Letter in National Post, August 8, 2018
Re: Expect job market moderation in the months ahead, internal memo tells Morneau, Andy Blatchford, Aug 1, 2018
Today's unemployment rate of 5.8% may be a a four-decade low, but a higher unemployment rate coincides with the rise of neo-liberalism in the 1980s. Unemployment after WWII until the mid-1950s averaged less than 3%, and had dropped to 1.4% during WWII itself. However, business and financial elites are happy to erase history, and to normalize higher rates because for them a slightly recessed economy delivers numerous benefits.
Higher unemployment means less pressure on wages that reduce the profit share. It also means less inflation that erodes accumulated wealth. And if the workforce is induced to borrow to maintain lifestyles, not only is another stream of financial income created, but the debt burden keeps workers even more obedient, fearful of losing their jobs.
Through its fiscal and monetary settings, the federal government always chooses the level of unemployment. Unfortunately the current choices benefit those at the top and sacrifice those at the bottom.
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