Labor Day

Guest Post by Paul Craig Roberts

Labor Day—what is it? Perhaps not many Americans any longer know, so here is my explanation.

In my time Labor Day was the unofficial end of summer, because school began after Labor Day.

Today school begins almost a month before. When I was in school that would not have been possible, especially in the South. The schools were not air-conditioned. If school had started in August no one would have showed up. It was difficult enough getting through May before school was out in June.

As most Americans probably thought of Labor Day as the last summer holiday, now that Labor Day has lost that role, what is Labor Day? The holiday originated as an apology capitalists tossed to labor to defuse a standoff.

Workers understood that labor was the backbone of the economy, not Wall Street moguls or bankers in their fine offices. Workers wanted a holiday that recognized labor, thus elevating labor in public policy to a standing with capital. Some states created labor day holidays, but it wasn’t until 1894 that Labor Day was made a federal holiday.

Congress created the federal holiday in response to the murder of strikers by US Army troops and federal marshalls during the Pullman strike of 1894. The factory workers who built Pullman railway cars lived in the company town of Pullman. George Pullman provoked a strike by lowering wages but not the rents charged in the company town.

President Grover Cleveland relied on Attorney General Richard Olney to restore capitalist control. Olney, a former railway attorney, sent in the federal violance to break up the strike. Olney still received a retainer from his railway company that was larger than his salary as US Attorney General. So we know whose side he was on. The presstitute media portrayed the beaten down strikers as unpatriotic foreigners, and the strike leader, Eugene Debs, was sentenced to federal prison. The experience radicalized Debs and turned him into a socialist.

The obvious injustice created more sympathy for labor than capitalists could stomach, so Congress defused the situation by creating Labor Day. President Cleveland washed his hands of the blood on them by signing the legislation.

Officially what we are celebrating on the first Monday of September is American labor, but what is really being celebrated is the success of capitalists again flummoxing the people and avoiding a real social revolution.

The labor movement, which gave us Labor Day, is no longer with us. The American labor movement died about ten years after the death of its most famous leader, George Meany of the AFL-CIO. Meany, born in 1894, died in 1980.

I remember when labor was at the center of politics and policy. There was even a field of economics called “labor economics.” The political influence of labor ended with the offshoring of US industrial and manufacturing jobs. For years US capitalists tried to avoid a fair shake for labor by locating their facilities in Southern states that had right to work laws. But with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the change in attitude of India and China toward foreign capital, capitalists learned that they could increase profits by using foreign labor offshore to produce the goods and services that they sold to Americans. The difference in labor costs flowed directly into profits, executive bonuses, and shareholder capital gains.

Free market economists, who live in a make-believe world, pretend that the lower labor costs flow into lower US consumer prices and that consumers beneift despite the loss of well-paying jobs. The problem with free market economics is that a priori reasoning takes precedence over empirical fact. For free market economists, the way the world should be prevails over the way that the world actually is.

As a consequence of jobs offshoring, industrial and manufacturing cities became semi-ghost towns with declining populations. Municipal and state governments, deprived of tax base, found themselves under duress to make pension payments. To avoid immediate bankruptcy, cities such as Chicago sold off public assets such as 75 years of parking meter revenues for a one time payment.

The Democratic Party, which had been the countervailing power against the Republican business party, was deprived of union funding as the jobs that paid union dues were no longer in America. By moving production offshore, capitalists turned the Democrats into a second capitalist political party dependent on funding from the business sector.

Today we have one party with two heads. The competition between the parties is about which party gets to be the whore for the capitalists for the next political term. As Democrats and Republicans swap the whore function back and forth, neither party has an incentive to do anything different.

The offshoring of high productivity, high value-added US jobs has destroyed the labor movement. How much luck will labor leaders have organizing people who hold part-time jobs as waitresses, bartenders, hospital orderlies, and retail clerks? As I have pointed out for years in
my reports on the monthly payroll jobs reports, the United States now has the labor profile of a Third World country. The absence of jobs that can support an independent existence and family life is the reason that more Americans aged 24-34 live at home with parents than live independently. The absence of jobs is the reason the labor force participation rate has declined for years. The absence of jobs that pay sufficiently to provide discretionary income is the reason the economy cannot grow.

