Jobs + Growth

The 20 percenters

The 20 percenters

In one in five U.S. families, no one has a job. Not mom. Not dad. Not grandma or grandpa. No one. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that in 2013, there were nearly 81 million families in the United States. Of that number, about 16 million families reported that nobody in their household had a...

By Hilary Gowins

Gallup: Half of Illinoisans would leave the state if they could

Gallup: Half of Illinoisans would leave the state if they could

Gallup released a stunning poll that shows 50 percent of Illinoisans want to leave the state, the highest percentage of any state nationally. This comes a week after Illinois’ worst-in-the nation performance in a Gallup poll that showed one in four Illinoisans consider Illinois to be the worst possible place to live. If Illinois government...

By Michael Lucci

1 in 4 Illinoisans think state worst place to live in U.S.

1 in 4 Illinoisans think state worst place to live in U.S.

Illinoisans are frustrated. But the depths of that frustration may not have been evident until now. According to a recent Gallup survey: “Illinois has the unfortunate distinction of being the state with the highest percentage of residents who say it is the worst possible place to live. One in four Illinois residents (25%) say the state is...

By Naomi Lopez Bauman

Two major problems with proposed Chicago pedicab regulations

Two major problems with proposed Chicago pedicab regulations

A Chicago City Council committee will consider a new set of restrictions on pedicabs at a hearing this week. Many specifics of the proposal, introduced by 44th Ward Alderman Tom Tunney, are unexceptional, but two provisions stand out as unnecessarily harmful to the pedicab market and consumer choice. For one, the ordinance arbitrarily caps the...

By Bryant Jackson-Green

Want a job? Move to a state that doesn’t tax work

Want a job? Move to a state that doesn’t tax work

Do high taxes help or hinder a state? The Fiscal Policy Center at Voices for Illinois Children thinks high taxes are a good thing. The group released a study recently claiming that states that levy high personal income taxes outperform states that don’t tax income at all. They use their study as a justification for...

By Michael Lucci

IRS data show more taxpayers fleeing Illinois

IRS data show more taxpayers fleeing Illinois

Internal Revenue Service migration data for the 2010 tax year shows that Illinois continues to lose people to other states. Illinois had a net loss of 49,000 residents to other states, along with a net loss of $1.9 billion in personal income. Not only did Illinois lose more people than it gained, but the state also...

By Michael Lucci

Illinois loses 3,200 payroll jobs, another business exits the state

Illinois loses 3,200 payroll jobs, another business exits the state

Illinois lost 3,200 payroll jobs in March, and the state’s unemployment rate ticked down to 8.4 percent from 8.7 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Illinois’ month-over-month change in payroll jobs was the third-worst nationally. Only Pennsylvania and Virginia lost more jobs. This news comes fresh on the heels of the announcement by...

By Michael Lucci

The myth of an Illinois comeback

The myth of an Illinois comeback

Myth: Gov. Pat Quinn says that Illinois is a regional leader in job creation, and that the state is making a comeback. Fact: Illinois has ranked at the bottom of regional job comparisons since the Great Recession hit. Illinoisans suffer a jobless rate that is the second-worst in the nation and the highest in the...

By Michael Lucci

Ridesharing victory over cronyism

Ridesharing victory over cronyism

This session, a bill was introduced to the Illinois General Assembly that would impose draconian regulations on Uber and Lyft’s ridesharing programs. This legislation was crafted by the cab unions with the intention of drastically increasing regulation so as to maintain monopoly control over the urban transportation market. In addition to stifling the free market,...

By Matt Paprocki

Metropolitan area jobs crisis continues

Metropolitan area jobs crisis continues

Illinois’ 10 largest metropolitan areas continue to be plagued with joblessness, according to a release by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This news comes on the heels of no monthly improvement in the state jobless rate, which at 8.7 percent is 2 points higher than the national average. Illinois has the second highest jobless rate...

By Michael Lucci

Tell your legislators now to save UberX and Lyft in Chicago!

Tell your legislators now to save UberX and Lyft in Chicago!

The taxi lobby has been trying to get Chicago to destroy ridesharing services like UberX and Lyft, but it hasn’t worked because the services are just too popular in the city. So now the taxi industry has turned to Springfield for help crushing the competition, and it looks like state legislators might be about to...

LLC fees hurt low-income entrepreneurs

LLC fees hurt low-income entrepreneurs

The Illinois Senate passed Senate Bill 2776 to lower the cost to create a Limited Liability Company to $39 from $500. This piece of legislation, which rightfully received bipartisan support, will take effect immediately upon receiving Gov. Pat Quinn’s signature. LLC fees are unnecessary and harm low-income entrepreneurs. In fact, LLC fees function like a...

By Michael Lucci

U.S. joblessness stays steady, Illinois lags

U.S. joblessness stays steady, Illinois lags

The U.S. jobless rate remained at 6.7 percent in March, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The national jobless measure has not improved for three months. U.S. payrolls picked up 192,000 workers in March, slightly below expectations of 200,000. Employment gains were made in professional and business services (57,000), food and drink services (30,000),...

By Michael Lucci

Rideshare drivers and customers to Chicago City Council: don’t kill these jobs

Rideshare drivers and customers to Chicago City Council: don’t kill these jobs

I don’t usually enjoy sitting through Chicago City Council committee meetings. The ones I’ve attended have typically involved aldermen blustering about how the city needs to ban, restrict or control one thing or another, with no regard for individual rights or economic sense. But last Thursday’s meeting of the council’s Committee on License and Consumer...