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Biden is solving America’s labor shortage
Posted on 5/19/22 at 1:03 pm
Posted on 5/19/22 at 1:03 pm
Biden is solving America’s labor shortage — through wealth destruction and looming recession
Biden has backed reckless government spending that led to a supply and demand imbalance, undermined our domestic oil and gas production, which helped drive energy costs higher, and encouraged federal handouts that kept workers on the sidelines. Overall, the president can take a good bit of credit for the runaway inflation that is hurting all Americans.
Now he can take credit for solving one cause of that inflation: the shortage of workers and consequent rising cost of labor. Unhappily, the fix entails more bitter medicine.
First, the Federal Reserve has finally promised to tackle soaring prices by raising interest rates and shrinking its balance sheet. The economy is already slowing and many now anticipate a recession. Sure enough, there are signs that the labor market is cooling. That will help the demand side.
Second, with stock and bond markets plummeting, Americans’ savings are being trashed, requiring some older Americans who thought they could comfortably retire to look for a job. That will pump up supply.
Elsewhere, Uber is getting tougher with employees while Carvana, the online used car dealer, has announced it is laying off 2,500 workers, 12 percent of its staff; competitor Vroom is likewise dumping about 14 percent of its workforce.
It isn’t just tech firms that are retrenching. The recent earnings disappointments from Walmart, Target and other retailers, and those companies’ determination to fight rising costs, suggest layoffs are right around the corner.
Meanwhile, another source of our labor shortage has been the millions of Americans who took early retirement, reversing a decades-long trend towards people delaying leaving the workforce. Between February 2020 and February 2022, some 2.6 million more people retired than expected. Among people aged 65 to 74, the portion employed at the end of 2021 was 7 percentage points below the share working during the final quarter of 2019.
Some of that retirement surge reflected the short-sightedness of companies that gravely overestimated COVID-19’s economic damage and booted older workers to keep costs under control.
The airlines, for instance, which arguably were among the industries worst hit by the pandemic, offered pilots early retirement and are now scrambling to bring them back. A severe shortage of pilots has forced airlines to cancel flights and trim routes.
Now we are witnessing enormous wealth destruction as investors price in an economic downturn. In recent weeks, the market rout has cost Americans tens of trillions of dollars. The Nasdaq is off 33 percent from its high last fall, while the S&P has given up 23 percent from its peak.
Home prices have largely held up, but as mortgages climb past 5 percent, numerous markets are beginning to show signs of softening. In crazy hot Palm Beach County, for example, realtors have posted some price reductions for the first time in years.
People who have left the workforce, comfortable in their ability to fund their retirement, will be taking a hard look not only at their diminished portfolios but also at the devastating impact that rising prices have on their ability to make ends meet. Inflation takes a terrible toll on those trying to live on a fixed income.
Chances are it won’t be long before some older people who had decided they could comfortably retire as their portfolios soared in value reassess their financial situation.
What they will see – their investments decimated by the actions of a reluctant and politicized Federal Reserve, a greedy Democratic Party that spent too much and sent inflation soaring and an incompetent White House – may force them to go back to work. They will not do so happily. LINK
Biden has backed reckless government spending that led to a supply and demand imbalance, undermined our domestic oil and gas production, which helped drive energy costs higher, and encouraged federal handouts that kept workers on the sidelines. Overall, the president can take a good bit of credit for the runaway inflation that is hurting all Americans.
Now he can take credit for solving one cause of that inflation: the shortage of workers and consequent rising cost of labor. Unhappily, the fix entails more bitter medicine.
First, the Federal Reserve has finally promised to tackle soaring prices by raising interest rates and shrinking its balance sheet. The economy is already slowing and many now anticipate a recession. Sure enough, there are signs that the labor market is cooling. That will help the demand side.
Second, with stock and bond markets plummeting, Americans’ savings are being trashed, requiring some older Americans who thought they could comfortably retire to look for a job. That will pump up supply.
Elsewhere, Uber is getting tougher with employees while Carvana, the online used car dealer, has announced it is laying off 2,500 workers, 12 percent of its staff; competitor Vroom is likewise dumping about 14 percent of its workforce.
It isn’t just tech firms that are retrenching. The recent earnings disappointments from Walmart, Target and other retailers, and those companies’ determination to fight rising costs, suggest layoffs are right around the corner.
Meanwhile, another source of our labor shortage has been the millions of Americans who took early retirement, reversing a decades-long trend towards people delaying leaving the workforce. Between February 2020 and February 2022, some 2.6 million more people retired than expected. Among people aged 65 to 74, the portion employed at the end of 2021 was 7 percentage points below the share working during the final quarter of 2019.
Some of that retirement surge reflected the short-sightedness of companies that gravely overestimated COVID-19’s economic damage and booted older workers to keep costs under control.
The airlines, for instance, which arguably were among the industries worst hit by the pandemic, offered pilots early retirement and are now scrambling to bring them back. A severe shortage of pilots has forced airlines to cancel flights and trim routes.
Now we are witnessing enormous wealth destruction as investors price in an economic downturn. In recent weeks, the market rout has cost Americans tens of trillions of dollars. The Nasdaq is off 33 percent from its high last fall, while the S&P has given up 23 percent from its peak.
Home prices have largely held up, but as mortgages climb past 5 percent, numerous markets are beginning to show signs of softening. In crazy hot Palm Beach County, for example, realtors have posted some price reductions for the first time in years.
People who have left the workforce, comfortable in their ability to fund their retirement, will be taking a hard look not only at their diminished portfolios but also at the devastating impact that rising prices have on their ability to make ends meet. Inflation takes a terrible toll on those trying to live on a fixed income.
Chances are it won’t be long before some older people who had decided they could comfortably retire as their portfolios soared in value reassess their financial situation.
What they will see – their investments decimated by the actions of a reluctant and politicized Federal Reserve, a greedy Democratic Party that spent too much and sent inflation soaring and an incompetent White House – may force them to go back to work. They will not do so happily. LINK
Posted on 5/19/22 at 1:47 pm to Jbird
Joe Biden can’t wipe his own arse
Posted on 5/19/22 at 2:35 pm to Jbird
We rather hurt financially than have mean tweets.
Posted on 5/19/22 at 2:40 pm to Nicky Parrish
quote:
Joe Biden can’t wipe his own arse
I disagree. I have information he still uses his hand and wipes it on the White House walls. Like they do in 3rd world middle east countries.
Posted on 5/19/22 at 2:45 pm to Jbird
It's all being done in the name of equity....
Posted on 5/19/22 at 2:48 pm to Bass Tiger
quote:
It's all being done in the name of equity...
Look, I don't know if equity is the goal, but if Ukraine can vote in a tv actor as president, they obviously aren't hungry yet. Nothing says decadence like some fruit playing piano with his dick.
Posted on 5/19/22 at 2:55 pm to Jbird
Welcome to the Great Joecession
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