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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Fri Apr 4, 2014, 03:01 PM Apr 2014

Wage Theft is a Bigger Problem Than Other Theft—But Not Enough is Done to Protect Workers

http://www.epi.org/publication/wage-theft-bigger-problem-theft-protect/

Wage theft is a far bigger problem than bank robberies, convenience store robberies, street and highway robberies, and gas station robberies combined. Employers steal billions of dollars from their employees each year by working them off the clock, by failing to pay the minimum wage, or by cheating them of overtime pay they have a right to receive. Survey research shows that well over two-thirds of low-wage workers have been the victims of wage theft, but the governmental resources to help them recover their lost wages are scant and largely ineffective.

Few local governments have any resources or staff to combat wage theft, and several states have closed down or so severely cut back their labor departments that workers are left mostly unprotected and vulnerable to exploitation. The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) is the one agency that brings substantial resources to the effort to prevent and remedy wage theft, but its total staff of wage and hour investigators, about 1100 in all, is responsible for securing compliance from more than seven million employers. Nevertheless, in Fiscal Year 2012, DOL recovered $280 million in back pay for 308,000 workers. That amount – a small fraction of the total wage theft nationwide – far exceeded the total lost to criminals in street and highway, bank, gas station and convenience store robberies in 2012.

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Wage Theft is a Bigger Problem Than Other Theft—But Not Enough is Done to Protect Workers (Original Post) xchrom Apr 2014 OP
This worker tragedy has been happening for toooooooo long ... time to rectify .... nt MindMover Apr 2014 #1
It would be smart to address employee theft at the same time. Psephos Apr 2014 #2

Psephos

(8,032 posts)
2. It would be smart to address employee theft at the same time.
Fri Apr 4, 2014, 03:54 PM
Apr 2014

Both cost the economy billions.

For example, employee theft accounts for more loss from retailers than shoplifting (60% vs. 40%).

Direct employee theft of goods is between $30 and $40 billion yearly in the US.

Time theft is less easy to measure, but massive by all accounts. It's almost part of the worker culture to figure out how to appear to be working while doing something else. For example, picture the staff at the Securities and Exchange Commission who spent up to half their day surfing porn and the net at work prior to the 2008 crash. Not only did they get paid for not doing their job, but they failed to monitor and regulate massive economic crimes when there was still something that could be done about it.

I don't expect a lot of agreement with my post, but as someone who has experienced both kinds of theft - from my employer, and later, from my employees - I can tell you it stinks both ways, and the costs are passed on to everyone else. In short, those who steal are ultimately stealing from all those who don't.

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