Unknown Speaker 00:01 Got through her password, something sometimes securities and kind of a benefit that goes directly to them because of their work as hard as much as helpless. So that is kind of another area of demands the recognition of housework as work and some kind of remuneration for that work. Unknown Speaker 00:31 And because for us that's critical, most of working women are still not employed and given Unknown Speaker 00:41 and that perhaps isn't justice critical here as given the climate, opportunities, employment opportunities for particularly for lower educated. Another area of demand is certainly the demand for social services and the demand, the social services, social. I think you have a patient here, Mr. Carlos. Wilford writes me. And now they are organizing around the world, each going against this, which, in a sense, sometimes I think it's more like a threat than a reality because of course, the majority of Indian family are unable to work because of the other responsibilities. So it's more like saying you don't have a right it's a, it's a harassment, more than a cut that will be able to be imposed so dramatically. But still, it's it's a threat is harassment that must be paid. And in the cases of their accounts, and they're happy because they must be going against women, which we what I think might be struggling. Unknown Speaker 02:20 But I'd like to do that. So the gentleman, perhaps only in London, but first in Puerto Rico right now 9% of all and for people. Unknown Speaker 02:34 So maybe 2%, Unknown Speaker 02:37 I think has a lot to do with the legislation and other things in this country because it terminates with humor. Western democracy. In the 1970s, we have one of our best day Indian media used to meet the petrochemical workers. Back to Puerto Rico, create an a union of the south part of the island and the southern coast, and you put the request for the southern coast of unemployment. And that didn't go on for very long. But also, I would like to point out that in our type of economy, which is beginning to be very artificial, you have people going in and out of the labor force all the time. For reasons that they can't fathom that have nothing to do, we are being hard working, less working away. The factories left or the petrochemical people left or whatever. And all of a sudden, they're out of the labor market. And then for a while, they might go out and sell bananas, and we're having the corner, streetlights for my Italian business of their own and then they will go on welfare and then they somebody, some some other kinds of factory owner may have a chance to get off. So that it is when you speak of a working class. You're speaking we have a working class working class and marginals as well. And then they go on and now the one we have and we will not compare them to say for example, the British migrants who for generations have been married and have a strong conscience of being workers and miners. And so another thing that I would like to point out is that I label for older since 1938, or there abouts when the minimum salary Puerto Rico was second relations with this country by certain things that were done by industry. The law changed a little bit in the 50s was more or less the same as a result of this the minimum wage which in Puerto Rico to a large extent, particularly in jobs that provide variants skill was receding and not, Unknown Speaker 05:03 not the floor Unknown Speaker 05:07 achieving minimum wages, magnificent, whatever it was. So this minimum wage when it was achieved was achieved because the minimum wage here, Rose, you see the minimum wage in Puerto Rico is more or less about 75% of the minimum wage year after 1984. It's the same. And so it was it's not a history in that respect of workers struggles to gain that semblance of improvement in self improve out of the struggles of workers in this country, and will apply to the workers in that country, because the workers in this country Dr. legislation so that the salaries in Puerto Rico will not be so low that the factory will leave here, people live in this kind of skilled jobs. So that makes again, for a different sort of history, in this respect than what one is used to see. And also, I would also like to say that in Puerto Rico, over 30% of the employees are employees. And the strongest Union, we have the 9% of people unionized, or even the utilities, the government injection, because it's because when the government bought the utilities, the electric power, authority and reverse authority when there was a gun in the 1940s, that said that if they got some company, and we have a union, they're willing to do that be allowed the relationship with the government. So even though government workers, by and large, are not unionized, they're not allowed to be in, etc. These government workers, and the thing is, like, here, which is a unit of electrical work is one of the strongest physical indicators, which, again, these unusual uses. And it's our private company, the government. Unknown Speaker 07:27 Just showing things here and there, but to show that sort of out of kilter, if you consider them, considering as normal in other societies, Unknown Speaker 07:39 they're also very out of kilter here, and you're out of kilter in the sense that with technological change with the international economy whose jobs are designed all this, what you're going to hear from Washington now is all this discussion of the mixed match of people in jobs, you're also going to have an enormous number of women in the labor force. The good news union perspective is million members are more likely to be women. Because all the bad news that we all know that nine to five heads, the SEIU has poured an enormous amount of money into trying to unionize clerical workers. But as clerical jobs become part time and temporary, and so called contingent