Sunday, December 21, 2008
Trade Adjustment Assistance
In the United States, federal Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) programs provide cash benefits and job retraining to workers and farmers who have been displaced by the off-shoring of U.S. jobs, falling prices resulting from increased imports, and other consequences of international trade. But workers and farmers have been seriously hampered in their attempts to gain TAA benefits by persistent and pervasive mismanagement of the TAA programs by the U.S. Department of Labor and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That's the point made by Professor Steven Schwinn of The John Marshall Law School in Chicago, whose new article describes some of the problems that workers and farmers have faced in applying for and receiving TAA benefits. While legislative changes may address some of these problems, the article argues that legal counsel for workers and farmers is a necessary component of any plan to ensure that TAA benefits reach those they were designed to help.
Click here to download the article. (Click on the link, then click on Download this paper)
Steve is also the founder of the new Constitutional Law Prof Blog, which was recently mentioned on the Legal Profession Blog.
(mew)
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/international_law/2008/12/trade-adjustmen.html