: “Its aim is infinitely higher and more important. Its mission is to
encourage thrift and economy among all classes of citizens.” Any benefit to the
post office’s bottom line should not come at the expense of those who can least
afford it.
Mehrsa Baradaran is an assistant professor of law
at the University of Georgia, specializing in banking regulation.
A version of this op-ed appears in print on February 8, 2014,
on page A19 of the New York edition with the headline:
The Post Office Banks on the Poor.
The Post Office Banks on the Poor, NYT,
7.2.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/08/opinion/the-post-office-banks-on-the-poor.html
The Economic Road Ahead
JAN. 31, 2014
The New York Times
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Economists, politicians and investors gave the latest economic
growth report, released on Thursday, a generally warm reception: The estimated
annual growth rate in the fourth quarter of 2013, a decent 3.2 percent, could
bode well for further growth this year. But there are, on balance, more reasons
for caution than for optimism.
Republican intransigence on spending will continue to impede growth. It will not
do as much damage as last year, when budget cuts and the government shutdown
trimmed nearly a percentage point from growth in the fourth quarter alone. But
Republicans’ refusal to renew expired federal unemployment benefits will hurt,
as will their expected opposition to a higher minimum wage and other policies.
Related Coverage
President Obama in Wisconsin Thursday. Mr. Obama said in his State of the Union
speech on Tuesday that 2014 should be a “breakout year” for the economy.
Economic fundamentals remain worrisome. Much of the fourth-quarter growth came
from bolstered consumer spending. But much of that spending was for bigger
outlays on household utilities and groceries, necessary expenditures that are
hardly indications of surging consumer sentiment. Spending on homes and cars,
which does reflect rising demand and confidence, was disappointing. The
residential housing sector contracted in the fourth quarter, for the first time
since 2010, and motor vehicle sales slowed from the third to the fourth quarter.
Whether housing and vehicle sales will recover quickly is an open question. In
the recent past, housing has been strengthened by favorable interest rates and
low home prices; light-truck sales were aided by the related surge in housing
construction. Eventually, however, the health of home and car buying is
inseparable from the health of the job market and the availability of credit —
especially, in the case of homes, for first-time buyers. Good jobs and ample
credit are still hard to come by. Another risk is the possibility that interest
rates will rise in the wake of Federal Reserve efforts to gradually withdraw
stimulus.
The report also does not inspire confidence in business investment, which has
been subpar for some time, to spur the economy. The only bright spot in the
fourth quarter was a jump in spending on equipment, which appears to be tied to
tax-motivated buying at the end of last year.
At bottom, the economy is where it has been before in the recovery that began,
officially, in mid-2009. Aggregate growth numbers look encouraging, but the
drivers of the growth look shaky and, in any event, are still too weak to
translate into more good jobs, higher pay and a better life for most Americans.
Nor is there any guarantee that the benefits of stronger growth, when and if it
materializes, will be broadly shared; to date, what growth there has been has
largely benefited those at the top of the income and wealth ladder, a dynamic
that becomes more entrenched the longer it endures.
Congress could help, with government spending, labor reforms and other policies
to support job creation and higher wages and, by extension, consumption and
investment. But legislative solutions are not in the cards. President Obama’s
recent executive efforts to create jobs and increase pay are positive, but
modest.
Cautious optimism is better than utter despair, but the emphasis still falls on
“cautious.”
A version of this editorial appears in print
on February 1, 2014, on page A22
of the New York edition with the headline:
The Economic Road Ahead.
The Economic Road Ahead, NYT, 31.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/01/opinion/the-economic-road-ahead.html
Revenue and Profit Rise at Google,
but Mobile Is a Persistent Challenge
By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
The New York Times
JAN. 30, 2014
SAN FRANCISCO — There is no denying that Google has become a
mobile company. Now, Google — along with shareholders, industry partners and
advertisers — is trying to figure out what that means.
In mobile advertising, Google is wrestling with how to make as much money on
phones as it has on the ads that appear on desktop computers. Its fourth-quarter
earnings report on Thursday showed that it is continuing to struggle with lower
ad prices on phones. Yet some of the new types of ads it has introduced have
paid off handsomely, as have mobile businesses like the Play store for Android
devices.
But in other areas, like manufacturing smartphones, Google has decided that the
business is better left to someone else. On Wednesday, it announced that it
would sell Motorola Mobility, which it bought less than two years ago for $12.5
billion, to Lenovo for $2.91 billion. Motorola’s $384 million loss in the fourth
quarter contributed to Google’s failure to meet analysts’ earnings expectations
for the quarter.
Google's stock activity over the last three months.
Google executives would prefer that people stop talking about mobile at all.
“People aren’t distinguishing what they’re doing on different screens, so
advertisers should be more agnostic about where they reach the user,” Nikesh
Arora, Google’s chief business officer, said on a conference call with analysts.
“The fundamental tenet is not to speak about mobile, mobile, mobile. It’s really
about living with the users. What device are you on? What’s your question? How
can we assist you? That’s a much broader and richer set of activities for us.”
And while everyone else is still obsessing about smartphones, Google has moved
on to new kinds of devices and even robots. Eyewear with tiny computers called
Google Glass is expected to be sold to consumers this year, and the company
recently bought robotics companies and agreed to acquire Nest Labs, which makes
Internet-connected thermostats and smoke detectors.
“While Apple hasn’t even put out a bigger phone, Google is leading in wearables
with Google Glass. It’s got driverless cars. It’s wiring up homes with
tremendous Internet speed connections,” said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC
Partners. “Something’s got to pay off.”
To shore up their control and acquire new companies, Google’s founders, Larry
Page and Sergey Brin, proposed in 2012 a new class of nonvoting shares.
On Thursday, Google announced that its board had approved the stock deal. Though
some finance experts have doubted whether it would benefit shareholders, the
news contributed to an increase of about 4 percent in Google shares in
after-hours trading.
“It’s a little bit like, ‘This is my company; if you don’t like it, hit the
highway,’ ” Mr. Gillis said.
