Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Letters: Inequality and the Internet: Why Some Remain Offline

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 23 Agustus 2013 | 13.26

Connect With Us on Twitter

For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

Your otherwise excellent article about the digital divide ("Most of U.S. Is Wired, but Millions Aren't Plugged In," Business Day, Aug. 19) missed an opportunity to discuss the significant digital divide between people with disabilities and those not (yet) disabled.

The Commerce Department report on which your article was based recognized the impact of disability. It found that Internet use among those with a disability is only 48 percent compared with 76 percent for those with no disability. In every metric used in the report, people with disabilities lagged behind. Your reporters rightly covered the digital divide based on race, age, education, class and geography. Disability deserved to be covered as well.

In my experience as a disability civil rights lawyer working with the blind community on technology and information access issues, the disability divide has two major components. First, disability cuts across and magnifies all other factors you mention.

Second, and equally important, there is a digital divide for people with disabilities because of a lack of accessible online content. Tim Berners Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, recognized that, saying: "The power of the Web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect."

LAINEY FEINGOLD
Berkeley, Calif., Aug. 19, 2013

To the Editor:

Your article's analysis of the digital divide understates American progress and overstates the American disadvantage compared with other major countries. Since 2008, Internet use in the United States increased to 85 percent of households from 79 percent, which represents 24 million more users. Other major countries have the same problem, with just slightly higher use.

In the United States three-fifths of those who do not use the Internet are 65 or older, and almost nine-tenths are 50 or older. Income is important, too, with half of non-Internet users having incomes below $50,000 a year.

But the fact that fewer than 1 in 10 eligible low-income households sign up for $10-a-month broadband underscores the importance of factors other than the monthly fee as a barrier to Internet use. After age, the best predictor of Internet use is computer ownership.

MARK COOPER
Director of Research
Consumer Federation of America
Washington, Aug. 19, 2013


13.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Letter: A Treaty on Wages

Connect With Us on Twitter

For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

To the Editor:

Re "Not All Industrial Food Is Evil"(column, Aug. 18):

Mark Bittman makes a crucial point: the need for an international minimum-wage structure.

Based on purchasing power rather than on currency exchange rates, and firmly enforced by treaty through the World Trade Organization, the World Health Organization, the World Bank and the United Nations, such a wage structure could raise living standards everywhere and diminish the incentives for low-skill economic emigration.

In fact, the cost savings in reducing that kind of emigration could offset the costs of imposing an international living-wage structure.

Along with raised living standards come improvements in health and reduced fertility rates. The international minimum wage is an essential and ultimately very profitable component of future international trade.

TOM TILLINGHAST
San Francisco, Aug. 18, 2013


13.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Letter: Bias Toward Abuse Victims

Connect With Us on Twitter

For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

"Victims' Dilemma: 911 Calls Can Bring Eviction" (front page, Aug. 17) shines a searing light on a decision women facing domestic violence should never have to make — whether to call the police or hold on to their homes. Yet as you report, hundreds of cities have nuisance ordinances that threaten tenants with eviction if they call the police.

No woman should ever have to choose between living with an abuser and losing her home or finding a new one. That's why Sanctuary for Families supports Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo's proposal in his Women's Equality Agenda to prohibit discrimination in housing based on one's status as a domestic violence victim.

Under current law, landlords can deny housing or evict people once they find out that they have been victims of domestic violence — even if no disturbance has taken place. The State Senate passed the governor's housing discrimination ban. The Assembly must do the same.

LAUREL W. EISNER
Executive Director
Sanctuary for Families
New York, Aug. 19, 2013


13.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Letter: Travel Cuts Hurt Scientists

Connect With Us on Twitter

For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

I was pleased to see your Aug. 19 front-page article "U.S. Workers Are Grounded by Deep Cuts," since the absence of government researchers from our technical conferences is having a terrible impact. Beyond the scientific content and leadership that the government personnel normally provide at these conferences, travel restrictions are having other, longer-range consequences.

Outstanding students in engineering and science have normally considered a career in our national laboratories as desirable. Students now completing their degrees will be much less inclined to join organizations that do not permit them to participate effectively in the scientific community.

Travel restrictions have also created a terrible mood among scientists and engineers working in those laboratories. Many of them are already seeking work elsewhere.

Recruiting and retaining the best and the brightest for our government laboratories should be a national priority, but it is now much more difficult thanks to the travel restrictions and other cutbacks.

RICHARD B. MILES
Princeton, N.J., Aug. 19, 2013

The writer is professor emeritus of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Princeton University.


13.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Room for Debate: Dealing With Crime in New York

  • Maria Haberfeld

    Recruit, Train and Discipline Better

    Maria Haberfeld, John Jay College

    With important changes, stop, question and frisk can still be used aggressively, but with integrity and fairness.