Looking at last Friday’s BLS payroll report, the jobs are in the lowly paid, part-time service sector. The goods producing sector of the economy lost 24,000 jobs. The jobs are in retail trade, health care and social assistance, waitresses and bartenders, and government which is tax supported employment.

Whether Washington policymakers realize it or not, the American work force smells like India’s of a half centruy ago. Whatever deranged Hillary and her neoconservatives claim, there is no evidence in the compositon of the US labor force that the US is a superpower. Indeed, what the employment statistics show is that the United States is a third world country, a country whose leaders are so out of their minds that they are picking fights with first world countries—Russia and China.

The United States of America is on its last legs. As there is no willingness to recognize this, nothing can be done about it. America’s last function is to cause World War 3 in which all of us will expire.


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8 Comments
Llpoh
Llpoh
September 5, 2016 9:29 am

PCR says: “As a consequence of jobs offshoring, industrial and manufacturing cities became semi-ghost towns”.

What a load of shit. When did Detroit fold? Way before offshoring.

Offshoring brought forward a lot of job losses. But the real reason the jobs were lost was automation.

In the fifties, half the working population or thereabouts worked in manufacturing. Today that would mean 80 million equivalent. What, around 13 million or some such work in mfg today. Offshoring accounts for 4 million list jobs, more or less. That means 63 million manufacturing jobs were lost through automation. And that number will climb further.

PCR is an idiot.

randy
randy
  Llpoh
September 5, 2016 11:08 am

As usual ll, you’re dead wrong…As the author stated, the first round of “off-shoring” was to move manufacturing to “right to work” states…Yes, technology has resulted in job loss, but not just in automation, but in banking, transportation, and trade deals.

Again, as stated, the productivity improvement made by technological advancement, and lower labour costs went into managements pockets, and investments in politicians, who in turn, reduced regulations and trade barriers.

So now, there are no shoes made in America, no televisions made in America, no cell phones or computers made in America, etc. Now 6 corporations own the vast majority of media. A handful of companies control all the meat production. And banking is controlled, again, by essentially 4 companies…

This concentration of ownership has produced companies that privatize profits, and socialize debt. This has created the circumstance of “too big to fail”…

And has taken down not only organized labour, and the middle class, but has given the top one percent total control over government…

Give your head a shake, and think outside the narrow box you’ve been programmed to accept. Sheesh…

Llpoh
Llpoh
  randy
September 5, 2016 5:28 pm

Randy – you moron. I have forgotten more about manufacturing than you will ever know.

Half of all employees used to be in manufacturing. Get it? Half! Those jobs did not go overseas, or o the south. Those fucking jobs entirely disappeared. Gone forever.

Those jobs disappeared because of steady, year on year productivity improvements. Each year, around 2.5% less people are required to do the same amount of work. And that is a compounding number, just like with interest.

Year after year after year – 2.5% less workers to do the same amount of work.

So, you moron, take 50%, and multiply it by .975 65 times, and see what number you get.

Here is a clue – it will be half of fuck all.

Sure, some jobs moved overseas. It just delayed the loss of jobs that would have happened because of automation by around 8 years.

Manufacturing is self-eliminating. It self-eliminated because it got so damn efficient, and will continue to do so.

Seriously, you are dumb as a bag of rocks. Just what is it you do? I suspect ou must be a goddamn teacher or govt drone, because you are too stupid to make a living in private business.

You morons who down-voted me are clueless motherfuckers. Seriously. You are too damn stupid to see fact when it hits you in the face, because you are self-deluded that the manufacturing jobs are able to come back.

They can’t come back. They did not go overseas, except for 4 million of them. They disappeared under the relentless pressure of productivity.

And the 4 million that did go would have eroded down by a million or more under that same relentless productivity gains, even if they had not been shipped overseas.

Seriously, you morons need to get a fucking clue.

Spend a goddamn lifetime studying manufacturing, running late and small manufacturing business, like I have, and get back to me.

