https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2021/08/09/job ... -says.html
pretty amazing. this is really welcome news for every worker as it increases your options.
from the boomers dying of covid or retiring for not wanting to die from covid or not wanting to deal with the technology of working from home, to the realization in low wage jobs that those jobs are absolute garbage and no one should have to take that kind of abuse from customers, to the lack of affordable daycare options keeping women out of the workforce, we have people holding out for higher pay. if employers want to fill the jobs, they will have to pay for it. that the worker now has enhanced leverage is strange for many companies, but this is closer to how it should be than the opposite.
ending the unemployment benefits early in about half the states hasn't done what those governors claimed it would do, and the other half is set to expire in less than a month. i doubt we will see much of any change. of course we have yet to see what the eviction moratorium ending will do, but with rental assistance available, most of which has been unclaimed, and with the unemployment benefits from the last year i don't think we are facing the monumental crisis that some people allege we are facing in regards to people losing their homes. still, it's an open question if that will cause people to seek employment.
i think severing unemployment benefits from the need to continue to apply for positions and not turning positions down (like at mcdonalds when they trick you and say that minimum wage starts at 17./hr and then they offer you something at 9 to hang the sword of damacles above you for rejecting it and losing benefits) is the main thing that needs to stay. this will force companies to offer higher wages and no longer be subsidized by the taxpayer. but beyond that, i think we're okay with everything else ending. the moratorium on evictions needs to end we can't just keep punting it. and the enhanced benefits should also end -- but in its place we need to have a federal system not the hodge podge of state systems that try and force people to work for the lowest wage possible, one that does not tie benefits to not rejecting work that is offered but is far more lenient. i'm not saying that they should be on basic for their whole lives with no consequence but i am saying that we need a big rethink on the safety net so that it isn't made to subsidize giant corporations paying the lowest wages possible