Illinois dead last in job creation in 2014
Illinois dead last in job creation in 2014
Illinois’ labor force shrank by 17,100 people in July, according to a release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. BLS also reported that the state’s unemployment rate fell to 6.8 percent from 7.1 percent. However, the entire decline in the July unemployment rate came as a result of workers quitting the workforce. This grim news...
By Michael Lucci
Repeal death, franchise taxes by ending cronyism
Repeal death, franchise taxes by ending cronyism
Illinois government does some strange things. A case in point is how the state treats people and businesses that create jobs. Illinoisans are subject to both a death tax and a franchise tax. The death tax is a special tax on wealthy people just for the privilege of dying in the state of Illinois. This...
By Michael Lucci
Illinois still 170,000 jobs away from recovery
Illinois still 170,000 jobs away from recovery
Illinois gained 10,300 jobs in July, according to the Illinois Department of Employment Security, or IDES. The Quinn camp was quick to tout this number as an indicator of the administration’s success. However, by comparison Illinois only created 10,600 net new jobs in first 66 months of Quinn’s tenure. Perhaps the Quinn administration believes that...
By Michael Lucci
Liquor license moratoriums highlight unchecked power of Chicago aldermen
Liquor license moratoriums highlight unchecked power of Chicago aldermen
It may seem obvious that a business owner should have the right to sell their business to someone else. But in Chicago, basic property rights take a back seat to arbitrary regulation and a system of aldermanic privilege that can put those rights in the hands of a single politician. Parlour on Clark, a once-popular...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Illinois paychecks shrink
Illinois paychecks shrink
Illinoisans enjoyed a larger paycheck than their Iowa counterparts for 30 years – until 2012. For the first time ever, the median household in Iowa surpassed its Illinois counterpart, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. If you lined up all households in order of income, the median household would be the one in the very...
By Michael Lucci
Illinois: Turning around or running in place?
Illinois: Turning around or running in place?
Gov. Pat Quinn is claiming that Illinois is making a comeback. But the evidence, supported by public opinion, belies that fact. Illinois remains an economic basket case: The state has the fastest-shrinking workforce in the nation Illinois has the second-highest property taxes in the country, as well as a high tax burden on individual and business incomes Illinois is the third-most corrupt state in the country Illinois loses one resident...
By Naomi Lopez Bauman
U.S. workforce grows, Illinois’ shrinks
U.S. workforce grows, Illinois’ shrinks
U.S. nonfarm payrolls added 208,000 workers in the month of July, against consensus expectations of 230,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The national unemployment rate ticked up to 6.2 percent. However, one of the reasons for the increase is that the number of people in the workforce increased. It is healthy for workforce...
By Michael Lucci
To catch up with Uber, Chicago taxi group proposes … higher fares?
To catch up with Uber, Chicago taxi group proposes … higher fares?
The taxi industry complains endlessly that ridesharing services such as UberX and Lyft are hurting its business. Now an AFL-CIO-affiliated group of Chicago cab drivers is seeking to improve its members’ fortunes by pushing the city to mandate higher taxi fares. But hiking prices doesn’t seem like a good way to save an industry that...
Illinois’ disappearing workforce
Illinois’ disappearing workforce
Since the Great Recession began, Illinois’ workforce participation has dropped more than that of any other state in the Midwest. That means that working-age Illinoisans have given up and left the workforce more rapidly than in surrounding states. A full 3.9 percent of Illinois’ adult population has quit the workforce since January 2008. The state’s...
By Michael Lucci
Quinn seeks unpaid interns, higher minimum wage
Quinn seeks unpaid interns, higher minimum wage
Perusing Gov. Pat Quinn’s website, one can easily find calls for increasing Illinois’ minimum wage to $10 from $8.25. Just a few clicks away is an application to work for the governor, full time: for free. If Quinn did what he says he wants every Illinois employer to do – pay these workers $10 an...
By Austin Berg
Illinois should join the crowdfunding revolution
Illinois should join the crowdfunding revolution
Illinois needs to pass a law to create space for this financial innovation, allowing families to invest in local businesses through crowdfunding.
By Michael Lucci
Illinois workforce shrinks by largest margin in state history
Illinois workforce shrinks by largest margin in state history
In June, Illinois suffered the largest monthly workforce loss in recorded state history. June’s workforce loss was worse than the worst month of the Great Recession. Overall, 21,700 Illinoisans gave up and left the workforce in June; in September 2008, 17,500 Illinoisans quit the workforce. (Bureau of Labor Statistics data go back to 1976.) This...
By Michael Lucci
Illinois should strive for better marks on hair-braiding regulations
Illinois should strive for better marks on hair-braiding regulations
The state of Illinois received a near-failing grade for the quality of its natural-hair-braiding licensing rules, according to a new study released by the Institute for Justice. The study overviews natural-hair-braiding (a popular beauty practice among African and African-American communities in the U.S.) regulations in every state in the country, ranking each one based on...
By Bryant Jackson-Green
Illinois has a cow over raw milk
Illinois has a cow over raw milk
The Illinois Department of Public Health is posed to release new, stricter regulations on the sale of raw milk in Illinois this month, several media outlets report. But many small-farm operators are concerned they won’t be able to meet the new standards. Raw milk sales have only been growing more popular in recent years, and...
By Bryant Jackson-Green