jobs, it becomes an extraordinary mechanism for employers to weaken their ties to the very people they hire, but the benefits come from outside the mobility ladders, lowering wages, etc. And in doing so, I mean, I, I have this sort of awful feeling that we will live through the first phase, even in some of our sexier sectors, like the public sector, where women are very likely to lose the games. They recently came Unknown Speaker 08:58 out in the public sector, I know what the week on is because of public sector employment as well. So as long as the one of the one of the graphs I have in my papers, here is also public sector employment in Puerto Rico in the Unknown Speaker 09:13 US. Yeah. Oh, that's, that's the 1000s and 1000s of employees. And then it does not include the the ticket just in terms of public sector. Jobs, but they have already talked about the winning young man at the university. Nobody anybody was injured. Tomorrow. I have already talked about this business of subcontracting and their work of very poor work and business as a result of working out without a contract without etc. Unknown Speaker 10:07 One thing I would add, to what extent can we expect these sectors, even these sectors, and just going from what you for us to continue increasing even as part time position? Because how long can an economist is to just clarify service employment without a solid base of production? Right. Unknown Speaker 10:35 Well, that's why United States is now a debtor nation because of our own export import. Issues upon shaky economy. Unknown Speaker 10:54 One quick question about Puerto Rico right now, can you comment in terms of your scenario in terms of the three parties, or their core policy makers within the statehood be in different bases in the Commonwealth party, who are at the young economist or someone struggling with alternatives other than the immigration is an alternative, or the four legs if you put Unknown Speaker 11:19 them what I would like to say that are that I'm looking for them. Because present, the government made it study. In fact, three of the government people made studies in 1982, when Reagan presented the saving CBI Plan Before He presented to Congress. So being studied with respect to Puerto Rico, and three of the political leaders. And another one that said the one thing even as far as we also present, the program, presented also the progress with the economy of Puerto Rico to be healthy for Jason, the CBI has originally proposed statutes to the economy to the repo. And when I looked at those programs, most of them except for the one, the Independence Party has 5% rule, or whatever. Most of them were just more of the same. Now with the factories, for example, they protected them supposedly for up to 1976 or 72 years. Here, we went, we did that before we went to the, to the factory plant, where it is built by the people who wanted specifications with Google, we don't have to be offensive to the very low price, we prepare their employees with the skills that they need. With the factory hires more than 100 employees for the first year, the government will pay their salary for the next time taxes we pay, we pay for the welfare today to listen, we also people earning interest to fight the fight with them to get the infrastructure necessary for industrialization. And then as a as an expert platform, the factory system in and out mean according to the world economic situation whenever they need and so on. So, for example, when I mentioned this, enter the sick thing, the pharmaceuticals have leased the argument, they have done it with paper, which they're good and they present the fact that they need to have this tax free status, because they have lost a large percentage of their overseas markets, the world market they have lost to the Germans and the Swiss and so on, unless they have a tax free status or they have a using proto people to sort of down their profits, they will not be able to compete with the Nationals. And so that's the way that is, but I don't see the ones that I see are as I said, some former students of mine who are in graduate school CMBS and the dumb University, some they they had hoped the story of the what I call the diagnosis about the situation, whenever going up and going to college. And they also secretly, some of them are now doing a doctorate to bring their master's degree and trying to look at these economies at work. I mentioned Pacific consultant and trying to bring some new ideas to the table but the industrialist organization was a major study in 1983 And when I read it was again more of the same you know, I mean yet they were open to everybody wants to come from China, what else can we do for them? Let's do this. Let's do that. I mean, obviously the world isn't functioning that way today. So why keep on doing the same thing? That's my my Unknown Speaker 14:45 comment on that preservative systems because no we wouldn't make capitalism has ever accumulated is from workers. Yeah. The only way? Yeah. So you said sort of incidentally, that those countries have totalitarian system. So yeah, I know the reason I'm asking you about the struggles of women and others is because, you know, I I questioned whether there is any other way any other pathway to to some other kind of system, then through that kind of consciousness that has been, it's trying to create something different. So I don't want to pretend your students but I, I, I questioned whether, you know, another kind of state plan to accumulate capital really familiar conditions story. Unknown Speaker 15:39 Yes. And I will also say that Puerto Rico, again there, I will also say that Puerto Rico tried to jump that particularly horrible stage, they also want to in socialist countries, of the 2030 years of accumulating capital, maybe by making sleep and by bringing capital from the outside. But while we