Will Obama’s Jobs Act Help?

Obama Delivers Jobs Act Speech

Credit: whitehouse.gov

Last week, President Barack Obama called on Congress to pass The American Jobs Act. The act’s proposals run the gamut from tax breaks to stimulus spending, and policy experts’ reactions to the bill ran the gamut too.  But it’s still unclear whether the bill will actually help Americans, and New Yorkers in particular, get jobs.  So let’s parse through the three best arguments for and against the bill.

Positive Reviews:

1. One of the most fervent supporters of the act is New York City Comptroller John Liu.  For every $1 billion invested in New York City, Liu’s office estimates that 7,500 jobs would be created. Obama’s plan would funnel approximately $3 billion to New York State, but it’s not known how much of that would go to the five boroughs.

2. Obama’s proposal would give New York State about $2 billion to retain teacher and first responder jobs, and another $2 billion to modernize public schools in the state.  New York State United Teachers, which represents 600,000 educators in New York, sided with the president because of that funding.

3. While America seems to be growing less fond of Obama in general, 45 percent of people surveyed by Gallup responded that they’d want their member of congress to vote for the act, compared with 32 percent that would vote against.

Negative Reviews:

1. James Parrott, the chief economist at the Fiscal Policy Institute says the jobs act is too heavy on tax cuts (toward bottom of article).  He says federal spending creates many more jobs per dollar than tax cuts do.

2. Business groups are saying the payroll tax cuts might seem business-friendly, but in reality can’t help in the long-term because businesses are struggling too much to hire new workers.

3. The president of the same teachers union that supports the bill (NYSUT) thinks it might be used as an excuse to not fund New York schools on a state-level.

Unless Obama finds a way to convince a vocally opposed Republican party otherwise, all the praise and criticism of the bill might be moot.

A curated list of how teacher layoffs and budget cuts affected NYC public schools

President Obama’s speech on Sept. 8 addressed how Congress can prevent more layoffs and create more employment opportunities for Americans. One of the aspects of the $300billionplan is that it aims to stop the teacher layoffs, specifically, and improve schools and the educational system as a whole by retraining teachers and/or rehiring them.

He also made a comment about the disappointing condition of many public schools in America and suggested that fixing them would help improve student education while creating more construction jobs.

Here are some examples of how the teacher layoffs and school budget cuts have affected New York City public schools:

  • According to the huffingtonpost.com article on how the plan will affect teachers, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said “A couple hundred thousands of teachers have lost their jobs.” This could cause the morale of the teachers who didn’t get laid off to go down because they could be worried about being next which would affect their effectiveness as teachers.
  • With the city constantly growing in population, and knowing after the latest census that there are about 8.2 million people in the city, the layoffs of teachers have created a unbalanced teacher to students ratio. Also the laid off teachers haven’t been readily replaced, and overall 2,600 less teachers were hired when the city expects 10,000 more students enrolled in public schools.
  • The budget cuts have caused the maintenance of public schools to be put on hold, since schools don’t had the money to fix them up, hence the Obama proposal to find ways to get construction jobs available to fix them.
  • Schools are unable to provide school supplies to kids, unless teachers who are/were afraid of losing their jobs supplied some for their classes.