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Season 6, Episode 182

Labor 131: Banking policy and its impact on labor

GENERIC LABOR 131 SIDEBAR

 

Guest Name:


Christopher Shaw

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On today’s edition of Labor 131, presented by the National Labor Office, Christopher Shaw, author and historian, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss the historical connection between labor and banking policy. Shaw explored the role of organized labor in shaping financial regulations, the decline of workers' engagement with banking issues and the potential for renewed activism in this arena.

Shaw highlighted how workers' activism led to crucial financial reforms during the Progressive Era and New Deal. He said these reforms, including creating the Federal Reserve and the FDIC, stabilized the banking system and contributed to mid-20th-century prosperity. Shaw emphasized that regular economic panics and depressions in the 19th and early 20th centuries were largely due to an unregulated banking system, prompting workers to demand regulations that would protect their interests and stabilize the economy.

The conversation then shifted to the erosion of these reforms in recent decades. Shaw pointed to the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999 as a pivotal moment that allowed the rise of financial conglomerates and set the stage for the 2007-2008 financial crisis. He noted that the decline in workers' engagement with banking policy, partly due to the success of earlier reforms, contributed to this deregulation trend. Shaw said the weakening of labor unions towards the end of the 20th century further diminished workers' influence on financial policy.

Despite the current challenges, Shaw expressed optimism about the potential for change. He drew parallels to the seemingly insurmountable power of Wall Street a century ago, which was eventually curbed through collective action and informed engagement. Shaw stressed the importance of workers becoming educated about banking issues and organizing to influence policy, emphasizing that "organized people can beat organized money" if they are informed and engaged.

Listen to the full episode for Shaw's in-depth analysis of labor's historical role in shaping banking policy and his vision for renewed activism.


America’s Work Force is the only daily labor podcast in the US and has been on the air since 1993, supplying listeners with useful, relevant input into their daily lives through fact-finding features, in-depth interviews, informative news segments and practical consumer reports. America’s Work Force is committed to providing an accessible venue in which America's workers and their families can hear discussion on important, relevant topics such as employment, healthcare, legislative action, labor-management relations, corporate practices, finances, local and national politics, consumer reports and labor issues.

America’s Work Force Union Podcast is brought to you in part by our sponsors: AFL-CIO, American Federation of Government Employees, American Federation of Musicians Local 4, Alliance for American Manufacturing, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes-IBT, Boyd Watterson, Columbus/Central Ohio Building and Construction Trades Council, Communication Workers of America, Mechanical Insulators Labor Management Cooperative Trust, International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers Local 50, International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Crafts, International Union of Painters and Allied Trades District Council 6, Ironworkers Great Lakes District Council, Melwood, The Labor Citizen newspaper, Laborers International Union of North America, The National Labor Office of Blue Cross and Blue Shield, North Coast Area Labor Federation, Ohio Federation of Teachers, United Labor Agency, United Steelworkers.

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