New York

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Bridge and Tunnel Crowd

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 30/01/2024 - 2:03am in

For a few hours on the morning of January 8, Gaza was everybody’s problem.

The More of Us There Are, The More of Us There Are

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/12/2023 - 7:37am in

Tags 

New York, Politics


Harron Walker: Hi, Nan. Let’s begin with your decision, this past November, to pull out of a cover shooting for the New York Times Magazine. On Instagram, you cited the newspaper’s “complicity with Israel” and its anti-Palestinian bias, “how they question the veracity of anything Palestinians say.” What prompted you to make that decision?  Nan […]

Be True to Your Bar

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 07/12/2023 - 12:59am in

Whither the gay bar?

NYC Is Giving Teens Free Online Therapy

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 06/12/2023 - 7:00pm in

Three great stories we found on the internet this week.

Help in hand

Good news for teens who need to talk: As part of a broader effort to address rising mental health concerns since the start of the pandemic, New York City has launched a program that will provide free online therapy. 

The initiative, called NYC Teenspace, enables New Yorkers ages 13 to 17 to text, call and video chat with licensed therapists via the online platform Talkspace. 

Though live sessions are limited to one per month, texting is unlimited — and valuable. “We have learned that when people face something stressful, messaging is a powerful tool at their fingertips,” said Talkspace CEO Jon Cohen.

Read more at Chalkbeat

Building resilience

Bamboo is having an architectural moment. Yasmeen Lori, an award-winning architect — and the first practicing female architect in Pakistan — is using the material to build structures for displaced Pakistanis. The Heritage Foundation of Pakistan, which Lori founded, has built nearly 40,000 homes since 2022’s devastating monsoon floods. And it’s aiming to hit one million in the next couple of years.


Become a sustaining member today!

Join the Reasons to be Cheerful community by supporting our nonprofit publication and giving what you can.

Lori draws a key distinction: these aren’t disaster relief shelters, but rather disaster-resistant homes. They are designed to be easily repaired, added to and, of course, replicated. Plus, bamboo can be harvested much more quickly than traditional timber, and bamboo products can store carbon.

“Architects call it natural steel,” said Liu Kewei, an engineer who has worked on bamboo projects elsewhere. “It’s really a marvelous material.”

Read more at the Washington Post

Hatching plans

The kiwi, a brown bird that one observer recently described as resembling an “avocado with legs,” is New Zealand’s most iconic animal. But while these flightless, nocturnal creatures could once be found all over the country, today there are only an estimated 70,000, mostly in remote areas.

A baby kiwi being nursed in an avian nursery.A baby kiwi being nursed in an avian nursery. Credit: K Ireland / Shutterstock

That’s why it’s a big deal that two hatchlings have been discovered just three miles from the bustle of Wellington — the first, experts say, to be born in the wild in the area in living memory. This marks a small but critical victory for a multi-year conservation effort, which included reducing predator populations and reintroducing kiwis into nearby farmlands.

There’s a long road ahead, and those Wellingtonian hatchlings still have to make it to adulthood. But it’s a “special moment,” says Pete Kirkman, the conservationist who found them.

Read more at the New York Times

The post NYC Is Giving Teens Free Online Therapy appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.

Recent Disparities in Earnings and Employment

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/12/2023 - 11:00pm in

Dectorative image of collage of polaroids of diverse group of people portraits.

The New York Fed recently released its latest set of Equitable Growth Indicators (EGIs). Updated quarterly, the EGIs continue to report demographic and geographic differences in inflation, earnings (real and nominal), employment, and consumer spending (real and nominal) at the national level. This release also launches a set of national wealth EGIs (which will be examined more closely on Liberty Street Economics early next year). Going forward, EGI releases will also include a set of regional EGIs, which will present disparities in inflation, earnings (real and nominal), employment, and consumer spending (real and nominal) in our region. Drawing on the just released EGIs, in this post, we present recent gender gaps in the labor market at the national and regional levels. We provide a picture of how gender wage and employment disparities have evolved since the pandemic, examining and contrasting gaps at the national and regional level. We find that the gaps between the employment rates and earnings of men and women have declined steadily following the pandemic, but have declined perceptibly more so in our region than in the nation.

Data

We use monthly, seasonally adjusted data on average weekly earnings and employment for men and women aged sixteen and older from the Current Population Survey. Creating a national panel, we draw a data set from respondents in all fifty states and Washington, D.C. We also conduct an analysis at the regional level, which includes respondents residing in New York State and the New York Metropolitan Statistical Area, except for Pennsylvania. We consider the time period from January 2019 to October 2023.

Labor Market Disparities

Gender wage and employment gaps have long been a persistent feature of the U.S. economy. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was much uncertainty over how the event would impact these disparities. The shuttering of daycare centers and schools introduced concerns about the disproportionate number of women leaving the workforce to care for their children.

