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#wages

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Today in Labor History May 15, 1917: The Library Employees’ Union was founded in New York City. It was the first union of public library workers in the United States. One of their main goals was to elevate the low status of women library workers and their miserable salaries. Maud Malone (1873-1951) was a founding member of the union. She was also a militant suffragist and an infamous heckler at presidential campaign speeches.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #MaudMalone #feminism #libraries #union #wages #womensrights #books @bookstadon

The government is likely to establish 1% growth in real wages as its first-ever official target for pay increases — a move that comes as prolonged inflation continues to exert a drag on domestic demand. japantimes.co.jp/business/2025 #business #economy #boj #wages

The Japan Times · Japan to target 1% real wage gains within the next five yearsBy Erica Yokoyama
Continued thread

"In the 1980s, America ranked 53rd in the world in income equality. Today, we rank 128th."

"The top 10% own 69% of the wealth. The bottom 50%? Just 2.6%."

"Since the 1970s: Salaries are up about 15%, but home prices up 500%, Healthcare costs up 500%, childcare up 200%, and college tuition up over 1000%."

"1 in 4 Americans are unemployed, underemployed, or earning less than $25,000 a year."

-- #RoKhanna
rokhannausa.substack.com/p/a-n

They want us to have $35K just sitting there "in case of #emergency"?

I stumbled across this #video arguing that your emergency #fund in 2025 should be at least $35,000. That’s the new “rainy day” number. Not #retirement #savings. Not #investing #capital. Just... existing.
It got me thinking — how can we have skyrocketing living #costs, stagnant #wages, and still be told to squirrel away that much cash “just in case”? Who is this even realistic for?

youtube.com/watch?v=K6815eb_Bj

Today in Labor History May 10, 1887: UMW organizer Ginger Goodwin was born on this date. He was also a socialist and anti-war activist. In 1918, he was murdered by a private cop. His assassination, along with outrage over World War One conscription, inflation, low wages, and censorship of the socialist media, sparked Canada's first General Strike, in Vancouver. Goodwin said that workers of one country should not be employed to kill workers of another country because of capitalist conflict. “War is simply part of the process of Capitalism,” he said. “Big financial interests will reap the victory, no matter how the war ends.”

The Ballad Of Ginger Goodwin

Ginger Goodwin is a name you don't often hear or see.
They don't say a word about him in our country's history.
He was a labour leader and he wouldn't go to war.
"While the army breaks our strikes at home, its strikers I'll fight for."

In Trail back in the summer of 1917.
Ginger fought against conscription even though he was class D.
But when he led a miners' strike to spread the eight hour day
Conscription checked him out again and found he was class A.

Ginger hid from cops and soldiers in the hills near Cumberland.
Miners brought him food and sheltered him, they knew he was their friend.
So the bosses hired special cops when their power was at stake.
Dan Campbell murdered Goodwin at the head of Comox Lake.

The whole damn town of Cumberland turned out for the funeral hike.
Vancouver's workers shut her down for a one day general strike.
Soldiers back from foreign wars then attacked the labour hall.
Both the bosses and the workers knew who caused the Czar's downfall.

You can still see Ginger's grave along the road to Cumberland.
He didn't win no medals and no one understands.
Don't tell me that a hero has to die in foreign lands.
We lost heroes here in labour's wars and they all had dirty hands.

youtu.be/GrwUueuW6rs

Today in Labor History May 5, 1931: The Infamous Battle of Harlan County, Kentucky occurred. Also known as the Battle of Evarts, the strike began in response to wage cuts implemented in February. On May 5, a scab accosted a union worker, resulting in three deaths. Governor Flem Sampson called in the National Guard, which killed several more union miners. The Harlan County class war was the inspiration for Florence Reece's famous union song "Which Side Are You On?" The strike continued for years, with the miners finally winning in 1940.

youtube.com/watch?v=SPFY8CwAKU

Today in Labor History May 5, 2018: Capping several weeks of teacher unrest across the country, public educators in Arizona won raises of 10 to 20 percent. Just prior to this, Oklahoma teachers struck for nine days and won roughly $6,000 in annual increases. And before that, teachers in West Virginia, won a five percent raise after their nearly two-week walkout. However, in almost all of the teacher strikes that occurred that year, the unions negotiated sell-out contracts that gave workers a fraction of what they demanded.

Today in Labor History May 4, 1926: Workers started a General Strike in the U.K. Unions called the strike to force the government to prevent wage reductions for 1.2 million locked-out coal miners. The strike lasted until May 12. Over 1.7 million workers participated. However, the TUC (Trades Union Congress) limited participation to just a few unions because they feared the revolutionary potential of a full blown General Strike. In their newspaper, they wrote: “The General Strike. . . is the road to anarchy.”

The #federal #minimumwage is officially a #poverty wage in #2025
When the minimum wage was created as part of the Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938, the policy was intended to protect the nation from “the evils and dangers resulting from #wages too low to buy the bare necessities of life.” The last time Congress increased the federal minimum wage was in July 2009, meaning that as prices have risen over the last 15 years, the value of the minimum #wage has fallen by 30%.
epi.org/blog/the-federal-minim

Economic Policy InstituteThe federal minimum wage is officially a poverty wage in 2025In 2025, the federal minimum wage is officially a “poverty wage.” The annual earnings of a single adult working full-time, year-round at $7.25 an hour now fall below the poverty threshold of $15,650 (established by the Department of Health and Human Services guidelines). The limitations of how the federal government calculates poverty understate how far…

“It might be well at this point to dispose of an almost universally held fiction. That relationship exists between #wages and #productivity, that wages can increase only to the degree that productivity increases. This view is put forward by economists, by #management, by #government, and by #labor leaders …. The theory has one justification – pegging wage increases to increased productivity (speed up) justifies the contract deals by which labor leaders barter increased discipline over the workers for financial benefits. The alleged relationship between wages and productivity is false in theory and false in fact. Without massive struggles, workers wage increases, tend to fall behind gains in productivity. With massive struggles, wages rise far beyond what productivity gains would indicate.”
— George #Rawick The American Working Class (1973)
#history #union #unions #MayDay #economics