by Loki » Sun 19 Jan 2014, 00:12:48
Oily, I'm glad we agree that the recovery of manufacturing is just another indicator that the 5% have recovered. Thank the gods for that, the 5% have recovered. Yay.
So how long should I hold my breath before the labor market has recovered? And median income? Because, ya know, that's what really matters to the vast majority of Americans.
As for manufacturing jobs, yes, wages are significantly higher.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')n average, hourly wages and salaries for manufacturing jobs were $29.75 an hour in 2010 compared to $27.47 an hour for non-manufacturing jobs. Total hourly compensation, which includes employer-provided benefits, was $38.27 for workers in manufacturing jobs and $32.84 for workers in non-manufacturing jobs, a 17 percent premium. Even after controlling for demographic, geographic, and job characteristics, manufacturing jobs maintained significant wage and benefit premiums.
http://www.esa.doc.gov/sites/default/fi ... al5912.pdfAnd no, the massive, historic, monumental, precipitous (I'm running out of adjectives) decline in manufacturing employment is not because Americans are too lazy to work. This ridiculous wingnut meme is facile, I'm deeply disappointed in you, I thought you were above partisan parrot points.
Are you seriously arguing that the decline shown in the chart below is because Americans are too lazy to work manufacturing jobs?


A garden will make your rations go further.