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posted by CoolHand on Wednesday April 15 2015, @06:50AM   Printer-friendly
from the suppresion-of-the-proletariat dept.

Analysis of a study (PDF) carried by UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education shows that isn't the poor people won't work but the work they do can't sustain them. As a blog on WaPo puts it:

We often make assumptions about people on public assistance, about the woman in the checkout line with an EBT card, or the family who lives in public housing. [...] We assume, at our most skeptical, that poor people need help above all because they haven't tried to help themselves — they haven't bothered to find work.

The reality, though, is that a tremendous share of people who rely on government programs designed for the poor in fact work — they just don't make enough at it to cover their basic living expenses. According to the UC Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education, 73 percent of people who benefit from major public assistance programs in the U.S. live in a working family where at least one adult earns the household some money.

This picture casts the culprit in a different light: Taxpayers are spending a lot of money subsidizing not people who won't work, but industries that don't pay their workers a living wage. Through these four programs alone [food stamps, Medicaid, the Earned Income Tax Credit, income supports through welfare], federal and state governments spend about $150 billion a year aiding working families, according to the analysis (the authors define people who are working here as those who worked at least 10 hours a week, at least half the year).

The workers relying the most on social programs: Fast Food (52%), Home Care (48%), Child Care (46%) and Part-time college students (25%).

 
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  • (Score: 2) by lentilla on Wednesday April 15 2015, @07:50PM

    by lentilla (1770) on Wednesday April 15 2015, @07:50PM (#171164)

    Ditch the laws that make full-time workers and overtime cost more.

    Perhaps instead it would be better to ditch the laws that make part-time workers cost less.

    As for overtime... as the Anonymous Coward pointed out, the whole reason that overtime exists is to encourage employers that regularly need more staff to hire more staff.

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  • (Score: 1) by albert on Thursday April 16 2015, @04:10AM

    by albert (276) on Thursday April 16 2015, @04:10AM (#171380)

    Perhaps instead it would be better to ditch the laws that make part-time workers cost less.

    No, because the laws that add expenses are pretty messed up. There is no reason why my employer should direct $25000 of my pay to a health insurance company of their choice. I'd rather pick my own health insurance.

    As for overtime... as the Anonymous Coward pointed out, the whole reason that overtime exists is to encourage employers that regularly need more staff to hire more staff.

    Ah, but the actual situation is backwards: the law forces employees who need more hours to get more jobs. These aren't workers who have the luxury of stopping at 40 hours. The work they perform is not valuable enough to support a family with only 40 hours. Wouldn't it be better if they could get those hours at just one employer?

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 16 2015, @06:26AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 16 2015, @06:26AM (#171419)

      These aren't workers who have the luxury of stopping at 40 hours.

      Thats because they're being fucked by their employers, who are refusing to pay anything resembling a living wage. Slavery was supposed to be abolished long ago; it disgusts me to see idiots like yourself cheering for it and fighting to bring it back.

    • (Score: 2) by lentilla on Thursday April 16 2015, @08:19AM

      by lentilla (1770) on Thursday April 16 2015, @08:19AM (#171463)

      because the laws that add expenses are pretty messed up

      Good point. At any rate, I'd be happy if employers found it easy to add more employees when their business expanded. There is already a significant cost involved in getting a new employee up to speed and I'd hate for there to be unnecessary additional barriers to employing more people. After all - isn't more employment a boon for employers, employees and society?

      As for full-time verses part-time: I know that in some countries it is the norm for couples with young children to both work part-time jobs and people seem to be reasonably happy. In the USA, it appears that the primary motivation to have part-time workers is to deny employees the benefits which come from full-time status. Now, not being a US citizen, that just seems bizarre. (And horrid. Oh, so truly horrid.) So, in reference to full-time verses part-time, I'd be happy if employees and employers could agree on an arrangement that suits both and pay (cash and "benefits") on a pro-rata basis. That being said, if existing employees want more work, I thoroughly support them getting a full week's work from the employer in preference to additonal part-time staff being employed for the same job.