Shareholders and equity analysts are also trying to figure out how to value
today’s Google. Its stock price rose 25 percent since its last quarterly
earnings announcement, yet Google has performed below analysts’ expectations
more often than not in the last two years, and it did so again in the fourth
quarter.
The company reported fourth-quarter revenue of $16.86 billion, an increase of 17
percent over the year-ago quarter. Net revenue, which excludes payments to the
company’s advertising partners, was $13.55 billion, up from $11.34 billion. Net
income rose 17 percent to $3.38 billion, or $9.90 a share. Excluding the cost of
stock options and the related tax benefits, Google’s profit was $12.01 a share,
up from $10.65 a year ago.
Analysts had expected revenue of $16.75 billion and earnings, excluding the cost
of stock options, of $12.26 a share.
The fourth quarter is generally Google’s strongest because it makes money from
retail advertisers during the holiday shopping season. Last quarter, that was
even more pronounced because of the success of Google’s product listing ads, a
new kind of ad with photos that Google requires retailers to buy to be included
in its shopping listings.
In the fourth quarter, the price advertisers paid each time someone clicked on
one of those ads rose 80 percent from the year before, compared with 11 percent
growth in typical text search ads, according to Adobe, which manages ad spending
for 1,200 advertisers.
Another new type of ad program from Google, called enhanced campaigns, lumps
mobile ads with desktop ones and is expected to help Google’s mobile ad business
grow. Nonetheless, the price advertisers pay when people click on smartphone ads
is still about a third of the price of desktop ads, in part because people make
purchases from mobile ads a quarter as often as they do on computers.
In the fourth quarter, the cost per click on ads declined 2 percent from the
quarter before and 11 percent from the year before, continuing a two-year trend
of declining prices.
Despite Google’s mobile challenges, among web businesses it might be the biggest
beneficiary so far of consumers’ shift to mobile devices. Google services are
the top web property on smartphones, reaching 87 percent of the mobile audience
through apps and mobile browsing, according to comScore. (Facebook is next with
85 percent.)
And Google earned 42 percent of all mobile ad revenue in the United States last
year, significantly more than any other company, according to eMarketer. Its
share of mobile revenue, however, was down from 50 percent the year before and
is not growing as quickly as that of Twitter, Apple and Facebook.
“It’s safe to say they figured out mobile advertising,” said Jordan Rohan, an
analyst at Stifel Nicolaus. “Google’s problem is it’s 50 percent of online
advertising, so it’s hard to grow as fast.”
Google benefited in the quarter from a brisk business in its Play store for
buying things like apps and music on Android devices, and from widely
distributing Google’s services on Android phones, which have a 52 percent market
share in the United States, according to comScore. On YouTube, 40 percent of the
time spent watching videos comes from mobile devices.
In November, Google announced that Nielsen would measure its traffic the way it
does on TV channels, which is expected to help YouTube court advertisers.
“From a longer-term perspective, every piece of advertising becomes digital,”
Mr. Arora said.
A version of this article appears in print on January 31, 2014,
on page B4 of the New York edition with the headline:
Revenue and Profit Rise at Google,
but Mobile Is a Persistent Challenge.
Revenue and Profit Rise at Google, but
Mobile Is a Persistent Challenge,
NYT, 30.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/31/technology/
revenue-and-profit-rise-at-google-but-mobile-struggles-continue.html
Paranoia of the Plutocrats
JAN. 26, 2014
The New York Times
Rising inequality has obvious economic costs: stagnant wages
despite rising productivity, rising debt that makes us more vulnerable to
financial crisis. It also has big social and human costs. There is, for example,
strong evidence that high inequality leads to worse health and higher mortality.
But there’s more. Extreme inequality, it turns out, creates a class of people
who are alarmingly detached from reality — and simultaneously gives these people
great power.
The example many are buzzing about right now is the billionaire investor Tom
Perkins, a founding member of the venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield
& Byers. In a letter to the editor of The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Perkins
lamented public criticism of the “one percent” — and compared such criticism to
Nazi attacks on the Jews, suggesting that we are on the road to another
Kristallnacht.
You may say that this is just one crazy guy and wonder why The Journal would
publish such a thing. But Mr. Perkins isn’t that much of an outlier. He isn’t
even the first finance titan to compare advocates of progressive taxation to
Nazis. Back in 2010 Stephen Schwarzman, the chairman and chief executive of the
Blackstone Group, declared that proposals to eliminate tax loopholes for hedge
fund and private-equity managers were “like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939.”
And there are a number of other plutocrats who manage to keep Hitler out of
their remarks but who nonetheless hold, and loudly express, political and
economic views that combine paranoia and megalomania in equal measure.
I know that sounds strong. But look at all the speeches and opinion pieces by
Wall Streeters accusing President Obama — who has never done anything more than
say the obvious, that some bankers behaved badly — of demonizing and persecuting
the rich. And look at how many of those making these accusations also made the
ludicrously self-centered claim that their hurt feelings (as opposed to things
like household debt and premature fiscal austerity) were the main thing holding
the economy back.
Now, just to be clear, the very rich, and those on Wall Street in particular,
are in fact doing worse under Mr. Obama than they would have if Mitt Romney had
won in 2012. Between the partial rollback of the Bush tax cuts and the tax hike
that partly pays for health reform, tax rates on the 1 percent have gone more or
less back to pre-Reagan levels. Also, financial reformers have won some
surprising victories over the past year, and this is bad news for
wheeler-dealers whose wealth comes largely from exploiting weak regulation. So
you can make the case that the 1 percent have lost some important policy
battles.
But every group finds itself facing criticism, and ends up on the losing side of
policy disputes, somewhere along the way; that’s democracy. The question is what
happens next. Normal people take it in stride; even if they’re angry and bitter
over political setbacks, they don’t cry persecution, compare their critics to
Nazis and insist that the world revolves around their hurt feelings. But the
rich are different from you and me.
And yes, that’s partly because they have more money, and the power that goes
with it. They can and all too often do surround themselves with courtiers who
tell them what they want to hear and never, ever, tell them they’re being
foolish. They’re accustomed to being treated with deference, not just by the
people they hire but by politicians who want their campaign contributions. And
so they are shocked to discover that money can’t buy everything, can’t insulate
them from all adversity.
