Sections
Home » New Economy » 4 Quick Ways to Boost Employment

4 Quick Ways to Boost Employment

— tags:

It is encouraging to see the Obama administration return its focus to job creation. The stimulus bill passed last February was an important factor in stopping the steepest economic downturn since the Great Depression. The latest report from the Congressional Budget Office indicates that the ARRA of 2009 may have been responsible for creating as many as 1.6 million jobs, lowering the unemployment rate by as much as a full percentage point.

Mondragon
Mondragón Worker Cooperatives Decide How to Ride Out a Downturn

Nonetheless, the downturn has been markedly worse than was predicted last winter. The unemployment rate is at an unacceptably high level and is now projected to remain high long into the future, remaining in double digits for most of 2010, and not falling below 7.0 percent until late 2012. President Obama has rightly decided that this baseline is unacceptable.

There are four steps that can be taken to reduce the unemployment rate quickly:

  1. Flexible employment credits to allow employers to shorten work hours instead of laying off workers: Each month, employers are laying off close to 2 million workers. If the government gave employers tax credits to shorten work time while leaving pay unchanged, it could reduce these layoffs. If the number of layoffs fell by just 10 percent, this would have the same effect on employment as adding 200,000 jobs a month or 2.5 million a year. Germany has used this mechanism to keep its unemployment rate from rising, even though it has experienced a steeper recession than the United States.

  2. Support for education, health care, and other vital state and local government services: Under budget pressure, state and local governments across the country are cutting these services and laying off workers. Aid from the federal government can allow these workers to keep their jobs and services to continue to be provided.
  3. Direct job creation: There are parts of the country where the unemployment rate now exceeds 25 percent, with youth unemployment well above 40 percent. To prevent a generation of young people from being locked out of the job market, it is important to have public service jobs that can employ people immediately.
  4. Right to rent for homeowners facing foreclosure: If homeowners facing foreclosure had the right to remain in their homes as tenants paying the market rent for a substantial period (5-10 years), it would provide substantial housing security to millions of families while stemming the nation's rising number of foreclosures. This policy could also provide an economic boost since it would free up money for millions of homeowners who are now struggling with mortgage debts that they cannot pay.

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Baker, D. (2009, December 04). 4 Quick Ways to Boost Employment. Retrieved May 22, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/4-quick-ways-to-boost-employment. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


You won’t see any commercial ads in YES!, in print or on this website.
That means, we rely on support from our readers.

||   SUBSCRIBE    ||   GIVE A GIFT   ||   DONATE   ||
Independent. Nonprofit. Subscriber-supported.




Reader Comments

Why the just the right to rent?

Posted by Rebecca at Dec 09, 2009 12:44 PM
I'm sorry. I've heard this idea before. I understand how it might be of some help, but I think given the gravity of the situation that many families are in we would be much better off with a solution more like what Roosevelt did after the housing bubble burst in the Great Depression--helping families refinance their homes so that they were truly affordable, rewriting their mortgages to reflect real market values. This effort was apparently quite successful. In many cities, "market" rents are quite high as a result of property prices driven up by the housing bubble, and also due to demand from families driven out of their homes. Many families would struggle even to pay "market" rents. For long-term financial stability, it seems that it would be a better strategy to help keep people as homeowners, using whatever measures necessary, having the welfare of people and their communities as the priority, and having the chips fall where they may for the banks, who created this mess with their predatory and risky lending. I guess we feel like that kind of solution isn't possible, because we have to punish the people who took those loans in some way--but is this really the solution that YES! should be suggesting? Just sayin'.

People Who Love YES! Find Out Why... Subscribe Today

Personal tools