      These aren't workers who have the luxury of stopping at 40 hours.

      That's a much bigger problem.

      Overtime should be a mechanism that helps the employer deal with a temporary excess of work. I've mostly worked in salaried positions (you pay me for a "day's work", and I'll work until it's done, or I'm too tired to be effective and we'll start again tomorrow), but there was one job I did where I occasionally did overtime. Every couple of months a 40 foot container needed to be unloaded. Staff were offered overtime. We (the staff) loved it - a fat bonus and all we had to do was unload a truck and go home a few hours later.

      Where I live, overtime generally attracts a stiff penalty: time-and-a-half for the first couple of hours (I can't recall the exact details) and double time after that.

      Wouldn't it be better if they could get those hours at just one employer?

      I take your point. For an individual's situation - then yes, it would certainly be far more convenient. Looking at it from a country's perspective - there are two very relevant points to consider:

      1. if employees can't earn enough at a "full-time job" to support a family, then they aren't being paid enough, and;
      2. people aren't effective much beyond forty hours per week. Fifty hours? OK. Sixty? Only for brief periods. It becomes a quality of life issue which is squarely within a country's responsibility to address.

      Now I'm aware that there will be people who want to earn more (so they want more hours). Fair enough. If they can get the overtime from their existing employer, all power to them. The simple truth however is that there are a limited amount of hours in a day and only so many of them can be spent working. "Forty hours" isn't a number invented out of thin air, it's a number that reasonably represents humans working at their most efficient. "Eight hours' labour, eight hours' recreation, eight hours' rest." [wikipedia.org] might be a catchy slogan but it's not far from the truth. Humans won't function very well if they try to squeeze many more working hours out of a day on a regular basis - no matter how much they need the cash.

      So you are right in both of your points, I probably just have non-US-native's way of looking at it.

      • (Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday April 16 2015, @10:01AM

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday April 16 2015, @10:01AM (#171497) Journal

        if employees can't earn enough at a "full-time job" to support a family, then they aren't being paid enough

        Or they aren't doing enough to justify the pay they want. There's that possibility too.

        people aren't effective much beyond forty hours per week.

        For a particular, very imaginary job. For real jobs, forty hours can be too little or too much. For math researchers, 40 hours a week tends to be too much except for a few, particularly sturdy workhorses. For janitors, they can remain "functional" far beyond forty hours. And various workaholics have shown that 80-100 hours per week can be done by some people for years at a time. Another thing to remember here is that not everyone is equally competent, skilled, and ambitious. A really good worker who does 80 hours a week may not, even with the alleged reduced effectiveness of working that much extra, be replaceable by someone else working that additional 40 hours per week. There is no one-size-fits-all labor policy for this.

        Another thing to note here is that this is a hypothetical "country's perspective". It's not reality. So we don't have, for example, a legal requirement that people are gainfully employed at or above a living wage. We just have the far weaker condition that if those people are employed legally, then their rate of pay and some other conditions are satisfied. It's quite easy, for example, for people to be unemployed or underemployed as reality has shown us. It's also quite easy for people to be employed illegally. If legal employment gets too onerous for the employer, then that becomes a viable alternative - in addition to "off shoring" or automating jobs.

        There's also some costs per employee to consider here. For example, the US "employer mandate" for health insurance creates (in businesses with 50 or more full time people) a per head cost that provides incentives for increasing the number of hours worked per week per person (alternately, the employer could keep full time employment under 50 people, which is the primary concern for worrying that the US will increase part time underemployment). That ends up being, last I calculated at least a minimum $1 per hour cost per additional employee working exactly the current ideal 2000 hours per year. Work them more than 2000 hours in a year and the cost per hour drops (for the alternative, work them less than roughly 1500 hours in a year with no health care benefits so that you business remains under 50 full time employees, and the per hour cost drops to $0 per hour).

        In summary, I see a lot of these policies as being based on delusion. Sure, we'd love everyone to work as little as possible and still get the gains of a technologically advanced society combined with shiny, happy people. But in practice, those policies don't work and create a lot of suffering.