I also suspect that today’s Masters of the Universe are insecure about the
nature of their success. We’re not talking captains of industry here, men who
make stuff. We are, instead, talking about wheeler-dealers, men who push money
around and get rich by skimming some off the top as it sloshes by. They may
boast that they are job creators, the people who make the economy work, but are
they really adding value? Many of us doubt it — and so, I suspect, do some of
the wealthy themselves, a form of self-doubt that causes them to lash out even
more furiously at their critics.
Anyway, we’ve been here before. It’s impossible to read screeds like those of
Mr. Perkins or Mr. Schwarzman without thinking of F.D.R.’s famous 1936 Madison
Square Garden speech, in which he spoke of the hatred he faced from the forces
of “organized money,” and declared, “I welcome their hatred.”
President Obama has not, unfortunately, done nearly as much as F.D.R. to earn
the hatred of the undeserving rich. But he has done more than many progressives
give him credit for — and like F.D.R., both he and progressives in general
should welcome that hatred, because it’s a sign that they’re doing something
right.
A version of this op-ed appears in print on January 27, 2014,
on page A19 of the New York edition with the headline:
Paranoia of the Plutocrats.
Paranoia of the Plutocrats, NYT, 26.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/27/opinion/krugman-paranoia-of-the-plutocrats.html
Microsoft Earnings Illustrate
Move to Devices and Services
From Software
JAN. 23, 2014
The New York Times
By NICK WINGFIELD
SEATTLE — A picture of the new Microsoft, one transformed from
a software factory into a maker of devices and online services, came into
sharper focus on Thursday.
The old Microsoft had an almost unmatched ability to chug out profits by selling
software on discs to customers. The new Microsoft has an expanding portfolio of
hardware products with decidedly lower margins.
That was clear on Thursday, when the company reported a happy 14 percent
increase in revenue — in large part from brisk holiday sales of its new Xbox
game console and Surface tablets — and a less happy 3 percent rise in profit.
The changing image of Microsoft was greeted positively by investors, who sent
the company’s shares up more than 3 percent in after-hours trading after the
release of its financial results. Microsoft management has been coaching Wall
Street for some time to expect major changes in its business as it refashions
itself to what it calls a devices and services company.
Apple, of course, is emblematic for that type of company. Apple’s success in new
product categories like tablets and mobile phones — and Microsoft’s weakness in
those areas — is a big reason Microsoft has taken the once unthinkable step of
making its own computers and mobile phones, although both crimp profit margins.
The person driving that change at Microsoft has been Steven A. Ballmer, the
chief executive. But if the vision is going to be seen through to the end, it
will be by someone other than Mr. Ballmer, who is stepping down in the coming
months. His successor was not named on Thursday as the search for a new leader
dragged on.
The holidays are an especially strong time for hardware sales, and they offered
a good test of the company’s evolving focus. The new Xbox One turned out to be
one of the most highly sought gifts this year, and Microsoft’s new versions of
the Surface tablet received better reviews than its first tablet offerings.
Those sentiments translated into sales. Microsoft sold 7.4 million Xbox
consoles, including the Xbox One and the older Xbox 360, up from 5.9 million a
year ago. And revenue from the Surface tablet more than doubled to $893 million
from the previous quarter. In the last quarter, which was Microsoft’s second
fiscal quarter and ended Dec. 31, revenue from devices and consumer hardware
rose 68 percent, to $4.73 billion, growing far faster than any other part of the
company.
The company reported net income in the quarter of $6.56 billion, or 78 cents a
share. That was up from $6.38 billion, or 76 cents a share, a year ago.
Microsoft’s revenue jumped 14 percent, to $24.52 billion.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters on average had expected the company to
report earnings of 68 cents a share and revenue of $23.68 billion.
“The real growth you see is hardware,” said Brendan Barnicle, an analyst at
Pacific Crest Securities. “It was the devices and consumer business driving
everything in the quarter.”
That’s the good. The bad, though, is that Microsoft’s gross profit from the
hardware business actually fell to $411 million, compared with $762 million a
year ago, despite the surge in sales. One of the big reasons for the fall is
that profit from new consoles like the Xbox One is almost always nonexistent
when the devices are introduced, but they improve as component prices fall,
manufacturing becomes more efficient and the audience of game buyers expands.
Microsoft’s performance in recent years has been hurt by slowing demand for PCs,
and many consumers moved to mobile devices. Microsoft has tried to adapt to the
rise of mobile devices by redesigning its Windows operating system to work
better on touch devices, though the product hasn’t yet incited a PC buying
spree.
In an interview, Amy E. Hood, Microsoft’s chief financial officer, said the PC
market showed “signs of stabilization” but consumer demand for PCs was still
soft.
Even if the 9 percent gross profit margin that Microsoft earned from its
hardware business gets better, it is a long way from matching the profit of
Microsoft’s commercial segment, the 83 percent gross profit margin business that
encompasses the software and services it sells to corporate customers.
“It’s never going to be at 83 percent gross margins,” Ms. Hood said on a
conference call with analysts. “It’s just a different business.”
Microsoft’s hardware ambitions are only getting bigger, too. The company is
nearing the completion of its $7.2 billion deal to acquire Nokia’s handset
business. Nokia ended the year on a down note, reporting on Thursday that its
smartphone sales declined 7 percent despite major marketing efforts.
Ms. Hood advised analysts and investors to consider the profit of Microsoft’s
overall business, rather than focusing in on one part of it. For all its
challenges, Microsoft’s bottom line remains enviable compared with those of some
more lionized companies, including Amazon.com and Salesforce.com. Microsoft’s
commercial business, which includes databases, Office software for organizations
and cloud computing services, rose 10 percent, to $12.67 billion, more than half
of overall revenue.
Ted Schadler, an analyst at Forrester Research, said Microsoft’s results spoke
to the growing appeal of products like the Surface in which hardware and
software are tightly coupled, rather than Microsoft’s traditional approach of
shipping software to independent hardware makers to put on their devices.
“What those numbers reflect to me is that people want that,” Mr. Schadler said.
