Jared Bernstein
Jared Bernstein
Jared Bernsteinis a Senior Fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. From 2009 to 2011, Bernstein was the Chief Economist and Economic Adviser to Vice President Joseph Biden in the Obama Administration. Bernstein's appointment was considered to represent a progressive perspective and "to provide a strong advocate for workers"...
facing families higher keeping lower pace pinch problem simply wages
The problem isn't simply that families are facing higher prices, particularly at the pump. It's also that they're facing lower wages. If wages were keeping pace with inflation, the pinch wouldn't be as hard.
class continue generate pace slower
While we continue to generate middle-class jobs, I would say we're doing so at a slower pace than we have in the past.
coming fairly finding folks growth jobs labor looking low pace weak
Folks are coming back into the labor market, but they're not finding jobs there. The tepid pace of job growth was too low to keep unemployment from rising. We're looking at a fairly weak recovery, at least initially.
growth happy job pace
I've been pretty happy to see the pace of job growth in professional services.
breadth economic gap overall pace progress results returns reveal
These results reveal the breadth of the unprecedented gap between the pace of overall economic progress and the returns to working people.
again cautious close employers period turning warrants whether
Whether we're into another period now where employers are turning really cautious again ... warrants close observation,
peak somewhere ultimately
Ultimately unemployment will peak somewhere around 6.2 or 6.3 percent,
bottom children decent giving growth harder income lifting people poverty start themselves time top
When income growth is concentrated at the top of the income scale, the people at the bottom have a much harder time lifting themselves out of poverty and giving their children a decent start in life.
wages trends slumps
We are in the midst of a protracted wage slump, ... a troubling trend that is largely going unnoticed by policymakers.
mistake thinking growth
It's a mistake to think that any increase in wages is inflationary and there is substantial room for non-inflationary wage growth, particularly at the bottom end of the scale.
strong wages way
With stagnant hourly wages, the only way for working families to get ahead is by working more hours, ... certainly not the path to improving living standards that we'd expect in an economy posting strong productivity gains.
school play competition
Where you see immigration competition play out most clearly is among high school dropouts. I'd say there's clearly immigrant competition among the least-skilled workers, but natives are a shrinking share while immigrants are a growing share.
government should high-road
The government should be actively enforcing the high road.
employment situation
The full employment situation reinforces itself.