• May 1: May Day protesters clashed with riot police in Turkey, Greece and Germany while French unions led their biggest ever Labor Day demonstrations amid growing public anger in Europe at unemployment and the handling of global economic crisis (Guardian)
  • Unemployment is on the rise across the continent. The European Commission expects an unemployment rate of 8.75% in the EU27 and 9.25% in the eurozone in 2009. In the Euro area, the unemployment rate was 8.5% in February 2009, 1.3% higher than a year earlier (OECD)
  • Labor unions in the EU are scandalized that the governments are handing money to banks when workers’ pay is stagnant. Moreover, bailing out banks could mean drawing funds from social welfare programs (Euractiv)
 

Some of the wage cuts, like the givebacks by Chrysler workers, are the price of federal aid. Others, like the tentative agreement on a salary cut here at The Times, are the result of discussions between employers and their union employees. Still others reflect the brute fact of a weak labor market: workers don’t dare protest when their wages are cut, because they don’t think they can find other jobs.

Whatever the specifics, however, falling wages are a symptom of a sick economy. And they’re a symptom that can make the economy even sicker.

First things first: anecdotes about falling wages are proliferating, but how broad is the phenomenon? The answer is, very.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/04/opinion/04krugman.html?_r=1

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