A version of this article appears in print on January 24, 2014,
on page B3 of the New York edition with the headline:
Microsoft Earnings Illustrate Move to Devices and Services
From Software.
Microsoft Earnings Illustrate Move to
Devices and Services From Software,
NYT, 23.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/24/technology/
holiday-sales-help-push-profit-up-at-microsoft.html
States Cutting Weeks of Aid to the Jobless
JAN. 21, 2014
The New York Times
By ANNIE LOWREY
RIEGELWOOD, N.C. — After losing her job as a security guard in
June, Alnetta McKnight turned to food stamps and unemployment insurance to
support herself and her 14-year-old son. But her jobless payments ran out after
20 weeks, and now they are living on close to nothing.
“I worked for 26 years; I lost my job through no fault of my own,” Ms. McKnight
said, sitting in her darkened living room — she keeps the lights off to save
money — in this small town about 20 miles from Wilmington, N.C. “This is what I
get?”
Had Ms. McKnight been laid off a year earlier, she almost certainly would have
qualified for more than a year of unemployment insurance payments, helping keep
her family out of penury while she sought another position. But last July, North
Carolina sharply cut its unemployment program, reducing the maximum number of
weeks of benefits to 20 from 73 and reducing the maximum weekly benefit as well.
The rest of the country is now following North Carolina’s lead. A federal
program supplying extra weeks of benefits to the long-term unemployed expired at
the end of 2013, and congressional Democrats failed in an effort to revive it.
About 1.3 million jobless workers received their last payment on Dec. 28.
Starting on Jan. 1, the maximum period of unemployment payments dropped to 26
weeks in most states, down from as much as 73 weeks.
The unemployment rate in North Carolina has plummeted since the state
significantly reduced its unemployment benefits last July. Economists said that
some of the reduction was due to jobless workers’ finding work, but more was due
to workers’ dropping out of the labor force altogether.
With that move, the country’s safety net for jobless workers
has undergone a sudden transformation, from one aimed at providing modest but
sustained protection to workers weathering a tough labor market to one intended
to give relatively short-term aid before spurring workers to accept a job, any
job.
It is still early, but the results in North Carolina suggest that there are both
gains and losses from cutting back on support for the jobless. The state’s
unemployment rate has plummeted to 7.4 percent from 8.8 percent, the sharpest
drop in the country. In part, that is because more jobless workers are
connecting with work. But an even greater number of workers have simply given up
on finding a job.
North Carolina’s move also highlights a sharp political divide that is now
playing out on the national stage. In Washington, Democrats are making an
election-year charge that Republicans are pulling the safety net from under
struggling families at a time when the economy remains weak and is operating far
below its potential.
“North Carolina still has a higher-than-average unemployment rate, so this is
important to this state,” President Obama said last week as he unveiled plans
for a new manufacturing research center in Raleigh. “Folks aren’t looking for a
handout. They’re not looking for special treatment. There are a lot of people
who are sending out résumés every single day, but the job market is still
tough.”
Republicans, in response, say that Democrats have done nothing but make
unemployment and poverty more comfortable, while overseeing scant job growth.
They argue that what they see as overly generous government support only
encourages dependency and that a thinner safety net would actually be more
effective, pointing to North Carolina’s falling jobless rate as prime evidence.
“Employers were telling me they had vacant jobs, but people would say, ‘Hold
that job until my unemployment benefits end.’ ” said Gov. Pat McCrory, a
Republican who is the prime mover behind the policy. “I heard that time and time
again. Now, employers are telling us that people are coming in and filling out
applications to accept jobs, not to meet the requirements of unemployment.”
Nonpartisan economists said it was difficult to definitively show the impact of
the change to the unemployment insurance program on the state’s labor market.
Employment increased from June through November by more than 22,000 people
(reaching a total of over 4.3 million). But for every worker who found a job,
more than two dropped out of the labor force entirely, according to the latest
survey by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which recorded a decline of over
50,000 from June through November.
It is hard to separate the effects of the unemployment cutbacks from overall
changes in the regional and national economy.
“We don’t have enough data to know what is happening for sure,” said Mark
Vitner, who studies the regional economy for Wells Fargo.
He said it was clear, though, that some of the unemployed were prodded back to
work. “If someone had been receiving unemployment benefits for a long enough
time, odds are they exhausted their savings, and they’re probably going to go
ahead and take a job they wouldn’t have been taking previously,” he said.
Nationally, economists expect the economy to respond much as
North Carolina’s has. The unemployment rate, currently at 6.7 percent, is likely
to fall further, both as the number of discouraged workers rises and as more
unemployed workers accept positions. Michael Feroli of JPMorgan Chase has
estimated that the loss of extended benefits might lead to a 0.25 to 0.5
percentage-point drop in the unemployment rate.
But statistics don’t tell the full story. North Carolina still has nearly
350,000 listed as officially unemployed, and many more, including those living
in depressed rural areas, have given up even looking for a job. For them, the
safety net is gone, and largely out of sight, countless families have slipped
deeper into poverty.
That includes Ms. McKnight’s. She still applies for jobs every day, and is
hoping to be retrained as a certified nurse’s assistant. But in the meantime,
she has sold her son’s dirt bike. She has stopped sending money to her mother,
who has cancer, or to her daughter in college. A friend sold a set of decorative
car rims to help her pay her electric bill. She has started visiting a local
food bank for groceries.
“Two interviews so far out of 150 applications,” Ms. McKnight said. “If
unemployment were for a year or a year and a half, that’s enough time to get
established and get a job. Now, it’s over before it starts. That’s not enough
time to find a job in an economy as bad as it is.”
Even conservative proponents of the North Carolina policy said there were
downsides along with the upsides: Many jobless workers are accepting jobs for
far less pay than they made before, and in many communities, there are simply
not enough jobs.
“We anticipated that in more urban areas, and with younger workers, there would
be a bigger impact,” Governor McCrory said, pointing to improvements in the
state’s major cities. By contrast, he said, rural areas might be hardest hit,
and job retraining and economic development initiatives were what those areas
needed.
For now, that is little consolation for those who have lost a critical lifeline.
