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12/22/11 10:44 PM

#63497 RE: basserdan #63491

"...The United States already ranks second among modern nations, just behind South Korea, in the share of its workers in low-wage jobs..."

low-wage jobs are not living wage jobs. To help, the US government pays the poor a "refund" that is not really a refund but a gift via the earned income credit.

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analysis of the first seven months of 2010 found that 76% of jobs created were in low- to mid-wage industries -- those earning between $8.92 to $15 an hour, well below the national average hourly wage of $22.60.

But the biggest problem is continued job losses in higher-wage industries severely hit by the bursting of the housing bubble -- construction and financial services. Recoveries in those sectors helped lead the economy out of earlier downturns, but they're still suffering more than a year and a half after the official end of the Great Recession.

High-wage sectors -- made up of jobs that pay between $17.43 and $31 an hour -- accounted for nearly half the jobs lost during the recession, but have produced only 5% of the new jobs since hiring resumed, Bernhardt's study showed.