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Changes in Life Expectancy and Social Security’s Full Retirement AgeMarch 7, 2016
CEPR and / March 07, 2016
Article Artículo
Labor Market Reentrance in a Not-Yet-Healthy EconomyEarlier this morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its February jobs report. The February data are being well-received, with CEPR and other outlets highlighting the fact that workers finally seem to be moving back into the labor force.
One easy way to see this is by looking at the share of unemployed workers classified as “reentrants to the labor market.” Reentrants are people who have held a job at some point in the past and recently began searching for work after a period of non-employment.
CEPR and / March 04, 2016
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Rubio Sweeps to Victory – in ArgentinaRumor has it that Senator Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign is set to name hedge fund manager Paul Singer as its national finance chairman. The potential move may represent a belated attempt by the Republican establishment to rally behind Rubio in order to derail Donald Trump’s presidential bid, as Politico’s Mike Allen has suggested. It also draws the Florida senator ever closer to his second largest financial backer – who has incidentally just emerged victorious from a decade-long campaign to extract an exorbitant return from Argentina after its financial crisis of 2001.
Almost three years after Argentina defied a New York court ruling that would have forced the country to choose between default and certain bankruptcy, Argentine President Mauricio Macri reached a settlement on Monday with a small group of holdout creditors led by Singer’s Elliott Management. The deal still needs to be approved by the Argentine National Congress, which is set to vote on repealing two laws that currently prevent the country from paying these vulture funds.
CEPR and / March 04, 2016
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Monthly Net Changes in Construction, Restaurant, and Temporary Employment from 2010 to 2016March 4, 2016
CEPR / March 04, 2016
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Weather Slows Job Growth in February, Unemployment Stays Flat at 4.9 PercentMarch 4, 2016 (Jobs Byte)
CEPR / March 04, 2016
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New Entrants to Labor Market Push EPOP to New High for RecoveryDean Baker / March 04, 2016
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The Black-White Unemployment Gap Isn’t Really About EducationIn 2015, the unemployment rate for black Americans aged 25 and older was 7.8 percent. For white Americans, it was just 3.8 percent. This large gap in unemployment rates persists even when controlling for educational attainment.
Figure 1 shows the average 2015 unemployment rates by race and educational attainment. The black unemployment rate is considerably higher than the white rate within each educational group.
CEPR and / March 03, 2016
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Should Poor Workers Receive Less Social Security Because Rich Workers Are Living Longer?During the 2016 campaign, a number of presidential candidates have proposed raising the retirement age to 70. Others want to raise the retirement age a bit less, and some don’t favor raising it at all.
When candidates talk about “raising the retirement age,” what they are referring to is the Social Security Full Retirement Age (SSFRA). This is the age at which retirees can begin receiving full Social Security benefits. Starting at age 62, retirees can receive partial benefits.
From 1937 through 2002, the SSFRA was 65. Based on a law from 1983, the SSFRA was gradually raised to 66 by 2009 and will be raised to 67 by 2027. While the age for receiving partial benefits wasn’t lifted, the amount of benefits was reduced. Figure 1 below shows how the SSFRA has and will increase according to current law.
CEPR and / March 03, 2016
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European Authorities’ Failed Economic Policies Hit Resistance in SpainMark Weisbrot / March 02, 2016
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Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton und das GeldDean Baker
annotazioni.de, 2 März 2016
CEPR / March 02, 2016
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Effects of Rising Wage Inequality Swamp Higher Social Security TaxesA little over a week ago, CEPR released a blog post looking at the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) projections for wage growth over the next decade. Based on the data presented in their 2016 Budget and Economic Outlook, CBO expects wage inequality to rise substantially over the next decade.
It is striking that this projection of a continuing rise in inequality has gotten so little attention. By contrast, the media constantly talk about the projected shortfalls in the Social Security Trust Fund, making the point that if the projections prove correct then in 2034 we will either have to cut benefits or raise taxes.
Dean Baker and / March 01, 2016
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Testimony to the Secure Choice Retirement Savings Investment BoardFebruary 2016, Dean Baker
CEPR / March 01, 2016
report informe
Publicly Funded Clinical Trials: A Route to Sustained Innovation with Affordable DrugsDean Baker / March 01, 2016
Article Artículo
We Poisoned Kids in Flint to Keep Their Parents from Having JobsDean Baker
Truthout, February 29, 2016
Dean Baker / February 29, 2016
Article Artículo
The Rise of Donald TrumpDean Baker
The Hankyoreh, February 29, 2016
Dean Baker / February 29, 2016
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The Fact Checker’s Judgment on Clinton’s Claim That Republicans Want to Turn Social Security Over to Wall StreetGlenn Kessler, the Washington Post’s Fact Checker, gave former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton three Pinocchios for saying that the Republicans wanted to turn Social Security money over to Wall Street. I am afraid that I see this one a bit differently.
First, as a small point, the piece comments:
“We have explained before that “privatization” is one of those pejorative political labels used by opponents of the Bush plan…”
That’s not how I remember the story. In the 1990s many conservatives openly talked about their plans to “privatize” Social Security. At some point, they apparently ran focus groups and discovered that the term “privatization” did not poll well. At that point, they switched directions and starting talking about “personal accounts,” rather than privatizing Social Security. While the advocates of a policy certainly have the right to assign whatever name they like to the policy, it seems a bit extreme to criticize its opponents for using the term that advocates themselves had used in the recent past.
The piece then notes that President Clinton had openly advocated investing Social Security money in a stock index fund, therefore:
“One could certainly say that the first president who wanted to ‘give the Social Security trust fund to Wall Street’ was Bill Clinton.”
It is worth making an important distinction between the possible meanings of turning Social Security over to Wall Street. On the one hand, there is the possibility of directly investing some of the trust fund in the stock market. On the other hand, there are proposals to turn over the administration of individuals' Social Security to private financial firms. These routes have very different meanings and implications.
Dean Baker / February 29, 2016