Aug. 10, 2006
EDITORIAL: It’s a Tough Time for American Workers
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A basic problem with the current state of the economy for most Americans is
that their wages are not keeping pace with the rise in their cost of living.
This serious problem is made substantially worse by the fact that the normal
way of dealing with that situation -- changing jobs to get more money -- has
been made more difficult by the fact that jobs are scarcer. As a result,
they are forced to stay with the jobs they have and, instead, cut corners,
riding the economy down, rather than leave the no-raise job and go find a
better one.
It is necessary to add that this is true for virtually all but the richest
Americans, whose income continues to rise, putting them in a position to be
able not to feel the pain of the rising cost of living. They are leaving
ordinary Americans in the dust in terms of their standard of living --
multiple houses, expensive cars, never mind for them the fact that the price
of gas has shot up over the past year. They don't have to worry about the
cost of the commutes that the two- or three-job family faces, some of whom
live far from their places of employment.
One more slap in the face for middle Americans in this category came last
Friday, when the total of new jobs created in July was announced as 113,000,
11,000 less than in June and far under the 150,000 needed for the economy
just to keep pace with the number of new entries into the job market that
month. The unemployment rate also went up to 4.8 percent, the highest it has
been in five months, although even that figure is deceptively low -- not
taking into account the number of people who continue to drop out of the job
market, through despair or lack of interest in finding a job in a hard-times
job market.
Optimists looking for a sign of hope judge that the flagging economy was
what prompted the Federal Reserve not to raise the interest rate another
notch at its meeting Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2006, fearful of causing the economy
to really stall out into a major downturn. No additional raise in the key
interest rate was a marginally helpful measure for people already facing
major credit-card debt or, worse, variable interest mortgages whose rates
have risen, pushing them up against the wall.
By the way, what does a family on a tight budget do when its mortgage
payment and costs for gas and heating soar? What the Bush administration
should be worried about is that the voters in that family vote Democrat in
the November elections, thus taking one or both houses of Congress away from
the Republicans.
What the whole country has to worry about now is that the Bush
administration might take the country deeper into Middle East warfare --
rather than extracting America from it -- to try to scare the American
people out of voting their pocketbook in November, as they would otherwise
normally do in such circumstances.
Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.