Susan Wild joins fight against corporate price gouging and shrinkflation
Congresswoman Susan Wild (D-Lehigh) became one of the latest Democrats to join the pushback against corporate price gouging and shrinkflation.
Congresswoman Susan Wild (D-Lehigh) became one of the latest Democrats to join the pushback against corporate price gouging and shrinkflation.
In this op-ed, Pennsylvania residents Lynn Strauss and Bob Leipold compare the economy under Trump and Biden presidencies.
Harrisburg Republicans have spent years honing a simple political strategy that could be described as oppose, pander, and negotiate in bad faith.
The rules issued last month establish national minimum staffing requirements for federally-funded nursing homes, enact national appointment wait time standards for Medicaid and CHIP enrollees, and more.
Under the new rules, passengers will no longer have to navigate customer service systems to receive refunds for canceled flights or fall prey to low advertised base fees without full disclosure of extra costs.
The new rule bans new noncompete agreements for the vast majority of American workers and requires employers to let current and past employees know they won’t enforce them going forward. Companies will also be required to throw out existing noncompete agreements.
The actions announced last week will promote fairer rental markets, boost the supply of affordable housing and manufactured homes, and help families who are struggling to make ends meet.
More than 45 million Americans who are charged late fees on credit cards each year will save an average of $220 annually under the new rule.
Grocery prices have risen by more than 20% since the beginning of the pandemic and in Pennsylvania, grocery prices rose 8.2% from Nov. 2022 to Nov. 2023. In response, President Biden is demanding grocery chains and food brands lower their prices and stop ripping families off.
Using funds provided by the Inflation Reduction Act, the IRS has already collected more than $520 million from 1,600 millionaires who had unpaid tax bills of more than $250,000. The IRS could collect as much as $851 billion in additional tax revenue over the next decade.