1 / 20

To Improve the Lives of Working Families… Building Power to Transform the Labor Market

To Improve the Lives of Working Families… Building Power to Transform the Labor Market. NAACP National Convention Steven C. Pitts, Ph.D. UC Berkeley Labor Center July 25, 2011. The Economic Situation…. Since June 2009, Black unemployment rates have remained stubbornly high

Télécharger la présentation

To Improve the Lives of Working Families… Building Power to Transform the Labor Market

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. To Improve the Lives of Working Families…Building Power to Transform the Labor Market NAACP National Convention Steven C. Pitts, Ph.D. UC Berkeley Labor Center July 25, 2011

  2. The Economic Situation… • Since June 2009, Black unemployment rates have remained stubbornly high • This jobless distress reflects the continued racial dimension of the labor market and the overall weak labor market • Attempts to solve the today’s Black job crisis must address institutional racism in the labor market and push for full employment fiscal and monetary policies

  3. The Political Situation… • Certain political forces are dead set on radically reducing the role of government in assisting everyday people in achieving their basic needs and a decent living standard • Other forces, due to their pragmatism and/or lack of commitment to defending the basic values that have driven progressive political action for the last century, have acceded ground to the former forces

  4. Recovery?!?!?!?...What Recovery!!!!!

  5. Black Unemployment Rate:16+ • December 2007 • 9.0% • June 2009 • 14.9% • June 2011 • 16.2%

  6. Black Unemployment Rate:16 - 19 • December 2007 • 33.1% • June 2009 • 39.0% • June 2011 • 39.9%

  7. Black Unemployment Rate:Females, 20+ • December 2007 • 6.6% • June 2009 • 11.7% • June 2011 • 13.8%

  8. Black Unemployment Rate:Males, 20+ • December 2007 • 8.2% • June 2009 • 16.3% • June 2011 • 17.0%

  9. The Great Recession: the Job Loss • 8.7 Million Jobs • 6.3% of all jobs in the economy

  10. Overall Employment-Population Rate: 16+ • December 2007 • 62.7% • June 2009 • 59.4% • June 2011 • 58.2%

  11. What is to be done?…some thoughts on solutions

  12. Overview… • The historical problem: persistence institutional racism in the labor market • Policy advocacy without power results in weak policies • The need to build institutions that can transform power dynamics in the labor market

  13. We focus on supporting individuals in the job market (job training; job search) • …but in a labor market shaped by • Institutional racism • Employer dominance over workers • Global economic change • …the individual approach results in declining working conditions for most workers racial discrimination for Blacks and other workers of color

  14. We need to support and build… • Unions • Black worker centers • Workforce development intermediaries (training academies linked to good jobs) • Unemployment committees/councils • Durable progressive coalitions to fight for job access and good jobs

More Related