The ultimate spin. I am surprised at how supinely the media have taken the latest piece of political spinning — the video press release. The government’s image makers were responsible for the pictures of Julia Gillard speaking at the launch of Women for Gillard. As the ABC noted, without making a big thing of it, and most others in the media ignored completely, “the launch was closed to the media but vision was provided by the Prime Minister’s office”. The new age of journalism without journalists has arrived.
A smaller piece of the pie for workers across the world. I noted briefly in these little snippets many, many months ago now, how labour’s share of the economic pie in Australia had declined noticeably in recent years. Now the International Labour Organisation has come out with a report showing there is nothing unique about our country’s experience. Capital has been grabbing more virtually everywhere.
The recently released Global Wage Report 2012/13 draws attention to the way that labour’s share of gross domestic product is declining significantly. The ILO notes how the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has observed, for example, that over the period from 1990 to 2009 the share of labour compensation in national income declined in 26 out of 30 developed economies for which data were available, and calculated that the median labour share of national income across these countries fell considerably from 66.1% to 61.7%:
“Between 1999 and 2011 average labour productivity in developed economies increased more than twice as much as average wages. In the United States, real hourly labour productivity in the non-farm business sector increased by about 85%since 1980, while real hourly compensation increased by only around 35%. In Germany, labour productivity surged by almost a quarter over the past two decades while real monthly wages remained flat.
“The global trend has resulted in a change in the distribution of national income, with the workers’ share decreasing while capital income shares increase in a majority of countries.
“Even in China, a country where wages roughly tripled over the last decade, GDP increased at a faster rate than the total wage bill — and hence the labour share went down.
“The drop in the labour share is due to technological progress, trade globalization, the expansion of financial markets, and decreasing union density, which have eroded the bargaining power of labour. Financial globalisation, in particular, may have played a bigger role than previously thought.”
The Australian manufacturing disadvantage. An interesting table from that International Labor Organisation report helps explain the problem confronted by Australian manufacturing industries.
Saving the chimps. The US government is planning to to declare all chimpanzees endangered, an act that the Washington Post reports would provide stronger protections and potentially end nearly a century of using great apes as test subjects for invasive medical research.
Back in 1990 the US Fish and Wildlife Service classified wild chimps as endangered and captive chimps as threatened, a designation that carries fewer protections. The “split listing” under the Endangered Species Act, the only one in the history of the agency, was designed to allow the National Institutes of Health to fund medical experiments using captive chimps, agency director Dan Ashe told the paper.
“Ashe said the new rule sends a clear message that, contrary to popular belief, the survival of all chimps is threatened.
“More than a million have disappeared from the wild since the beginning of the 20th century, according to estimates by theInternational Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. Fewer than 300,000 remain, as people invade chimpanzee habitats, using the land to farm and hunting the animals for meat, according to IUCN’s Red List of Threatened Species.
‘The most important thing about this is it brings attention to the plight of chimpanzees in the wild,’ Ashe said. Because chimps are often dressed in clothing and used as comic relief in movies, Americans do not believe they are endangered, he said.”
A thought for the day.
“Do you know what scares me more than terrorism? A polity that reacts to fear by ceding more autonomy and power to its secret police.”
— Conor Friedersd0rf on The Irrationality of Giving Up This Much Liberty to Fight Terror
News and views noted along the way.
- Julia Gillard says women would be banished from political life under Abbott government
- Majority views NSA phone tracking as acceptable anti-terror tactic — public says investigate terrorism, even if it intrudes on privacy.
- Reading to children: a head-start in life — “Evidence suggests that children should be regularly read to, especially by their parents. Although reading has little effect on non-cognitive skills, the benefits to cognitive development are huge.”
- What to make of a warming plateau — “The rise in the surface temperature of earth has been markedly slower over the last 15 years than in the 20 years before that. And that lull in warming has occurred even as greenhouse gases have accumulated in the atmosphere at a record pace. The slowdown is a bit of a mystery to climate scientists.”
- New York lays out $20 billion plan to adapt to climate change
- Hello, Susan Rice: national security adviser
- Argentina bans football away supporters after fan death — “The Argentine Football Association (AFA) has banned away fans from attending football matches, after the death of a supporter. The ban will apply across the country in all divisions of Argentine football. On Monday a supporter of visiting club Lanus was killed as fans and police clashed in La Plata, near Buenos Aires, during a match against Estudiantes. More than 70 football supporters have been killed in Argentina since the year 2000.”
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