Monday, August 26, 2013

PRESS RELEASE: First-of-a-Kind Resolution on International Wage Parity Passes California State Assembly


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                             Contact: Justin Hager (818) 558-3043
August 20, 2013                                                                            Mobile (415) 889-9762

Mike Gatto's AJR 12 Contains Cutting-Edge Proposal to Protect American Jobs and Industries, Stop Outsourcing

Sacramento, CA – Yesterday, the California Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution authored by Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Los Angeles) that directs the federal government to use its constitutional treaty powers to require trading partners to gradually raise their minimum wages, raising the standards of living in those countries, and making U.S. workers and exports more competitive.

Artificially depressed global wages, like Indonesia’s minimum wage of 46 cents an hour, make it nearly impossible for higher-paying nations to compete.  These practices are increasingly viewed as a form of unfair trade, much like the currency manipulation that Mitt Romney so famously decried during his 2012 presidential campaign.

Congress, by statute, has ordered the United States Trade Representative to seek input from the fifty states on the effects of, and policies relating to, globalization.  Assembly Joint Resolution (AJR) 12 provides such guidance.  It enshrines the position of the state of California that future treaties, trade agreements, and relevant international protocols should require a gradually increasing wage in signatory nations.

Since the dawn of the republic, the United States has used its treaty power to require things like free elections (with Iraq, after the Iraq war), respect for U.S. companies’ patent and intellectual property rights (in various treaties), and of course, currency valuations (in the various Bretton Woods accords, etc.).

The Assembly passed AJR 12 by a vote of 52-21.

“American workers and companies are having trouble competing because workers are paid inhumane rates in some other countries,” said Gatto.  “This ‘race to the bottom’ hurts workers around the world and causes thousands of U.S. jobs to be sent overseas each year.  Gradually increasing international wages, even from 50 cents an hour to one dollar, would make U.S. exporters, from movie makers to automakers, more competitive, and would help raise billions out of poverty.”

Gatto’s floor speech endeavored to connect the bill to each of his colleagues and their constituents.  He stated that a “no” vote on AJR 12 was tantamount to a statement that one likes calling one’s cell-phone or computer provider, only to be routed to an overseas call center.  Traditionally, such customer-service jobs have been among the most vulnerable to outsourcing from artificially depressed global wages.

The concept in AJR 12 has been supported and championed by economist Richard Duncan, author of “The Corruption of Capitalism: A strategy to rebalance the global economy and restore sustainable growth,” and a frequent television contributor.  Duncan is the Chief Economist for Blackhorse Asset Management, which is affiliated with several high-performing hedge funds.  Duncan is not alone among cutting-edge economists who view this policy as one of the few proposals that can actually help correct the vast trade and currency imbalances caused by globalization.

AJR 12 now heads to the Senate for consideration.

Mike Gatto is the Chairman of the Appropriations Committee in the California State Assembly.  He represents Burbank, Glendale, La Cañada Flintridge, La Crescenta, Montrose, and the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Atwater Village, East Hollywood, Franklin Hills, Hollywood Hills, Los Feliz, and Silver Lake.  www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

No comments:

Post a Comment