  • Delores Jones-Brown

    Return to Community Policing

    Delores Jones-Brown, Center on Race, Crime and Justice.

    Work with residents to identify and resolve problems. Give officers autonomy to respond to and identify their needs.

  • Heather Mac Donald

    Judge's Mandates Shouldn't Affect Priorities

    Heather Mac Donald, Manhattan Institute

    The redirection of manpower to fulfill paperwork requirements of a departmental monitor will be a serious burden.

  • Glenn E. Martin

    Preventive Programs Should Be Preserved

    Glenn E. Martin, Fortune Society

    The Young Men's Initiative helped black and Latino men build futures, with mentoring, education, employment, and housing.

  • Michael Jacobson

    End Lengthy and Costly Pre-Trial Imprisonment

    Michael Jacobson, CUNY Institute for State and Local Governance

    Being jailed awaiting trial removes one from family, work and education and increase the likelihood of a criminal future.

  • Jennifer Parish

    City Jails Use Solitary Confinement Excessively

    Jennifer Parish, Urban Justice Center

    One of every 12 inmates is in solitary. But it can have devastating effects on young people and those with mental illnesses.


  • 13.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Letter: Return of the Gray Seals

    Written By Unknown on Kamis, 22 Agustus 2013 | 13.25

    Connect With Us on Twitter

    For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

    Re "Thriving in Cape Cod's Waters, Gray Seals Draw Fans and Foes" (news article, Aug. 17):

    The return of gray seals to Cape Cod along with sharks and angry fishermen is an old story for Californians. As a late maritime frontier we did a great job eradicating sea otters, seals, whales and so on. But with changed attitudes and policies we've seen a return of our marine wildlife.

    Today, Californians live with more than 20,000 migratory gray whales (and a thriving whale watching industry), 30,000 harbor seals and 300,000 California sea lions.

    Our fishermen have stopped taking illegal potshots at sea lions and still find ways to preserve their livelihoods. And with the return of seals as prey there are also more white sharks off California, along with accidental human-shark encounters.

    But as one saying goes, "If there's not something bigger and meaner than you are out there, it's not really a wilderness."

    DAVID HELVARG
    Richmond, Calif., Aug. 17, 2013

    The writer is the author of "The Golden Shore: California's Love Affair With the Sea."


    13.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Letter: The Museum Experience

    Connect With Us on Twitter

    For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

    To the Editor:

    The short answer to the question posed to Times readers about "how we experience art museums" (letters, Aug. 17) is through a tacky, two-dimensional photo taken by a tacky, tiny hand-held camera or cellphone.

    That, alas, is how an increasing number of museumgoers seem to absorb the art experience these days.

    Museum authorities, and security guards, might go back to the old days of "no photos," even ones without flashbulbs, and allow viewers the pleasures of the three-dimensional world of great art.

    A. E. SANTANIELLO
    New York, Aug. 17, 2013


    13.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Letter: A Tribute to Elmore Leonard

    Connect With Us on Twitter

    For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

    To the Editor:

    Re "A Novelist Who Made Crime an Art, and His Bad Guys 'Fun' " (obituary, front page, Aug. 21):

    The legendary crime and western novelist Elmore Leonard, who died on Tuesday at 87, helped elevate literary genres once perceived as lowly into a respected and honorable pursuit.

    His memorable characters, intriguing plots and elegant prose made him not just a great crime and western writer but a great writer, period.

    One could say he was "the Hemingway of the crime genre," as he was direct and to the point, using only the minimum number of words necessary.

    The prolific Mr. Leonard, who wrote 45 novels, had the ability to churn out books with the regularity of an automobile assembly line, which is fitting since he lived much of his life in or near Detroit.

    What made Mr. Leonard so fascinating was that his villains were often far more interesting and compelling than his "good guys."

    KENNETH L. ZIMMERMAN
    Huntington Beach, Calif., Aug. 21, 2013


    13.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Letter: A Flower in Midst of War

    Connect With Us on Twitter

    For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT.

    To the Editor:

    Re "An Afghan Poet Shapes Metal and Hard Words" (front page, Aug. 19):

    While the verse of Matiullah Turab is admirable, perhaps in a brighter moment he will reconsider his harsh thoughts about the relevance of love and flowers to the war in Afghanistan.

    Nothing seems more curative and defiant than love freely given or the appearance of a hardy flower in a miserable place created by human evil.

    Perhaps Wordsworth captured it best when he wrote:

    To me the meanest flower that blows can give
    Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.
    EARL P. BELL
    Olympia Fields, Ill., Aug. 19, 2013


    13.25 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Opinionator: Hard Times, For Some

    Tom Edsall on politics inside and outside of Washington.