A more permanent change to labor market paradigms has been the rise in popularity of remote work. As more and more companies offered remote work options, many people have wondered: whether the increased flexibility would improve women’s labor market participation; whether women disproportionately taking advantage of remote work would be penalized compared to men who work in-person; or if the decline in childcare provided by in-person schooling might hinder women’s labor force participation. We examine how the labor market trends have evolved in the nation and in the region.

Employment Disparities

The gender gap for the employment to population ratio (or employment rate) at the national and regional levels between January 2019 and October 2023 is shown in the chart below. The employment gap is defined as the percentage point difference between the employment rate for men and the employment rate for women. Before the March 2020 pandemic and recession, the national and regional gender employment gaps were roughly equal, 12 and 12.6 percentage points, respectively. However, during the pandemic recession, both the national and the regional gender gap increased sharply, with the national gap approaching 13 percentage points in June 2020 and the regional gap exceeding 14 percentage points in August 2020. Women were more likely to exit employment than men during the pandemic recession for a variety of reasons, including more tenuous attachment to the labor force, shorter tenure in their current job, and the absence of in-person schooling as a source of childcare.

The Gender Employment Gap Has Declined at the National Level since the Pandemic but Perceptibly More Sharply in the Region

Liberty Street Economics line chart showing the gender gap for the employment to population ratio (in percentage terms) at the national and regional levels between January 2019 and October 2023.Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Equitable Growth Indicators.

After these temporary increases, the national and regional gender employment gaps decreased at steady rates until mid-2022. Since then, the regional disparity declined perceptibly faster than the national gap. By October 2023, the gender employment gap had shrunk to around 10.9 percentage points at the national level and 8.7 percentage points at the regional level. Thus, employment gaps for women that initially widened at the onset of the pandemic have returned to a declining trend and fallen to well below pre-pandemic levels. The gender gap also declined faster in the region than in the nation as a whole. Although the regional and the national gap were very close in 2019, the regional gender gap is now over 2 percentage points less than the national gap.

Earnings Disparities

We now turn to looking at the gender gap in earnings, defined as the percentage difference between the earnings of men and women. The regional and national gender earnings gap trends, displayed in the chart below, are more volatile than the employment gaps. As the regional gaps are particularly volatile, we also present a smoothed regional gap to better appreciate the ways in which the regional gaps differ from the national gaps.

In 2019 and early 2020, both national and regional gender earnings gaps were decreasing, with disparities in our region substantially smaller than national ones. In December 2019, before the onset of the pandemic, gender earnings gaps hit a trough of 21.2 percent at the national level and 16.7 percent at the regional level, implying women earned 78.8 percent and 83.3 percent of what men earned, respectively. However, the declining trend was reversed as the pandemic brought on labor market changes, with women earning as much as 24 percent less than men at both the regional and national level in March 2020.

Part of the reason for this sharp reversal may have been selection: many lower-earning jobs mostly held by men, may have borne the brunt of layoffs during the very acute contraction of March 2020, leading to the men remaining employed being disproportionately those with higher earnings. Another reason may have been that women, who could afford to, dropped out of the labor force for childcare, as schools closed at the beginning of the pandemic.

Gender Earnings Gap Has Declined at the National Level since the Pandemic, but More So in the Region

Liberty Street Economics line chart showing the gender gap in earnings, defined as the percentage difference between male and female earnings, at the national and regional levels, between January 2019 and October 2023.Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Equitable Growth Indicators.

As the pandemic eased, gender earnings gaps in both the nation and region declined. However, the regional gap flatlined between early 2022 and mid-2023, declining after that. In contrast, the national gap continued to decline slowly but steadily following the pandemic. The smoothed version of the regional gap shows more clearly that gender earnings disparities declined more sharply in the region than in the nation immediately following the pandemic, and generally remained lower than those in the nation. The national gap is less volatile, gradually decreasing to 18 percent by the end of October 2023. The regional gap did not decrease as rapidly for much of 2023, but has fallen to 16 percent in recent months.

Looking at the real earnings of men and women separately, as we do in this quarter’s EGIs, both in the nation as a whole and even more starkly in the region, women’s real earnings have tended to grow consistently faster than the real earnings of men. Overall, between January 2020 and October 2023, the national and regional gender earnings gap have decreased by more than 3 percentage points each. As of October 2023, men make 16 percent more than women do in our region, compared to 18 percent in the nation.

Conclusion

With the rise of remote work in recent years and the shock of the COVID-19 pandemic, it has been an open question how gender gaps in the labor market would evolve. We provide an analysis of trends in gender employment and earnings gaps at the national and regional level drawing on the New York Fed EGIs. We find that after initial increases during the COVID-19 pandemic, gender gaps at the national and regional level have decreased to below pre-pandemic levels for both employment rate and earnings. Although national and regional employment gaps were similar pre-pandemic, by October 2023 both employment and earnings gaps have become substantially lower in our region—which was particularly affected by the pandemic and its associated changes—compared to the national level.

