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View Full Version : The Bush m.o.: Keeping the poor down in America


Chris A
December 24th, 2003, 12:24 PM
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The Death of Horatio Alger

by PAUL KRUGMAN
[from the January 5, 2004 issue]
The other day I found myself reading a leftist rag that made outrageous claims about America. It said that we are becoming a society in which the poor tend to stay poor, no matter how hard they work; in which sons are much more likely to inherit the socioeconomic status of their father than they were a generation ago.

The name of the leftist rag? Business Week, which published an article titled "Waking Up From the American Dream." The article summarizes recent research showing that social mobility in the United States (which was never as high as legend had it) has declined considerably over the past few decades. If you put that research together with other research that shows a drastic increase in income and wealth inequality, you reach an uncomfortable conclusion: America looks more and more like a class-ridden society.

And guess what? Our political leaders are doing everything they can to fortify class inequality, while denouncing anyone who complains--or even points out what is happening--as a practitioner of "class warfare."

Let's talk first about the facts on income distribution. Thirty years ago we were a relatively middle-class nation. It had not always been thus: Gilded Age America was a highly unequal society, and it stayed that way through the 1920s. During the 1930s and '40s, however, America experienced what the economic historians Claudia Goldin and Robert Margo have dubbed the Great Compression: a drastic narrowing of income gaps, probably as a result of New Deal policies. And the new economic order persisted for more than a generation: Strong unions; taxes on inherited wealth, corporate profits and high incomes; close public scrutiny of corporate management--all helped to keep income gaps relatively small. The economy was hardly egalitarian, but a generation ago the gross inequalities of the 1920s seemed very distant.

Now they're back. According to estimates by the economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez--confirmed by data from the Congressional Budget Office--between 1973 and 2000 the average real income of the bottom 90 percent of American taxpayers actually fell by 7 percent. Meanwhile, the income of the top 1 percent rose by 148 percent, the income of the top 0.1 percent rose by 343 percent and the income of the top 0.01 percent rose 599 percent. (Those numbers exclude capital gains, so they're not an artifact of the stock-market bubble.) The distribution of income in the United States has gone right back to Gilded Age levels of inequality.

Never mind, say the apologists, who churn out papers with titles like that of a 2001 Heritage Foundation piece, "Income Mobility and the Fallacy of Class-Warfare Arguments." America, they say, isn't a caste society--people with high incomes this year may have low incomes next year and vice versa, and the route to wealth is open to all. That's where those commies at Business Week come in: As they point out (and as economists and sociologists have been pointing out for some time), America actually is more of a caste society than we like to think. And the caste lines have lately become a lot more rigid.

The myth of income mobility has always exceeded the reality: As a general rule, once they've reached their 30s, people don't move up and down the income ladder very much. Conservatives often cite studies like a 1992 report by Glenn Hubbard, a Treasury official under the elder Bush who later became chief economic adviser to the younger Bush, that purport to show large numbers of Americans moving from low-wage to high-wage jobs during their working lives. But what these studies measure, as the economist Kevin Murphy put it, is mainly "the guy who works in the college bookstore and has a real job by his early 30s." Serious studies that exclude this sort of pseudo-mobility show that inequality in average incomes over long periods isn't much smaller than inequality in annual incomes.

It is true, however, that America was once a place of substantial intergenerational mobility: Sons often did much better than their fathers. A classic 1978 survey found that among adult men whose fathers were in the bottom 25 percent of the population as ranked by social and economic status, 23 percent had made it into the top 25 percent. In other words, during the first thirty years or so after World War II, the American dream of upward mobility was a real experience for many people.

Now for the shocker: The Business Week piece cites a new survey of today's adult men, which finds that this number has dropped to only 10 percent. That is, over the past generation upward mobility has fallen drastically. Very few children of the lower class are making their way to even moderate affluence. This goes along with other studies indicating that rags-to-riches stories have become vanishingly rare, and that the correlation between fathers' and sons' incomes has risen in recent decades. In modern America, it seems, you're quite likely to stay in the social and economic class into which you were born.

