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Stephanie Ruhle gets it right. If businesses want workers, pay them more.

Stephanie Ruhle gets it right. If businesses want worker, pay them more.

MSNBC Host Stephanie Ruhle did not mince her words. She pointed out that businesses should pay more if they want more workers. Full stop.

Stephanie Ruhle makes a lot of sense.

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Today’s jobs report is out and it is not what was expected. Many thought that over one million jobs would be created.

The US economy added 266,000 jobs in April, a huge miss compared to the 1 million jobs economists expected. The unemployment rate in April ticked up a bit to 6.1 percent, as the number of jobs added didn’t outpace the size of the workforce. The Black unemployment rate increased to 9.7 percent, while the white unemployment rate fell to 5.3 percent.

The news left many people, well, shook. “This is a big miss that changes how we think about the recovery,” University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers tweeted. Indeed economist Nick Bunker wrote that it “might be one of the most disappointing jobs numbers of all time.”

“Obviously, this is an incredibly disappointing report,” Bunker told Vox in an interview. “All the signs from all the other data that we have is that demand for workers is quite strong, and the report today, while it doesn’t point in the direction of, say, massive labor shortages, it suggests that there is some hesitancy out there on behalf of workers to take out some jobs, be it because of fear of the virus, child care constraints, or concerns about the instability of jobs.”

Some attempt to create the narrative that American workers flushed with stimulus extended unemployment are sitting on their couches not working because they are getting an equivalent of $15/hour for doing nothing. In a society of supply and demand, one would expect wages to go up to get those people off of the couch. But the parasitic nature of business would prefer that the government stop sending the American worker any relief.

For once, some workers are getting a break, a long-overdue reprieve. Businesses and the wealthy have grown on the backs of the American worker for too long. A break is long overdue. But long term, pay the damn workers what they are really worth. And while a minimum wage increase law is necessary, just maybe, the current environment will force one.

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