The stark reality facing us today is that without the labour reforms, workers will get neither the income nor jobs in the face of cut-throat global economic competition.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
It's estimated that by 2030 there will be virtually no unskilled jobs in the British economy.
Labour reforms are not anti-worker.
No economy can succeed without a high-quality workforce, particularly in an age of globalization and technical change.
Jobs will come back when the economy recovers, but they will never be the same.
There can be no rise in the value of labour without a fall of profits.
Increased jobs are the consequence of increased trade. Increasing jobs more than output implies a fall in productivity and standards of living. That surely cannot be our goal.
If you get the government off our back, there's no economy in the world that can create more jobs in the long-term for everybody.
Free trade should not mean free labor.
In our high-tech, high-skilled economy where low-skilled work is being scaled back, phased out, exported, or severely under-compensated, all the right behavior in the world won't create better jobs with more pay.
American workers won't be able to compete fairly for jobs until companies have to pay higher wages in countries like China and India.
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