    Tags:

    Acemoglu, Daron, Autor, David, Binghamton (NY), Buffalo (NY), Congel, Robert J, Labor and Jobs, Obama, Barack, Scranton (Pa), Wages and Salaries, Wilson, Ralph Jr

    On July 24, President Obama returned to Galesburg, Ill., to reiterate a promise he made in 2005 as a freshman Senator: to create new opportunities for the nation's beleaguered middle class.

    I'm here to tell you today that we're not there yet. We all know that. We're not there yet. We've got more work to do. Even though our businesses are creating new jobs and have broken record profits, nearly all the income gains of the past 10 years have continued to flow to the top 1 percent. The average C.E.O. has gotten a raise of nearly 40 percent since 2009. The average American earns less than he or she did in 1999. And companies continue to hold back on hiring those who've been out of work for some time.

    We all wish him luck, but he is battling long odds.

    Cesar Suarez, Galesburg's director of economic development, puts the best face on Galesburg's five-decade-long downward trajectory. "Given the two challenges, the Great Recession and globalization, we have been doing pretty well," Suarez told me in a phone interview. The city's population has continued to fall, although less sharply than in the past. "Relatively speaking, that's good," Suarez said. "But it is a loss."

    In a June 2005 speech to the graduating class at Galesburg's Knox College, Obama said:

    America is a land of big dreamers and big hopes. So let's dream. Let's imagine what we can do to give every American a fighting chance in the 21st century.

    That fighting chance has yet to materialize in Galesburg. The city was once a manufacturing center with major facilities operated by Maytag, Butler Manufacturing and the Outboard Motors Corporation. Now, of the 4,915 men and women working for the city's top 10 employers, 1,707 work for the government, and 1,241 are in health care. The ninth largest employer in Galesburg is Walmart, whose employees earn on average $11.75 an hour.

    If completing college is crucial to getting a good job, Galesburg is behind the eight ball: 17.52 percent of its residents have a college or advanced degree, compared with 29.28 percent for all of Illinois and 27.36 percent for the entire United States.

    Galesburg is a hard case, and so too are the other cities Obama is touring this week in an effort to prod Congressional Republicans to compromise on upcoming budget negotiations: Scranton, Pa., Syracuse, Buffalo and Binghamton, N.Y. Once vibrant manufacturing centers, they are now disproportionately dependent on service jobs and employment in hospitals, government and social assistance.

    In Scranton, a stunning 41.3 percent of those over 18 have withdrawn altogether from the work force; the poverty rate is 20.4 percent, much higher than the statewide level of 12.6 percent. In Syracuse an even higher percentage, 42.4 percent, have withdrawn from the work force. The poverty rate there is 32.3 percent, compared with 14.5 percent statewide. Median household income in Scranton is $36,968, compared with $51,651 across all Pennsylvania; that figure is $31,689 in Syracuse, compared with $56,951 in all of New York State.

    What about the other end of the income distribution? If labor is stagnating, how are the owners of capital doing? Walmart offers a clear example. While its employees in Galesburg earn $11.75 an hour, six members of the Walton family are listed by Forbes among the 400 richest Americans. The Waltons' total assets: $115.3 billion.

    In Syracuse, while workers are crawling along the bottom, Bloomberg Businessweek identified Robert J. Congel as the richest man in Syracuse. He is the head of the privately held Pyramid Management Group, developer of malls and entertainment complexes. The Syracuse Post-Standard has reported that Congel is building an "opulent new $2.7-million-plus mansion" in addition to his "$3.6 million mansion in Skaneateles and a 500-acre hunting preserve/lodge known as Savannah Dhu in Wayne County."

    If any city on Obama's tour has had it rough, it's Buffalo. Median household income is $30,230, just over half the state's $56,951 median. The city has a 29.1 percent poverty rate, twice the statewide rate. In 1960, Buffalo had a population of 532,759; 261,310 people live there now.

    How about people who amassed fortunes in the city, like Robert Rich Jr., son of Robert Rich Sr., the founder of Buffalo-based Rich Foods? While Buffalo's fortunes have gone down, Rich's have gone up. In 2009, Forbes estimated his wealth at $1.9 billion; by 2012, his net worth had grown by half a billion dollars.

    Or take Ralph Wilson Jr., who bought and established the Buffalo Bills football franchise in 1959 for $25,000. The most recent estimate puts the 2013 value of the Bills at $870 million.

    Obama wants to raise living standards while powerful headwinds are pushing back. It's not only Republican opposition. National and global trends are forcing wages and salaries down and holding them there.

