Anno X - Numero 39
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Eugenio Montale

giovedì 26 marzo 2020

If the UK Can Protect Workers From Covid-19 Layoffs, Why Not the US?

House members Rosa DeLauro and Mark Pocan have a plan to keep Americans working

di John Nichols

The British government announced Friday that it would launch an ambitious initiative to prevent mass layoffs amid the coronavirus outbreak. The plan will provide grants to cover up to 80 percent of the salaries of millions of workers whose jobs are now threatened. In return, employers will keep them on payroll during the economic crisis that is only beginning to unfold.

“We are starting a great national effort to protect jobs,” declared the chancellor of the Exchequer, Conservative politician Rishi Sunak, when he announced the part of the British response that seeks to avoid nothing less than a depression.

“We want to look back on this time and remember how, in the face of a generation-defining moment, we undertook a collective national effort—and stood together,” he tweeted. “It’s on all of us.”
The British initiative won’t save every job or ease all the pain, but it is an example of how to go big to fight layoffs and save small businesses—and some congressional progressives are taking it to heart.

As House Democrats and Senate Republicans spar over how aggressively to respond, the example set by the UK’s Conservative-led government reminds us how miserably uninspired and insufficient the US response to layoffs has been so far.

“[Sunak] said there would be no limit on the funding available to pay people’s wages,” The Guardian reported. “The payments will be backdated to the start of March, will be up and running within weeks, open initially for at least three months, and could be extended if necessary.”


Describing the program in epic terms—“unprecedented measures for unprecedented times”—the chancellor said, “I know that people are worried about losing their jobs, about not being able to pay the rent or mortgage, about not having enough set by for food and bills…. to all those at home right now, anxious about the days ahead, I say this: you will not face this alone.”

He also pleaded with companies that are on the brink of collapse to avoid shutting down. “The government is doing its best to stand behind you. And I’m asking you to do your best to stand behind our workers.”

There’s good reason to believe the plan could succeed.

Work-sharing initiatives are not a new idea in Europe. Germany has long experience with them. In the aftermath of the 2008 financial meltdown, a New York Times headline from August 2010 read, “Defying Others, Germany Finds Economic Success.” Reporting strong economic growth when other countries were struggling, the Times piece noted that a “vast expansion of a program paying to keep workers employed, rather than dealing with them once they lost their jobs, was the most direct step taken in the heat of the crisis.”

More recently, Deutsche Welle explained, “One of the major reasons—if not the major reason—for the recession back then not ending up in a massive job cull was the unprecedented expansion of short-time work programs especially in the manufacturing and service industries across the nation.”

With the coronavirus outbreak spawning an epic economic upheaval in the United States, congressional Progressive Caucus cochair Mark Pocan says the federal government should ramp up support for work-sharing initiatives to avert mass unemployment. “At a time when workers live in fear of losing their next paycheck, we must do everything in our power to protect their livelihoods.” He’d like to go as big as Britain or Denmark, which this week established a program in which the government covers 75 percent of the salaries of employees who would otherwise have been laid off—while their employers pay the remaining 25 percent.

Continua la lettura su The Nation

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