"Raise the national minimum wage and index it to the cost of living increases"
If a minimum wage is appropriate, this seems right. I tend to think a minimum wage is appropriate in the current situation. It does risk eliminating jobs at the low end.
"Extend unemployment benefits to workers who have lost their jobs and haven't been able to get back into the workforce"
Probably also a good idea - I don't think "they need a kick in the pants" is a very good model of those people.
"Provide tax incentives to businesses that hire long-term unemployed workers and prohibit discriminating against the long-term unemployed when hiring"
I like the first half of that - and maybe go further and outright pay a portion of wages as companies retrain these people. We have to make it desirable to hire them. An actual cost-benefit analysis should be done, though...
The second half worries me a bit. Trying to get companies to act outside of their interests is always messy (which certianly isn't to say it should never be done, mind...), and it's inviting litigation. I don't really think more work for lawyers is the kind of jobs program we want.
"Establish a work-sharing program that allows workers to collect unemployment assistance when employers choose to reduce hours instead of layoffs"
Interesting, and probably a good move making hours slightly closer to fungible for both parties.
"Provide incentives to employers for hiring unemployed veterans"
Probably not a bad thing (and probably easy to sell) but I'm curious what those incentives would look like.
"Support workers' rights to organize through the Employee Free Choice Act as well as trade laws that protect labor"
Interesting. We've definitely shifted away from organized labor as a country, for good and ill. I personally prefer employee ownership (startups and co-ops) to unions, where that makes sense... and would like to see unions made less necessary (like most concentrations of power) - but that isn't to say this couldn't be a good move.
"End tax incentives for companies that ship jobs overseas"
Also curious what that looks like.
"Establish a National Infrastructure Bank to invest in infrastructure repair and expansion projects that will create millions of jobs nationally and open new economic opportunities"
An interesting thought. Certainly, it makes sense to build infrastructure while money is cheap.
"What do you think will work?"
One thought I had on the international stage, which isn't really relevant to the House but I figure I'll mention it anyway, is that while I think the WTO's push to reduce trade barriers generally makes sense, we might want to globally (possibly in the context of the WTO) come up with a framework for permitting certain types/sizes/scopes of barriers based on the differences between countries in things like worker protections, environmental regulation, taxation, &c (including enforcement of same), with a goal of checking somewhat the downward pressure. Not anywhere near a trivial task, of course.
I'm also a big fan of the idea of a low (~7k or so) basic income, but I'm not sure whether pushing that makes sense.
If a minimum wage is appropriate, this seems right. I tend to think a minimum wage is appropriate in the current situation. It does risk eliminating jobs at the low end.
"Extend unemployment benefits to workers who have lost their jobs and haven't been able to get back into the workforce"
Probably also a good idea - I don't think "they need a kick in the pants" is a very good model of those people.
"Provide tax incentives to businesses that hire long-term unemployed workers and prohibit discriminating against the long-term unemployed when hiring"
I like the first half of that - and maybe go further and outright pay a portion of wages as companies retrain these people. We have to make it desirable to hire them. An actual cost-benefit analysis should be done, though...
The second half worries me a bit. Trying to get companies to act outside of their interests is always messy (which certianly isn't to say it should never be done, mind...), and it's inviting litigation. I don't really think more work for lawyers is the kind of jobs program we want.
"Establish a work-sharing program that allows workers to collect unemployment assistance when employers choose to reduce hours instead of layoffs"
Interesting, and probably a good move making hours slightly closer to fungible for both parties.
"Provide incentives to employers for hiring unemployed veterans"
Probably not a bad thing (and probably easy to sell) but I'm curious what those incentives would look like.
"Support workers' rights to organize through the Employee Free Choice Act as well as trade laws that protect labor"
Interesting. We've definitely shifted away from organized labor as a country, for good and ill. I personally prefer employee ownership (startups and co-ops) to unions, where that makes sense... and would like to see unions made less necessary (like most concentrations of power) - but that isn't to say this couldn't be a good move.
"End tax incentives for companies that ship jobs overseas"
Also curious what that looks like.
"Establish a National Infrastructure Bank to invest in infrastructure repair and expansion projects that will create millions of jobs nationally and open new economic opportunities"
An interesting thought. Certainly, it makes sense to build infrastructure while money is cheap.
"What do you think will work?"
One thought I had on the international stage, which isn't really relevant to the House but I figure I'll mention it anyway, is that while I think the WTO's push to reduce trade barriers generally makes sense, we might want to globally (possibly in the context of the WTO) come up with a framework for permitting certain types/sizes/scopes of barriers based on the differences between countries in things like worker protections, environmental regulation, taxation, &c (including enforcement of same), with a goal of checking somewhat the downward pressure. Not anywhere near a trivial task, of course.
I'm also a big fan of the idea of a low (~7k or so) basic income, but I'm not sure whether pushing that makes sense.