“Our economies have been deconstructed,” said the Rev. Mac Legerton, the
executive director of the Center for Community Action, a nonprofit in nearby
Lumberton, one of the poorest communities in the state.
“We’re having to build new economies, which takes a significantly long period of
time,” he said. “The assistance from extended unemployment benefits really
provides one of the very few support systems for people who’ve been impacted by
decisions far beyond their control.”
A version of this article appears in print on January 22, 2014,
on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline:
States Cutting Weeks of Aid to the Jobless.
States Cutting Weeks of Aid to the Jobless,
NYT, 21.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/22/business/
states-cutting-weeks-of-aid-to-the-jobless.html
Growth in Jobs
Slows Sharply to 3-Year Low
JAN. 10, 2014
The New York Times
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ
Just when it seemed as if the economy was finally
accelerating, the latest employment figures once again confounded expectations
of better days ahead.
The government said on Friday that employers added jobs at the slowest pace in
three years in December, reversing three months of steadily rising hiring that
had persuaded economists and policy-makers at the Federal Reserve that the labor
market had finally turned the corner.
Wintry weather, however, may have exaggerated the weakness, and the unexpectedly
grim data immediately set off a debate among economists as to whether they were
an anomaly or an indication of a more significant slowdown in the economy.
But even after accounting for factors like cold temperatures and snow that may
have inhibited hiring, many experts cautioned that other trends, like average
hourly earnings and the labor participation rate, were hardly encouraging.
On Capitol Hill, the lackluster economic picture in December
may strengthen the hand of Democrats who are pushing to extend unemployment
benefits to 1.3 million Americans whose coverage expired at the end of the year.
Since midsummer, the job market had been trending upward, with employers adding
241,000 workers in November, a robust performance that helped persuade the Fed
to begin easing its vast stimulus program. But the latest data called into
question whether the central bank’s optimism was premature.
Employers added just 74,000 jobs last month, the Labor Department said, a far
cry from the 200,000 that economists had been looking for, and well below the
monthly average increase of 182,500 over the course of 2012 and 2013.
The one apparent bright spot in Friday’s report — a sharp drop in the
unemployment rate to 6.7 percent from 7 percent — was tarnished because it
largely resulted from people exiting the work force rather than because they
landed jobs. The work force shrank by 347,000 in December, reversing a big gain
from November, and returning the proportion of Americans in the labor force to
its October level of 62.8 percent, the lowest in 35 years.
While some of that decline is because of demographic factors like an aging
population and rising retirements, Ms. Coronado said she was particularly
troubled by how many prime-age workers were dropping out.
Among workers aged 45 to 54, the participation rate dropped 0.4 percentage point
to 79.2 percent, the lowest since 1988. For workers 55 and older, the
participation rate edged down only 0.1 percentage point. “It just keeps dropping
and dropping,” she said. “It’s depressing, as it’s not just older workers
retiring.”
After initially dropping in the wake of the Labor Department report Friday
morning, stocks recovered later in the day as investors shifted their focus away
from the labor market to what they hope will be more buoyant results as
companies report fourth-quarter earnings in the next few weeks.
Some economists, impressed by other recent data showing steadily rising economic
output, private surveys showing healthier payroll gains, a growing manufacturing
sector, and increased exports, suggested that December’s figures represented a
statistical fluke rather than another of the so-called swoons that have been a
recurring feature of the fitful recovery that has followed the Great Recession.
“My advice is to ignore this number,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at
IHS. “A lot of other indicators are showing strength. It was largely noise last
month, and the Fed will see it the same way, unless there is other evidence that
gives them pause.”
Most experts say the Federal Reserve will stick with its plan
to gradually taper its stimulus program when policy-makers meet later this
month, but future reductions could be delayed if payroll gains remain weak in
February and March.
Even as optimists like Mr. Behravesh insisted that December’s data was not a
sign that the recovery was ebbing, they say it makes sense to remain focused on
the labor market. “This is the weak spot in the economy,” he said. “Output has
recovered and is above the prerecession level. But employment is still about two
million below where it was when the recession started.”
Although retailing posted decent gains as the holiday shopping
season reached its peak in December, the figures suggested that other areas of
the economy that had been healthy for most of 2013 reversed course as the year
drew to a close, significantly cutting into overall job creation.
For example, the construction industry lost 16,000 jobs in December, an
about-face from the 2013 average monthly gain of 10,000 jobs. Similarly, health
care employment fell by 6,000, compared with monthly gains of 17,000 in 2013 and
27,000 in 2012. The average workweek in the private sector fell to 34.4 hours, a
drop of a tenth of an hour and another sign of softness in the economy.
Some groups fared better than others, despite the broad weakness in the data.
For example, the number of jobs held by women increased 75,000, even as those
held by men dropped by 1,000. Men were especially hurt by the construction
sector decline, while women benefited more from the growth in retailing. At the
same time, the labor participation rate among workers with some college or more
rose slightly, but was more than offset by a fall in participation among people
with a high school diploma or less.
Economists cautioned that month-to-month volatility in the payrolls report was
common, and the numbers could be revised upward in the future. The Labor
Department revised the number of jobs created in November to 241,000 from
203,000.
And there have been other big month-to-month swings in 2013. After a 172,000
gain in June, payrolls advanced by just 89,000 in July, only to jump by 238,000
in August.
On Wall Street, the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index finished the day up 4.24
points or 0.23 percent, at 1,842.37. The Dow Jones industrial average edged
lower 7.71 points or 0.05 percent, closing at 16,437.05. The Nasdaq composite
index gained 18.47 points or 0.44 percent, ending the week at 4,174.67.
In the market for government bonds, the price of the benchmark 10-year Treasury
note rose 29/32 to 99 2/32, sending its yield down to 2.86 percent from 2.96
percent late Thursday.
Michael Hanson, senior United States economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch,
estimated that even if weather did subtract 75,000 to 100,000 jobs from payroll
gains, December hiring was nevertheless somewhat anemic. Nor does the weather
explain why average hourly earnings increased by only 0.1 percent in December,
about half the average percentage increase for the last 12 months.
