Posts filed as “US economy”

Room service no more: why luxury is leaving the middle class behind | Helaine Olen

Hilton's pulling of room service in New York is another example of how middle income earners are losing access to life's luxuries

New York City's Hilton Hotels recently announced they would end room service this summer, offering customers instead a high-end food shop in the lobby.

That's right. For $200 a night plus taxes, you'll be expected to brown-bag it.

Think of this as one more demonstration of how services for the middle...Read more.

Room service no more: why luxury is leaving the middle class behind | Helaine Olen

Hilton's pulling of room service in New York is another example of how middle income earners are losing access to life's luxuries

New York City's Hilton Hotels recently announced they would end room service this summer, offering customers instead a high-end food shop in the lobby.

That's right. For $200 a night plus taxes, you'll be expected to brown-bag it.

Think of this as one more demonstration of how services for the middle...Read more.

American retail workers need more than $10 an hour

The more workers are earning low wages, the less likely the economy will reach escape velocity

The retail sector has been a star of recent jobs reports. May's numbers from the Department of Labor say it was responsible for adding 28,000 positions to the overall economy. It's on an upward trend – the monthly retail employment number has averaged 20,000 for the past year.

Considering one in nine Americans work in, for...Read more.

American retail workers need more than $10 an hour

The more workers are earning low wages, the less likely the economy will reach escape velocity

The retail sector has been a star of recent jobs reports. May's numbers from the Department of Labor say it was responsible for adding 28,000 positions to the overall economy. It's on an upward trend – the monthly retail employment number has averaged 20,000 for the past year.

Considering one in nine Americans work in, for...Read more.

Why the federal budget can’t be managed like a household budget

Not all budgets are created equal – even if politicians say they are. The fed is much better off when it is short on cash

Today in homespun homilies that are out-and-out political hokum, we're going to take on the case of why so many of us believe the federal budget should be managed just like our household finances.

This old saw is routinely trotted out by politicians looking to give themselves...Read more.

America’s silent freelance army

The US last calculated the number of contingent workers in 2005 – how can we structure better policies without hard data?

What kind of job do you have?

No, I don't mean what do you do for a living. Do you have a job, a regular position with set days and hours? One of those old-fashioned things that comes with – at least we hope – health insurance, retirement benefits, vacation and sick...Read more.

Cyprus is no reason to hide your money

Right-wing pundits are scaremongering over fears the US will be the next Cyprus, which is is totally out of the question

My late Tante Bessie had a bank account. In fact, she had more than one. Like a lot of people who lived through the Great Depression as adults, she didn't really trust the banks. She liked to spread her Social Security and pension checks around.

Just in case all those...Read more.

The economic plan to rob grandma’s bread basket | Helaine Olen

Republicans insist the government is spending too much on social security. Their solution? Something called chained CPI 

Here is one of the problems in retirement planning: you can go along for years, faithfully using retirement calculators, re-balancing your stock market investments, reading your estimated social security payouts, just sure you are on track and – well, poof! – the rules of the game can change in an instant.

And, apparently, the United...Read more.

Your 401k won’t save you | Helaine Olen

Most of us have less than $100,000 in retirement savings, less than half what some estimate is needed

Most of us respond to questions about our financial prospects after retirement with sentiments that could be best be compared to the look on Captain Quint's face when he realized he was about to be eaten by the shark in the 1970s classic Jaws.

There is a $6.6tn gap between what we...Read more.