General Motors: The Next Delisting from the Dow? [View article]
A recent report by the Congressional Research Service ("Globalization, Worker Insecurity, and Policy Approaches," updated July 31, 2008) noted the results of the decades-long drive to increase the exploitation of American workers.
Sorry. GM is still a great indicator of how the overall U.S. economy is doing:
"While productivity growth or output per worker rose by 71% from 1980 to 2005, the real compensation of non-supervisory workers comprising 80% of the work force grew by 4%. The gap in the manufacturing sector was even greater: productivity rose 131%, while compensation of non-supervisors grew only 7%."
-
A recent report by the Congressional Research Service ("Globalization, Worker Insecurity, and Policy Approaches," updated July 31, 2008) noted the results of the decades-long drive to increase the exploitation of American workers.
Sep 05 11:06 am
|Rating:
0
0
All Comments by Bibble »General Motors: The Next Delisting from the Dow? [View article]
Sorry. GM is still a great indicator of how the overall U.S. economy is doing:
www.fas.org/sgp/crs/mi...
"While productivity growth or output per worker rose by 71% from 1980 to 2005, the real compensation of non-supervisory workers comprising 80% of the work force grew by 4%. The gap in the manufacturing sector was even greater: productivity rose 131%, while compensation of non-supervisors grew only 7%."