“You can’t say it’s the weather, wash your hands and be done with it,” he said.
“Even with a generous interpretation, job growth was softer than it has been
recently.”
A version of this article appears in print on January 11, 2014,
on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline:
Growth in Jobs Slows Sharply To 3-Year Low.
Growth in Jobs Slows Sharply to 3-Year Low,
NYT, 10.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/11/business/
economy/us-economy-added-only-74000-jobs-in-december.html
No Jobs, No Benefits, and Lousy Pay
JAN. 10, 2014
The New York Times
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The Opinion Pages|Editorial
There is nothing good to say about the December employment
report, which showed that only 74,000 jobs were added last month. But dismal as
it was, the report came at an opportune political moment. The new numbers rebut
the Republican arguments that jobless benefits need not be renewed, and that the
current minimum wage is adequate. At the same time, they underscore the need,
only recently raised to the top of the political agenda, to combat poverty and
inequality.
The report showed that average monthly job growth in 2013 was 182,000, basically
unchanged from 2012. Even the decline in the jobless rate last month, from 7
percent in November to 6.7 percent, was a sign of weakness: It mainly reflects a
shrinking labor force — not new hiring — as the share of workers employed or
looking for work fell to the lowest level since 1978. That’s a tragic waste of
human capital. It would be comforting to ascribe the dwindling labor force
mainly to retirements or other long-term changes, but most of the decline is due
to weak job opportunities and weak labor demand since the Great Recession.
One result is that the share of jobless workers who have been unemployed for six
months or longer has remained stubbornly high. In December, it was nearly 38
percent, still higher by far than at any time before the Great Recession, in
records going back to 1948.
And yet, nearly 1.3 million of those long-term unemployed had their federal
jobless benefits abruptly cut off at the end of last year, after Republicans
refused to renew the federal unemployment program in the latest budget deal.
Each week the program is not reinstated, another 72,000 jobless people who
otherwise would have qualified for benefits will find there is no longer a
federal program to turn to. Worse, in the Senate this week, after a show of
willingness to discuss renewing the benefits, Republicans objected to a bill to
do just that. They had demanded that a renewal be paid for, but they didn’t like
how Democrats proposed to do that — with spending cuts at the end of the budget
window in 2024 in exchange for relief today.
There was no need to pay for the benefits, which have such a crucial and
positive effect — on families, the economy and poverty — that it would be sound
to renew them even if the government borrowed to do so. But Republicans would
rather criticize President Obama’s handling of the economy than help those left
behind.
A similar dynamic is developing around the drive for a higher minimum wage. In
the December jobs report, the average hourly wage for most workers was $20.35.
That means that the minimum wage, at $7.25 an hour, is only one-third of the
average, rather than one-half, as was the case historically. Raising the wage to
$10.10 an hour, as Democrats have proposed, would help to restore the historical
relationship. But even that would fall far short of the roughly $17 an hour that
workers at the bottom of the wage scale would be earning if increased labor
productivity were reflected in their pay, rather than in corporate profits,
executive compensation and shareholder returns.
Republicans, however, are opposed to any increase, as if the numbers don’t speak
for themselves. Their stance also dismisses research, and common sense, which
says that raising the wages of low- and moderate-income workers is essential for
lessening both poverty and inequality.
Instead, in the past week, they have introduced ostensibly “antipoverty” ideas,
most prominently Senator Marco Rubio’s plan to transform federal safety net
programs into state block grants, another of the shopworn Republican ideas that
also include privatizing federal services and slashing domestic spending. Block
grants have allowed states to disregard the needs of the least fortunate. The
proposal would set back the debate on wages, poverty and inequality.
The December jobs report is telling Congress what it needs to do. Unfortunately,
that will not lead to action anytime soon.
A version of this editorial appears in print on January 11, 2014,
on page A18 of the New York edition with the headline:
No Jobs, No Benefits, and Lousy Pay.
No Jobs, No Benefits, and Lousy Pay, NYT,
10.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/11/opinion/no-jobs-no-benefits-and-lousy-pay.html
Obama Speaks of Better Days for Economy,
With Asterisk
January 7, 2014
The New York Times
By MICHAEL D. SHEAR
WASHINGTON — Only moments after the Senate advanced an
emergency extension of unemployment insurance benefits on Tuesday, President
Obama stood on an East Room stage full of people without jobs and defied the
traditional logic of White House strategy that normally emphasizes good news
over bad.
The president, who sought to dramatize the need for Congress to extend the
benefits, delivered what amounts to his broader economic message for 2014:
Despite an improving economy, too many people are being left behind. The tableau
demonstrated the challenge for Mr. Obama as he seeks to advertise the financial
recovery while arguing for action to help a still-besieged middle class.
“Our businesses have created more than eight million new jobs since we hit
bottom,” Mr. Obama said while somber-looking unemployed Americans, invited to
the event by the White House, served as his backdrop. “America’s getting
stronger and we’ve made progress.” But the president quickly added that “we’ve
got to do more to make sure that all Americans share in that growth” and warned
that “there are still a lot of people who are struggling.”
A short time before Mr. Obama spoke, the Senate voted to move forward on the
extension of the unemployment benefits, winning the votes of six Republicans to
overcome a filibuster by a vote of 60-37. The bill still faces debate,
negotiation and another vote in the Senate before possibly moving on to the
House.
In opposing the unemployment legislation, some Republican lawmakers found
themselves arguing against their own political story line that Mr. Obama’s
economy was still anemic. Instead, they said that the nation’s financial straits
had improved to the point that an emergency extension of the benefits was no
longer justified.
In 2008, Senator John McCain of Arizona, then the Republican presidential
nominee, tripped over a similar rhetorical challenge when he said at a rally
that “the fundamentals of our economy are strong” but added immediately that
“these are very, very difficult times.”
Mr. Obama, then Mr. McCain’s opponent, seized on the phrase that the American
economy was fundamentally strong and rode it to the White House.
Now it is the president who must find a way to navigate a complex economy. White
House officials say that Mr. Obama intends to focus this year on trying to
narrow the gap between the rich — who have profited from rising incomes,
increasing home values and a 30 percent gain in the stock market — and everyone
else.
