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What Will Become of Worker's Rights Under Trump's Supreme Court? (Original Post) thomhartmann Jul 2018 OP
Right down the Shitter my friends. Wellstone ruled Jul 2018 #1
Fasten your seat belt and affix your crash helmet... magicarpet Jul 2018 #2
Farm animals will probably have more rights than the average American by the time they're through. sandensea Jul 2018 #3
In the Intro, Thom refers to this WaPo analysis article from July 4, 2018 appalachiablue Jul 2018 #4

magicarpet

(14,113 posts)
2. Fasten your seat belt and affix your crash helmet...
Mon Jul 9, 2018, 07:46 PM
Jul 2018

.... this journey is going to suck. Labor rights will be trashed and decimated.

sandensea

(21,595 posts)
3. Farm animals will probably have more rights than the average American by the time they're through.
Mon Jul 9, 2018, 10:10 PM
Jul 2018

Who knows though: Fate (or Bob Mueller) may yet intervene.

appalachiablue

(41,102 posts)
4. In the Intro, Thom refers to this WaPo analysis article from July 4, 2018
Tue Jul 10, 2018, 05:06 AM
Jul 2018

- Is It Great To Be A Worker In The U.S.? Not Compared With The Rest Of The Developed World,- by Andrew Van Dam, Washington Post, July 4, 2018

The U.S. labor market is hot. Unemployment is at 3.8 percent, a level it’s hit only once since the 1960s, and many industries report deep labor shortages. Old theories of what’s wrong with the labor market — such as a lack of people with necessary skills — are dying fast. Earnings are beginning to pick up, and the Federal Reserve envisions a steady regimen of rate hikes. So why does a large subset of workers continue to feel left behind?

We can find some clues in a new 296-page report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a club of advanced and advancing nations that has long been a top source for international economic data and research. Most of the figures are from 2016 or before, but they reflect underlying features of the economies analyzed that continue today.
In particular, the report shows the United States’s unemployed and at-risk workers are getting very little support from the government, and their employed peers are set back by a particularly weak collective-bargaining system.
Those factors have contributed to the United States having a higher level of income inequality and a larger share of low-income residents than almost any other advanced nation. Only Spain and Greece, whose economies have been ravaged by the euro-zone crisis, have more households earning less than half the nation’s median income — an indicator that unusually large numbers of people either are poor or close to being poor.

Joblessness may be low in the United States and employers may be hungry for new hires, but it’s also strikingly easy to lose a job here. An average of 1 in 5 employees lose or leave their jobs each year, and 23.3 percent of workers ages 15 to 64 had been in their job for a year or less in 2016 — higher than all but a handful of countries in the study. If people are moving to better jobs, labor-market churn can be a healthy sign. But decade-old OECD research found an unusually large amount of job turnover in the United States is due to firing and layoffs, and Labor Department figures show the rate of layoffs and firings hasn’t changed significantly since the research was conducted.

The United States and Mexico are the only countries in the entire study that don't require any advance notice for individual firings. The U.S. ranks at the bottom for employee protection even when mass layoffs are taken into consideration as well, despite the 1988 Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act's requirement that employers give notice 60 days before major plant closings or layoffs.
When you lose your job in the United States, it’s harder to find another. Fewer than half of displaced workers find a job within a year, the researchers found. That puts the United States near the bottom of the five countries for which the researchers provided recent data. Japan’s rate was similar to the U.S., but Finland, Australia and Denmark were well ahead..https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2018/07/04/is-it-great-to-be-a-worker-in-the-u-s-not-compared-to-the-rest-of-the-developed-world/?utm_term=.abcae4872532

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