The coming backlash against growth and jobs

How America's rich are trying to drag us back to 2008

A garbage can.
(Image credit: Illustrated | iStock)

Republican Senator Ron Johnson (Wis.) won't try to convince OshKosh Defense, a Wisconsin-based company, to make vehicles for the Post Office in his home state. "It's not like we don't have enough jobs here in Wisconsin," he told reporters over the weekend. "The biggest problem we have in Wisconsin right now is employers not being able to find enough workers."

He's not alone in that thinking. "We don't have a lack of work but a lack of willing workers," claimed Heritage Foundation research fellow Joel Griffith in a recent statement, adding that "[w]hat's to blame are welfare handouts that don't require any effort to get back to work[.]" Others aren't so blatant, but the message is the same. "If I were the Fed chair ... I would have raised rates early in the fall," Bank of America researcher Ethan Harris told CNBC Monday. "When we get this broad-based increase, and it starts making its way to wages, you're behind the curve, and you need to start moving." That is: Workers are making too much, and their pay needs to be cut.

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Ryan Cooper

Ryan Cooper is a national correspondent at TheWeek.com. His work has appeared in the Washington Monthly, The New Republic, and the Washington Post.