To do that, Mr. Obama plans to campaign in 2014 for universal preschool, an
increase in the minimum wage and an administration effort to make college less
expensive for the middle class.
That approach, which White House officials have foreshadowed for weeks, is
rooted in statistics that are at best mixed for Mr. Obama. He is presiding over
an economy that has improved sharply in the five years since 2009, when it was
buckling under the weight of a severe recession, but decades-long shifts in
technology and globalization have left more people out of work for extended
periods than at any other time in the past 50 years.
Like Mr. Obama, President Ronald Reagan also ended his fifth year with
unemployment at 7 percent after a devastating recession. But Mr. Reagan was
sunnier in public as the country’s financial fortunes turned around, and ran for
re-election in 1984 with an advertising campaign that declared “It’s morning
again in America” for a country weary of economic distress. Mr. Obama has chosen
to be more restrained in his enthusiasm.
“There is a reality in politics, as in life, that you have to play the hand you
are dealt,” said Geoff Garin, a veteran Democratic pollster. “The question comes
down to whether you think Americans have a capacity for nuance. President Obama
has always operated on the presumption that they do, and that is the approach he
is taking now in talking about the economy.”
With congressional elections on the horizon and his legacy at stake, Mr. Obama
does at times peddle economic good news like any other president, as he did at a
news conference last month when he said, “I firmly believe that 2014 can be a
breakthrough year for America.” He repeated that line on Tuesday.
But to make the case for his agenda and to convince skeptical Republicans in
Congress, Mr. Obama is also emphasizing how the recovery has fallen short. In a
speech in December that aides described as a preview of the president’s State of
the Union address later this month, Mr. Obama spoke in depth about the economic
problems he still confronts.
“The basic bargain at the heart of our economy has frayed,” Mr. Obama said.
The president’s language is to some degree the latest version of what critics
call the muddled economic message the White House has been delivering for years.
In 2009 and 2010, Mr. Obama and his top economic advisers regularly pointed to
minor improvements in the economy even as they acknowledged the suffering that
many felt. Now that the economic recovery is moving more quickly, the
administration remains cautious about declaring victory.
“We could be an administration that just comes in here and tells you nothing but
the good news that’s happened, or the improvement,” Gene Sperling, the
president’s top economic adviser, said Monday. “But that’s not what we’re
about.”
David Axelrod, who was Mr. Obama’s senior adviser at the beginning of his first
term, said the president had always had to confront what he called a “duality”
in the economy.
“The economy is indisputably much better than it was a few years ago and far
better than it was when he took office,” Mr. Axelrod said. “But there are
structural ramifications that have created this long-term unemployment.”
Mr. Axelrod said it would be wrong for Mr. Obama to try to ignore the economic
struggles of so many people.
“I think to pretend that ‘It’s morning in America’ is a misreading of the times
in which we live,” he added. “The great challenge for us is how do we build an
economy for the future that allows for people who work hard to move up. He
should not run away from that issue. He should own it.”
Stuart Stevens, who was the chief strategist for Mitt Romney’s presidential
campaign in 2012, said that Mr. Obama was trying to have it both ways by
embracing the economy’s improvement even as he focused on people who were not
doing well.
“The message seems to be,” Mr. Stevens said, “the economy is great — send
emergency relief!”
Obama Speaks of Better Days for Economy,
With Asterisk, NYT, 7.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/08/us/politics/obama.html
The Bubble Is Back
January 5, 2014
The New York Times
By PETER J. WALLISON
WASHINGTON — IN November, housing starts were up 23 percent,
and there was cheering all around. But the crowd would quiet down if it realized
that another housing bubble had begun to grow.
Almost everyone understands that the 2007-8 financial crisis was precipitated by
the collapse of a huge housing bubble. The Obama administration’s remedy of
choice was the Dodd-Frank Act. It is the most restrictive financial regulation
since the Great Depression — but it won’t prevent another housing bubble.
Housing bubbles are measured by comparing current prices to a reliable index of
housing prices. Fortunately, we have one. The United States Bureau of Labor
Statistics has been keeping track of the costs of renting a residence since at
least 1983; its index shows a steady rise of about 3 percent a year over this
30-year period. This is as it should be; other things being equal, rentals
should track the inflation rate. Home prices should do the same. If prices rise
much above the rental rate, families theoretically would begin to rent, not buy.
Housing bubbles, then, become visible — and can legitimately be called bubbles —
when housing prices diverge significantly from rents.
In 1997, housing prices began to diverge substantially from rental costs.
Between 1997 and 2002, the average compound rate of growth in housing prices was
6 percent, exceeding the average compound growth rate in rentals of 3.34
percent. This, incidentally, contradicts the widely held idea that the last
housing bubble was caused by the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy. Between 1997
and 2000, the Fed raised interest rates, and they stayed relatively high until
almost 2002 with no apparent effect on the bubble, which continued to maintain
an average compound growth rate of 6 percent until 2007, when it collapsed.
Today, after the financial crisis, the recession and the slow recovery, the
bubble is beginning to grow again. Between 2011 and the third quarter of 2013,
housing prices grew by 5.83 percent, again exceeding the increase in rental
costs, which was 2 percent.
Many commentators will attribute this phenomenon to the Fed’s low interest
rates. Maybe so; maybe not. Recall that the Fed’s monetary policy was blamed for
the earlier bubble’s growth between 1997 and 2002, even though the Fed raised
interest rates during most of that period.
Both this bubble and the last one were caused by the government’s housing
policies, which made it possible for many people to purchase homes with very
little or no money down. In 1992, Congress adopted what were called “affordable
housing” goals for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are huge government-backed
firms that buy mortgages from banks and other lenders. Then, as now, they were
the dominant players in the residential mortgage markets. The goals required
Fannie and Freddie to buy an increasing quota of mortgages made to borrowers who
were at or below the median income where they lived.
