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Let’s Celebrate: Exxon Mobil Is Making Record-Breaking Profits

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by Tula Connell, May 1, 2008

Trying to keep up with the bad economic news can take up most waking hours these days.  

Just in the past few days, the following have been reported:  

  • U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) grew at a miniscule rate in the past quarter—0.6 percent, giving the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) cause to frame the data this way: “GDP flashing recession.”
  • So what does a pathetic little increase in GDP mean in concrete terms? Says EPI economist L. Josh Bivens: “Annual growth of less than 2.5 percent is a recipe for rising unemployment. We’re already seeing this in three consecutive months of job loss, and considering the GDP numbers…we’ll surely see more in the coming months.”
  • How bad is our nation’s health care crisis? In a Kaiser Family Foundation poll, 7 percent of Americans say they or someone in their household decided to marry in the last year so they could get health care benefits via their spouse.

  • Median black families have only about one-tenth as much in wealth holdings (including home equity) as median white households ($11,800 for blacks compared to $118,300 for whites). When home equity is removed from the calculations, the picture is even more dire: The median white family holds $36,100 in non-home wealth compared with $300 for blacks—for every $100 held by white families, the median black family holds only about 83 cents.
  • U.S. home foreclosures continue to skyrocket. In the three months ending in March, the number of foreclosures totaled 649,917, up 23 percent from the previous quarter and 112 percent from the first quarter of 2007, according to RealtyTrac.
  • The effects of the mortgage crisis are beginning to reverberate far beyond foreclosures. Home Depot, the world’s biggest home-improvement retailer, is closing 15 stores and firing 1,300 workers. The home furnishing store Bombay, is shutting down all its 360 stores in the United States. Levitz, the Sharper Image and others have filed for bankruptcy, and other stores, like Linens & Things, are “looking vulnerable.”
  • High oil and food costs also are shell-shocking the nation’s economy. U.S. manufacturing output shrank for a third consecutive month in April, as employment shrank and prices increased. Says Bloomberg: “Manufacturers, which account for 12 percent of the economy, are cutting back as surging fuel and food costs and job losses cause consumers and businesses to retrench.”

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3 Comments

  1. Sally on 02.05.2008 at 18:54 (Reply)

    I heard yesterday on NPR that the cost of gasoline had gone up 18% since Jan 2007 and Exxon’s net profits were up 18% for 2007.

    Interesting coincidence.

  2. ChicanoWobbly on 04.05.2008 at 14:03 (Reply)

    Yes food, gasoline and healthcare costs continue to surge upward as our standard of living decreases! The profits of the healthcare insurance and pharmaceuticals continue to soar upwards as do the profits of ExxonMobil!

    Yet not one presidential candidaate is addressing this mass profiteering! Not one candidate has the guts to challenge this legal robbery and speak out on behalf of the people! One has to question WHY?

  3. union friend on 06.05.2008 at 12:42 (Reply)

    It just makes me sick. Bush (our government) has made it so corporations are protected AT ALL COSTS from having to sacrifice even a portion of their profits to ‘trickle down’ to protect the workers, both in the pay they receive and the buildings they work in. NOT A DIME goes to the average hard-working American. NOT A DIME goes to the tax base needed to keep this country running and competitive. NOT A DIME goes toward protecting the very people who have made their corporations so profitable (in the way of health care, pensions, good pay).

    Everyone needs to speak up for what they want, and I mean EVERYONE. Or else, these companies will continue to exploit everyone who works for them. No union = exploitation, and many times slave labor, because even if they can justify themselves by saying, ‘Well, we pay you’, it is still not enough to even survive.

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