    The devaluation of wage and salary work can be seen in Figure 1. The chart illustrates the marked shift over the past three decades in the distribution of national income in the United States from labor (in the form of wages, salaries and fringe benefits) to capital (in the form of interest, capital gains and other returns on investment).

    Figure 2 from the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides additional evidence of this shift. The graph shows that what was once a pattern of American workers' pay rising in proportion to productivity gains is no longer the case: the rate of wage increase is now far below the rate of productivity growth.

    The decline in labor's share of income is not restricted to the United States. It is a worldwide phenomenon, as Loukas Karabarbounis and Brent Neiman of the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business show in their June 2013 paper, "The Global Decline of the Labor Share." Their work shows, surprisingly, that the shift away from labor in pro-union Nordic countries is stronger than it is in the United States. Figure 3 reveals the pattern, with the eight largest economies marked in red.

    Karabarbounis and Neiman argue that the negative consequences (the loss of wages for those workers who bear the brunt of the declining share of income going to labor) are outweighed by the positive results (the drop in the price of consumer goods resulting from lower production costs), culminating in a net gain to the general welfare:

    Measurements of welfare gains or losses are essentially economists' quantitative answer to the question, "So what?" Because the declining price of investment goods in our model allows the economy to produce and consume more with a given amount of labor, people in the model economy are better off. The welfare gains are a measure of how much better off they are from this (in terms of increased consumption).

    Though in the real world there clearly are some workers that do worse as labor share declines, we use our model to note that the decline in labor share in response to the investment price change is overall a positive thing – the world is generally better off due to the cheaper computers, etc. If, on the other hand, the same labor share decline were hypothetically caused by higher profits that would on average make people in our model economy worse off.

    The idea of an overall net gain is not likely to provide comfort to Obama as he tries to improve the lot of those in the bottom-to-middle of the income distribution. David Autor, an economist at M.I.T., argues that the welfare gains cited by Karabarbounis and Neiman will flow to the affluent, those who need no help:

    It's likely that a rising capital share disproportionately benefits the owners of capital (these are people, of course) and disproportionately displaces relatively middle and low skill workers who are likely to be relatively substitutable with machines —particularly workers performing routine clerical, production and monitoring tasks. This means that the reduction in labor demand generally lowers earnings opportunities for less educated and lower wage workers. Conversely, rising capital productivity enhances the incomes of those who own capital or intellectual property, and those who are complemented by the new capital (e.g., software engineers, financiers, doctors, researchers). In short, the process of capital biased technical change (if that's what it is) likely contributes to our inequality problem even as it raises aggregate wealth.

    Autor adds that "the bulk of the costs are often borne by those least able to afford them, and the bulk of the benefits often accrue to those who least need them. "

    Daron Acemoglu, who is also an economist at M.I.T., argues that the welfare gains claimed by Karabarbounis and Neiman are "not a bygone conclusion":

    There have been important changes in labor market institutions in many O.E.C.D. economies, the U.S. and the U.K. first among them, but also in Germany and Scandinavia. In this case, the welfare implications are more complex. If we started from a neutral position and capital gets stronger, this would be a bad thing. If, on the other hand, somehow labor was excessively strong, reducing the return to capital and thus thwarting job creation, redressing this imbalance might be good.

    Economic analysts more to the left take this critique a step further. Leo Pantich and Sam Gindin, political scientists at York University in Canada, are co-authors of the recently published book "The Making of Global Capitalism." In an e-mailed response to a Times inquiry, Gindin wrote:

    The economist-speak of "net welfare gains" needs to be unpacked. The net gains are to the economy as a whole but this says nothing about the main issue being addressed — the distribution of such "net benefits." Nor does it really speak to whether those potentials for growth can be realized in a sustained way if domestic demand is simultaneously repressed by the stagnation of working class incomes. The point about the especially large decline in labour share in the Nordic countries relates, in our analysis, to the fact of their increasing integration into global capitalism and the consequent intensified competition among corporations and states anxious to attract or retain capital. States with a more egalitarian income chose, or were compelled — given those pressures and their commitment to globalization — to move more rapidly towards the international "norms."

    The essential political question emerging from this debate is whether the forces driving down labor's share of income, exacerbating inequality and vastly increasing the wealth of those at the top can be redirected to produce more equitable and beneficial results while fostering continued growth.

    "What do we do," Noah Smith, an economist at Stony Brook University, asks in the Atlantic, "if the 'endowment of human capital' with which people are born gets less and less valuable?"

    Has the train left the station? Has the momentum behind the hollowing out of middle class jobs and the increasing replacement of human beings by machines gained so much strength that it cannot be reversed? Obama has put the goal of a revived middle class at the top of his agenda, but he has not publicly voiced an understanding of the size and scope of the problem he seeks to address.


    13.25 | 0 komentar | Read More
    techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger