We all know how heavily the short-term census workers figured in the recent unemployment statistics.
Now we're seeing the residual effects of this:
HIRE Act
My low-skilled-but-employed friends in a very economically depressed part of the country are starting to see their hours cut to make way for new hires so that their employers can benefit from this tax cut.
Bottom line is, long-term workers in "unskilled" positions (retail, food service) are no longer able to meet their obligations.
Yeah, this is going to help recover asset prices, when renters start moving in with their parents.
Bottom line: tax cuts to industry do not "trickle down."
Now we're seeing the residual effects of this:
The payroll tax exemption provides employers with an exemption from the employer’s 6.2 percent share of social security tax on wages paid to qualifying employees, effective for wages paid from March 19, 2010 through December 31, 2010.
My low-skilled-but-employed friends in a very economically depressed part of the country are starting to see their hours cut to make way for new hires so that their employers can benefit from this tax cut.
Bottom line is, long-term workers in "unskilled" positions (retail, food service) are no longer able to meet their obligations.
Yeah, this is going to help recover asset prices, when renters start moving in with their parents.
Bottom line: tax cuts to industry do not "trickle down."
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