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Prosperity through voter action
June 28, 2010
Government paychecks and transfer payments outpace private sector personal income in Maine
 

One hot summer day, a retiree, a construction worker and a government employee took a break from their journey and went skinny-dipping. As they finished their swim, they saw a bear lumbering toward them. The construction worker grabbed his clothes and boots and started to run, only to see the other two taking their time putting on their shoes.

"Hey, you gotta run or the bear will eat you!" cried the laborer. The other two looked calmly at him and said in unison, "We don't have to outrun the bear, we just have to outrun you!"

Last week, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released its personal income data for the first quarter of 2010. In the last year, overall personal income rose 3.5 percent in Maine, compared with 1.9 percent for the entire United States. That statistic may make us feel that we've outrun our fellow U.S. citizens, but a closer look at the report suggests someone in Maine is getting gnawed on.

There are three broad categories of personal income to measure:

· Government workers

· Private sector workers

· Non-working citizens in Maine, generally retirees, who depend in part on government transfer payments for their personal income

Digging into the numbers explains why Maine is doing better than the nation.

Government employees in Maine have done very well over the last year. Roughly 15,000 federal government employees in Maine saw their average personal income rise by 8.4 percent, to an average of about $68,200.

Maine's 84,000 state and local government employees had an average 4.1 percent increase in personal income. State employees have an average income of about $45,000 and local government employees average about $35,000, according to the Maine Bureau of Labor Statistics. Their counterparts across the nation received less than a 1 percent increase.

The figures don't include health or retirement benefits, which average about 25 percent in the private sector and closer to 40 percent of the annual wage in the public sector. Also important to note is that 17 percent of all workers in Maine are employed by government while only 7 percent of the nation's work force is on the government payroll.

For retirees who did not work in the past year to earn their income, the value of those government transfer payments in Maine grew by 8.3 percent. Nationally, the figure was 9.2 percent.

Transfer payments are defined as: "Government payments to individuals (and) includes retirement and disability insurance benefits, medical payments (mainly Medicare and Medicaid), income maintenance benefits, unemployment insurance benefits, veterans' benefits, and federal grants and loans to students."

Even though retirees have paid into Social Security and Medicare, they are now getting far more value back from Social Security and health care benefits than they contributed.

Folks working in the private sector account for more than eight out of 10 jobs in Maine, yet they did the worst. Their overall personal income in the private sector grew by just 1.8 percent in the past year. The biggest winners for personal income growth were those working in accommodation and food services (5.7 percent) as well as health care and social assistance (5.2 percent).

Incomes dropped by almost 1 percent for those working in the higher-paid professional, scientific and technical services segment, as well as those in the finance and insurance (minus 4.7 percent) and construction (minus 4.4 percent) sectors.

These most recent numbers bring to light some thorny issues about public policy, employment compensation and social benefits. Public sector employee unions have negotiated successfully and in good faith for wages and benefits that are generous by most standards. And non-working retirees expect to have their benefits paid as promised.

But times have changed. The laborer is hobbled and the bear is hungry.

The two fellas lacing up their shoes with no urgency have forgotten that if the bear eats their pal, their source of income disappears. That's what's happening in Maine's economy.

The private sector is being gnawed by the bear without much assistance from the unionized public sector or from retirees whose growing sense of entitlement is a powerful political force.

In fact, the vast majority in the private sector sees government and expanded entitlement programs as impediments to staying ahead of the bear.

But if they're going to confront the bear, then all three have to ensure they are on equal footing. If they work together, they can expect to enjoy other days of bear-free swimming along the road they travel together.

 
...and for those who travel in search of a career
 
The following is excerpted from a letter-to-the-editor in the Bangor Daily News:

For years I've been told that it is more expensive to live out of state and it's hard to get a job. In my journeys out of state, I've noticed no shortage of jobs. In fact, on a recent trip to Virginia, practically every business I visited, from department stores to legitimate offices, was hiring.

Where are the jobs in Maine? I currently make $8 an hour with a college degree. There are no decent jobs for at least an hour from where I live. I only make $900 a month. I can't even get assistance because I make too much.

As for expenses, gas is on average 30 cents less a gallon in the South.

Apartments are about the same if not less than the ones in the Bangor area. Food as well as entertainment seems to be about the same cost in the South, and with more to do I am sure that my recent problems in getting a relationship would be solved. Everyone there is career minded, it seems.

In essence, what do I have to lose?

If you want to fix Maine, make it business friendly and encourage development. It's the only way that you'll get anyone my age to stay here. Wake up. Please.

Candidate Contact Information
 
We have posted the e-mail addresses of the general election candidates for Congress, Governor and the Maine Legislature on our web site. Please contact them and determine which are to your liking based on your view of Maine's future. Then, please forward this newsletter to your own contact list and, finally, get involved and support the election of the people you think will do the best job. Thanks!
 
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Tony Payne
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207-232-7830 
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Among the values of the Alliance is supporting a strong higher education system in Maine - one that prepares students to teach themselves for a lifetime. Access to educated and skilled employees is the key to attracting and retaining jobs in a competitive world economy. We encourage you to support higher education in Maine (University of Maine System, Maine Community Colleges) for your children, your co-workers and yourself. 
About the Alliance for Maine's Future

Our mission

 Improve the economic opportunities for all Maine people
by electing and supporting a bi-partisan majority of state legislators
who support a strong private sector and an efficient and affordable public sector. 

The Alliance for Maine's Future was formed in 2001 by Maine business leaders to 'Improve the Economic Opportunities for All Maine People'. A non-profit, non-partisan grassroots entity, AMF provides free education services designed to help employers and employees make informed choices when voting for state legislative candidates.

In addition, the affiliated AMF Maine Propserity PAC recruits and supports candidates for the Legislature who are experienced, thoughtful people willing to listen to both sides of an issue. They appreciate that both Maine's natural and economic environments are essential to enhancing the quality of life for all Maine people.

To learn more about the Alliance, go to: www.changeformaine.com or call us 207.232-7830. To financially support the Alliance in its education mission, click here! Be patient - it takes a minute load. Thanks!

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