Through the 1990s and into the 2000s, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development raised the quotas seven times, so that in the 2000s more than 50
percent of all the mortgages Fannie and Freddie acquired had to be made to home
buyers who were at or below the median income. To make mortgages affordable for
low-income borrowers, Fannie and Freddie reduced the down payments on mortgages
they would acquire. By 1994, Fannie was accepting down payments of 3 percent
and, by 2000, mortgages with zero-down payments. Although these lenient
standards were intended to help low-income and minority borrowers, they couldn’t
be confined to those buyers. Even buyers who could afford down payments of 10 to
20 percent were attracted to mortgages with 3 percent or zero down. By 2006, the
National Association of Realtors reported that 45 percent of first-time buyers
put down no money. The leverage in that case is infinite.
This drove up housing prices. Buying a home became preferable to renting. A low
or nonexistent down payment meant that families could borrow more and still
remain within the monthly payment they could afford, especially if it was
accompanied — as it often was — by an interest-only loan or a 30-year loan that
amortized slowly. In effect, then, borrowing was constrained only by appraisals,
which were ratcheted upward by the exclusive use of comparables in setting
housing values.
Today, the same forces are operating. The Federal Housing Administration is
requiring down payments of just 3.5 percent. Fannie and Freddie are requiring a
mere 5 percent. According to the American Enterprise Institute’s National
Mortgage Risk Index data set for Oct. 2013, about half of those getting
mortgages to buy homes — not to refinance — put 5 percent or less down. When
anyone suggests that down payments should be raised to the once traditional 10
or 20 percent, the outcry in Congress and from brokers and homebuilders is
deafening. They claim that people will not be able to buy homes. What they
really mean is that people won’t be able to buy expensive homes. When down
payments were 10 to 20 percent before 1992, the homeownership rate was a steady
64 percent — slightly below where it is today — and the housing market was not
frothy. People simply bought less expensive homes.
If we expect to prevent the next crisis, we have to prevent the next bubble, and
we will never do that without eliminating leverage where it counts: among home
buyers.
Peter J. Wallison, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise Institute,
was a member of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.
The Bubble Is Back, NYT, 5.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/06/opinion/the-bubble-is-back.html
Fired? Speak No Evil
January 2, 2014
The New York Times
By WILL BLYTHE
I WAS fired the other day. I believe the preferred phrase is
“terminated,” which is how my former employer, Byliner, a digital publishing
company and subscription service in San Francisco, put it. I was informed that
our “burn rate” was too high, that we needed to show investors that we were
serious about reducing it, and that while my loss of a job was unfortunately
going to be a part of that reduction, this had nothing to do with the quality of
my work. Soon thereafter, an email arrived from the company’s founder and chief
executive saying how much he had enjoyed working with me.
Around the same time, a termination agreement pinged into my inbox. Much of it
set forth standard-issue language resolving such matters as date of termination,
the vesting of options, the release of all claims against the company, and the
return of company property. I think I get to keep last year’s Christmas gift of
an iPad, and the previous year’s bottle of wine has long been drunk, but I must
send back any company files in my possession. So far, so good.
What brings me up short is clause No. 12: No Disparagement. “You agree,” it
reads, “that you will never make any negative or disparaging statements (orally
or in writing) about the Company or its stockholders, directors, officers,
employees, products, services or business practices, except as required by law.”
If I don’t agree to this nondisparagement clause, I will not receive my
severance — in this case, the equivalent of two weeks of pay. Two weeks? Must be
hard times out in San Francisco, or otherwise why the dirt parachute — and by
the way, is that the sort of remark I won’t be allowed to make if I sign clause
No. 12?
I would prefer not to, as Bartleby the Scrivener put it so succinctly in Herman
Melville’s classic tale of bureaucratic resistance. When I shared that
inclination with one of my superiors at Byliner, the news traveled up the chain
of command. And I was soon informed that the president wished to assure me that
there is nothing unusual about such clauses, that media people like herself sign
them all the time, and that Byliner might even agree to a mutual
nondisparagement clause. That means that if I don’t say anything mean about the
company, its representatives won’t say anything unkind about me.
You might say, what’s the big deal? Sign the damn thing already! And indeed,
it’s true, as Byliner implied, that nondisparagement clauses prohibiting
individuals from saying or writing anything that might have a negative effect on
a corporation are increasingly common — used in most settlement agreements and
about a quarter of executive employment agreements.
To make the choice of nondisparagement even easier for a prospective signee,
there is no established body of law precisely defining “disparagement.” Several
state laws suggest that for former employees to violate a nondisparagement
contract, their statements must be not only disparaging but also untrue. This
means that it would probably be hard for a company to prove disparagement in the
courts.
So if nondisparagement agreements are downright ordinary and at the same time
difficult to enforce, why not sign and take the severance?
Because as quaint as this may seem, giving up the right to speak and write
freely, even if that means speaking or writing negatively, strikes me as the
unholiest of deals for a writer and an editor to accept. Though such clauses
don’t technically violate the First Amendment — I’d be explicitly agreeing to
forfeit my right to speak freely if I signed clause No. 12 — such a contract has
a paralyzing effect on the dissemination of the truth, with all of truth’s
caustically cleansing powers. To disparage is but one tool in a writer’s kit,
but it’s an essential one. That a company would offer money for my silence,
which is what this boils down to — well, I’ve seen many a mob movie about
exactly that exchange.
The increased prevalence of nondisparagement agreements is part of a corporate
culture of risk management that would have us say nothing if we can’t say
anything nice. And yet it occurs to me that if a company isn’t strong enough to
be reproached, then it simply isn’t strong enough, period.
Mind you, I’m not looking to disparage Byliner. The company has made a few
mistakes in my view (firing me perhaps being a relatively minor one), but what
fledgling enterprise does not screw up from time to time during its shakedown
phase? It’s not that I necessarily want to disparage, but I want the freedom to
do so, to be able to criticize, to attack, to carp, to excoriate, if need be. I
want to tell the truth, even if it isn’t pretty.
That’s why I won’t sign clause No. 12. Byliner can keep the money. I’ll keep my
self-respect.
Will Blythe, former editor at large for Byliner,
is the author of “To Hate Like
This Is to Be Happy Forever.”
Fired? Speak No Evil, NYT, 2.1.2014,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/03/opinion/fired-speak-no-evil.html
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