did that was momento that was in the 1950s, or 60s or the government. And I remember one of the lightest people's we ever had was the American government. We had we had one of the ones I know about, I know exactly when all the government issues, but the last two were very great. One was that young lady who was in Puerto Rico for exactly one year and was said to be Ambassador fishy from the United States usually accepted. And the second one was very Unknown Speaker 16:31 government and government. Unknown Speaker 16:35 When Fomento first invented this business of bringing the factories from outside, you own it for the buyer and Tasha law to the legislature to the to the centimeters the legislation said we have been trying for the last six years to get absentee landowners out of Puerto Rico. And that feedback doesn't make sense. She wants to Unknown Speaker 17:06 know what the president of Puerto Rico is doing. Unknown Speaker 17:12 Whatever he was doing about the primary school? Well, the main thing it's done about quality for the last 13 years, is that the United States government before Unknown Speaker 17:26 and of course, it's always talking about creating Trump's, he always talks about the average governor of New television, you know, instead of the Commonwealth message, he's always talking about creating jobs and the President visit Japan, we visit Saudi Arabia because they have some mental with people. I have to admit, probably six months ago, that they weren't making any jobs. But he asked them we the public, we said they sent me some of the jobs we have to the rest of the Caribbean conspired with me. What shall we say, contribution to the CBI? But but they're not the same. We have to create the job that we have said we haven't been able to create jobs, Unknown Speaker 18:17 but when creating jobs also presuppose to suppose natural resources that Unknown Speaker 18:22 yes, yes, but there are some natural resources and also there are some possibilities the government another thing has been offered here the nice thing about and then lastly, kids, I mean, most common causes and stages of changing cause and poverty are forming software developers. They've all been offering to have industry created by Puerto Rican enterpreneurs in Puerto Rico small scale industry to start and have government support to solve them every year when he comes to see the results nothing very important. So that they just show me that they told me Unknown Speaker 19:06 I guess I would say that we have had prior employment before so it means that entire employment is possible that has paralyzed an Unknown Speaker 19:25 infant while people Unknown Speaker 19:30 granted that it wasn't I agree with government. Unknown Speaker 19:36 But But certainly, particularly has a program that seems to the government tries to go to meetings. Me Thank you. I believe that there have to be greater and greater changes in the members of the voting by just Unknown Speaker 20:12 one vote Unknown Speaker 20:19 that's precisely what I was getting against but there is a bit of social decomposition guide on the Friday lives Imagine we don't even have the rest of the book Unknown Speaker 20:51 Trump says love it well okay you don't want to Unknown Speaker 21:04 give me your address I can send you a Unknown Speaker 21:07 copy here Unknown Speaker 21:07 I did my dissertation I Unknown Speaker 21:09 really loved this also circulated and one of the things I tried to mention here on the screen what is going on there thank you so much this is not my area but that was Unknown Speaker 21:53 one of my mistake I even said that what is going on at present is really like a civil war and I guess we welcome people can learn nothing also it's very passive income and the people who are running the country those who serve the financial blocks and they think Unknown Speaker 22:22 yes everyone's so good to say us which is Unknown Speaker 22:48 really under Unknown Speaker 22:51 people's minds as to sort of what I Unknown Speaker 23:00 was trying to get out and then when I knew it wasn't a look right Unknown Speaker 23:36 now for the Unknown Speaker 23:55 most see any change in the status layer if you're starting to die soon you Unknown Speaker 24:04 just don't see it. Unknown Speaker 24:05 I mean, from the point of view of things you know, Unknown Speaker 24:09 and therefore it Unknown Speaker 24:12 doesn't it doesn't carry on dedicate my time in this video to change the guard moving out the daddy daddy going on now yeah, yes, you're right. You're right. You represent America. You don't have to upgrade to but Unknown Speaker 25:05 I've always been a Unknown Speaker 25:06 mentioned some of the Unknown Speaker 25:09 data that already stuck in the nail for my knowledge Unknown Speaker 25:23 that goes from Unknown Speaker 25:32 left to right and not go there not only in their business and ego but in the other end instead you're gonna be better Unknown Speaker 26:13 at work you seen an integration situation fix it so Unknown Speaker 26:25 you can see how it works Unknown Speaker 26:32 look at what we came up with I have a 10 minute 10 minute different levels of thinking we were not in one accord we know them to do anything really because they have everything working for them messiness appears Unknown Speaker 27:45 to be getting cast evening we're gonna get outside the physical retail fleet I'm just so grateful my Unknown Speaker 28:50 job the most interesting for me number two we have many of Unknown Speaker 29:13 you Monica Andrea over here but afterwards I was thinking about being acceptable so they will say you know the idea of any of the piano singing Our appointment Okay like I said casino can take care of the game but I don't know if you guys so well nothing has happened when I told you Unknown Speaker 31:00 safely at this time a bad Unknown Speaker 31:19 thing going on