February 9, 2022
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Workers Still Lack Security Despite Tight Labor Markets

       

According to BLS statistics, the labor market is exceptionally tight, a scenario which has converged over the last six months with what economists are calling the Great Resignation, with a record number of workers quitting in November.  In the popular media, the narrative emerging from this phenomenon is one in which workers are in possession of more power than they have been for quite a while, which has resulted in an increase in wages, especially for the working class.

The power, however, ultimately remains in the hands of bosses, and many workers’ experiences do not neatly coincide with the narrative. The post-Recession jobs recovery under presidents Obama and Trump was more the result of an increase in part-time jobs, gig work, and freelancing in the amorphous and unstable “service economy,” exacerbating a trend from the end of US’s post-War economic boom when corporations, faced with with declining rates of profit, turned to union-busting, subcontracting and a reliance on part-time workers.

According to the New York Times, much of the current situation, with rising wages but no attendant benefits like schedule stability or full-time work, is due to employers having gotten very used to worker flexibility since the Great Recession. They have not changed during the pandemic. Workers may be experiencing short-term gains, especially in rising wages, they are not seeing more long-term ones, like full-time employment and schedule stability.

So, while wages may be going up, employee satisfaction or security remains at a low ebb, and many of the recent labor actions that have received national coverage, such as the grocery chain King Scooper’s strike last month, are centered not over pay but over demands for things like full-time employment. Additionally, with private sector union membership continuing its historic decline, many workers, such as Chipotle workers or those working through the DoorDash delivery app both featured in the Times’s story, lack any bargaining power or in some cases even recognition that they are employees of the company.

Emergency Paid Leave and Sick Days under Fire in New Stimulus Negotiations

December 21, 2020
Leave
As Congress races to finalize a new round of stimulus for the nation, stricken at the moment with the winter surge that epidemiologists predicted, workers are under threat of losing access to paid emergency leave as well as paid sick days. According to the National Partnership for Women & Families, allowing such provisions to expire would be a grave mistake.

Childcare Costs Skyrocket in 2020

December 9, 2020
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Child care has not been affordable for a long time now, especially not for poor and working class parents, but with the pandemic forcing the closure of schools and childcare facilities across the country, costs have shot up even more as parents scramble to figure out what to do with their children as they try to balance work and family.

Special Issue of Harvard Law & Policy Review Focuses on Pregnancy

December 7, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
The Harvard Law & Policy review has recently devoted an issue to the special theme of “The Politics of Pregnancy.” It contains numerous responses to and discussions of myriad political issues of pregnancy in the U.S. and abroad, including increased emphasis on maternal health, abortion access, surrogacy, and state intervention into matters of women’s health, including the effects of incarceration on mothers.

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