Our findings are consistent with the increased incidence of work from home following the COVID-19 pandemic, which offered workers greater flexibility in balancing career and family. Women, especially more educated women, disproportionately took advantage of working from home, relative to before, which led to their increased: labor force participation, employment rate, and earnings relative to those of men. This effect may have been stronger in our region because of its relatively greater reliance on remote work, and because of its relatively more educated female workforce that was better positioned to take advantage of remote work. By making it easier to combine career and family, in the words of 2023 Nobel Laureate Claudia Goldin, remote work may have provided a “silver lining” to the effect of the pandemic on women.

National Earnings Report                  National Employment Report

Regional Earnings Report                  Regional Employment Report

Chart data excel icon

Portrait of Rajashri Chakrabarti

Rajashri Chakrabarti is the head of Equitable Growth Studies in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Research and Statistics Group.  

image of Kasey Chatterji-Len

Kasey Chatterji-Len is a research analyst in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Research and Statistics Group.

image of Dan Garcia

Dan Garcia is a research analyst in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Research and Statistics Group.

 portrait of Maxim Pinkovskiy

Maxim Pinkovskiy is an economic research advisor in Equitable Growth Studies in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Research and Statistics Group.

How to cite this post:
Rajashri Chakrabarti, Kasey Chatterji-Len, Dan Garcia, and Maxim Pinkovskiy, “Recent Disparities in Earnings and Employment,” Federal Reserve Bank of New York Liberty Street Economics, December 1, 2023, https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2023/12/recent-disparities....

Dectorative image of collage of polaroids of diverse group of people portraits.

Equitable Growth Indicators

Dectorative image of collage of polaroids of diverse group of people portraits.

The EGIs: Analyzing the Economy Through an Equitable Growth Lens

 A Research Series

Economic Inequality: A Research Series

Disclaimer
The views expressed in this post are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System. Any errors or omissions are the responsibility of the author(s).

Video: former US Israel adviser arrested after disgusting Islamophobic hate-speech tirades

Stuart Seldowitz’s foul and shameless verbal assaults on street food vendor finally have consequences. He now offers to apologise

Pro-Israel former US government adviser Stuart Seldowitz has been arrested after a shameless and disgusting series of tirades against a Muslim street food vendor.

Seldowitz was filmed – and knew he was being filmed – smiling as he asked the man whether he had raped his daughter, threatened to send details of his family to the Egyptian secret police so they could pull out his father’s fingernails and, appallingly, said that four thousand Palestinian children slaughtered in Gaza wasn’t ‘enough’.

And he went back repeatedly to do it, as videos of him in different outfits show:

Seldowitz was Deputy Director in the US State Department’s Office of Israel and Palestinian Affairs from 1999 to 2003. It’s not hard to imagine whose side he was on during his ‘service’ – and his lack of hesitation as he was filmed suggests he thought he was above consequences for his racism and actions.

However, while New York Police reportedly originally said they could take no action because he was exercising his freedom of speech, Seldowitz has now been arrested for aggravated racial harassment and four counts of stalking – and in an embarrassing climbdown that his actions suggest has everything to do with avoiding prosecution, has offered to apologise to the man he abused:

Seldowitz’s arrogance is all too typical of the attitude of supporters of Israeli violence and apartheid, who treat scrutiny as antisemitic and even as ‘holocaust denial’.

Israel has slaughtered more than 15,000 civilians, around half of them children, and has bombed schools, hospitals and the homes of doctors and journalists in its campaign to empty Gaza for its own purposes, committing widespread war crimes. Its pretext – that it is ‘defending itself’ after supposed atrocities by Hamas, is falling apart daily as its ‘evidence’ for Hamas’s presence in hospitals is rightly mocked and its admissions continue, unreported by the so-called ‘mainstream’ media in this country, that Israeli forces killed hundreds of their own people on 7 October.

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

Smoke Week

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 15/06/2023 - 3:27am in

Tags 

Ecology, New York


On the weather map on my phone, as I stood and consulted it at 81st and Central Park West, the color-coded diagram of the plumes scorching and stretching south from Ottawa looked exactly like a circa-2004 televised aerial heat map visualization of some especially deadly nighttime moment in a town somewhere in Basra. The colors populating my Instagram feed when I swiped over from the weather map—filtered, balanced, enhanced—were similarly vivid and lively, the colors of harvests and autumn leaves. In real life at midday, the chromatic effects on Central Park West were more like sepia, paprika, piss.

I’m Fucking Agitated, Are You Going to Murder Me?

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 10/05/2023 - 12:42am in

Tags 

New York


Real estate greed, the glutted police budget, ceaseless gentrification, racist journalists, Eric Adams, Kathy Hochul, white people—we cycled through the injustices, against them, resuscitating despair into focused rage.

A Strike Diary

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 24/12/2022 - 1:57am in

Tags 

New York


Then the parents threatened a class-action lawsuit. The students occupied a university building. The full-time faculty began rumbles about a vote of no confidence against the president. They had nowhere left to go.

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