Fucking morons.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  randy
September 5, 2016 7:31 pm

Randy the moron says “So now, there are no shoes made in America, no televisions made in America, no cell phones or computers made in America, etc”.

Just what do all of those products have in common, hmmmm? They are consumer products. And why are they no longer manufactured in the US? Gee, was it because consumers want cheap cheap cheap shit, and are not prepared to pay a few percent more for US made? Bingo – that is it.

Let me give an example. The US sells around 16 million cars per year. Let’s say half are imported. Let’s further say that magically, no more imports are to be allowed. So, how many car manufacturing jobs would magically come back to the US? (Let’s ingnore US car exports in this).

Well, it takes 20 hours to make a car. Yep, you read that right – 20 hours. Let’s say there are another 20 hours in supplier parts, and let’s say there are 20 hours in miscellaneous work. So, we get 60 hours per car by 8 million cars = 480 million work hours = roughly 240,000 jobs.

Well, folks, 240,000 jobs = around 0.15% of US employees. Not 1.5% but 0.15%.

Get it yet? Even if all cars sold in the US were made in the US, it would be a tiny blip on total employment. Even if my figures are off by a factor of three, it is still just a blip.

Manufacturing simply no longer takes masses of people.

Let’s take another example. Say we bring back $1 trillion of manufacturing magically from overseas. Say that that has 15% labor in it = $150 billion of labour. How many jobs us that? Umm, that is 3. Million. Or 2% of the workforce. Bringing total manufacturing workforce to say 15 million

A bit more than a blip, but not much more, given the real unemployment rate is over 20%.

And then, remember, automation is going to cut 2.5 percent, or around 400,000 jobs out of the 15 million, every year, year after year after year.

Within 10 years, after bring back all manufacturing, manufacturing workers will number less than before the work was brought back.

And that does not include the impact of falling quality, which will happen in a closed system. Nor does it include the impact of other nations not buying US products due to a trade war. And do not kid yourself – the US exports massive amounts of manufactured goods – just not cheap consumer goods.

You folks wanting the return of offshored manufacturing need to understand – even if it happened in its entirety, it would be insignificant relative to the issues, and would be eaten up by automation very rapidly.

Manufacturing is a mature field, and there is no future in it with respect to employment. It is the modern equivalent of agriculture. Workers are not needed in manufacturing in large numbers by percent.

Plus, here is one more little detail – who is going to invest capital to create the facilities for the jobs? Margins on manufacturing capital are low. I know I am not going to build a factory for that magically returning work. And neither is anyone reading this.

It is not going to happen.
And it did not happen as PCR said. Jobs went because of automation, 15:1 more than to offshoring.

Maggie
Maggie
  Llpoh
September 6, 2016 6:16 am

I believe you.
But people need to be productive to have a sense of self worth. I am not blathering about self esteem either.

Idle hands do the Devil’s work.

M.I.A.
M.I.A.
  Llpoh
September 5, 2016 2:36 pm

Lloph is right – Fascinating Video Of Modern Crankshaft Machining at Mercedes . Totally Automated Automotive Manufacturing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jaWDSiSjzk

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
September 5, 2016 11:41 am

Excellent article!!

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again for the newbies to this site……

There is no such thing as “Free Trade”.
You have to give up something to get something – and you gave up your high paying, stable manufacturing jobs to another country, so that the corporations could offshore your job to that country, allowing the corporations to reduce their cost of labor, (their largest expense) all the while, the corporations get to seamlessly bypass any import/export tariffs at the borders, which you personally don’t get to participate in.
For that privilege you get to buy “junk” at a reduced price, that won’t last as long as “American Made”
That sounds like a fair deal… right? Happy Labor Day..

prusmc
prusmc
September 5, 2016 2:39 pm

Like in the Jim Quinn post, the real prosperity is in government employment : federal, state, local, county, city, town or authorities such as rapid transit or port authorities. That is where Unionism is strong, protected, encouraged,and well rewarded. No need for profit or bottom line concerns. The well will never go dry. Only a matter of time before the newly arrived and vibrant workforce move in and dominate this venue. Far better, than scrapping for low level service/productive position in private sector ( or what is left of it).