Business Week attributes this to the "Wal-Martization" of the economy, the proliferation of dead-end, low-wage jobs and the disappearance of jobs that provide entry to the middle class. That's surely part of the explanation. But public policy plays a role--and will, if present trends continue, play an even bigger role in the future.

Put it this way: Suppose that you actually liked a caste society, and you were seeking ways to use your control of the government to further entrench the advantages of the haves against the have-nots. What would you do?

One thing you would definitely do is get rid of the estate tax, so that large fortunes can be passed on to the next generation. More broadly, you would seek to reduce tax rates both on corporate profits and on unearned income such as dividends and capital gains, so that those with large accumulated or inherited wealth could more easily accumulate even more. You'd also try to create tax shelters mainly useful for the rich. And more broadly still, you'd try to reduce tax rates on people with high incomes, shifting the burden to the payroll tax and other revenue sources that bear most heavily on people with lower incomes.

Meanwhile, on the spending side, you'd cut back on healthcare for the poor, on the quality of public education and on state aid for higher education. This would make it more difficult for people with low incomes to climb out of their difficulties and acquire the education essential to upward mobility in the modern economy.

And just to close off as many routes to upward mobility as possible, you'd do everything possible to break the power of unions, and you'd privatize government functions so that well-paid civil servants could be replaced with poorly paid private employees.

It all sounds sort of familiar, doesn't it?

Where is this taking us? Thomas Piketty, whose work with Saez has transformed our understanding of income distribution, warns that current policies will eventually create "a class of rentiers in the U.S., whereby a small group of wealthy but untalented children controls vast segments of the US economy and penniless, talented children simply can't compete." If he's right--and I fear that he is--we will end up suffering not only from injustice, but from a vast waste of human potential.

Goodbye, Horatio Alger. And goodbye, American Dream.

Chris A
December 24th, 2003, 12:26 PM
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THE BALTIMORE SUN
December 24, 2003
On the rebound?

By John Atcheson

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WASHINGTON - Before America allows President Bush to take bows on the economy, let's take a closer look at this recovery. A simple thought experiment will help.

Imagine for a moment that you took all your credit cards and maxed them out. Now take your mortgage and borrow the maximum on it. Cash in the kid's college fund, your rainy day savings, your 401(k) retirement savings. While you're at it, stop paying for your health insurance and the maintenance on your house, your car and your yard. Now take all that money and spend it. Feeling pretty flush? Sure you are. You just pumped tens, maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars into your pocket.

But you'd never do that.

Because you know that just because you'd be living large for the time being, you wouldn't be wealthier. In fact, you'd be getting poorer by the minute. And yet, that's exactly what Mr. Bush's recovery is - a giant borrowing binge. But he'd rather you didn't know that. In February, the administration buried a report from its own Treasury Department that said our current fiscal policies, the ones Mr. Bush likes to claim are bringing on a "recovery," would create more than $44 trillion in chronic debt.

As the London Financial Times noted, $44 trillion is roughly equivalent to 10 times the publicly held national debt, four years of U.S. economic output or more than 94 percent of all U.S. household assets. No wonder things seem good. We've cashed in everything we own at the Bush Pawn Shop, and now we're flashing a serious wad of walkin' around money.

The Democrats like to point out that we're still down some 2.5 million jobs since Mr. Bush took over and that, absent a miracle, Mr. Bush is likely to be the first president since Herbert Hoover to have fewer jobs at the end of his administration than when he took over. But the real story is, how can we not be living even larger, after borrowing all our children's assets and shrinking the Federal Reserve rate to the lowest level since 1958? What have we got to show for it?

An essentially jobless recovery. Mr. Bush likes to say the jobs will come. They'd better. Because right now, all he's managed to do is spend about $350 billion of "your money" to hire 328,000 checkout clerks and greeters at the local Wal-Mart. Meanwhile, we've shipped some 2.6 million high-paying manufacturing jobs overseas since January 2001.

Is this a success?

So if we're cutting taxes by $350 billion a year in order to stimulate the economy and the economy is growing, but we're only getting an anemic response in employment, what's up? Kenneth L. Lay's stock portfolio, for one thing. And the portfolio of those Bush pioneers we hear so much about. And, of course, Mr. Bush's campaign contributions. As for the rest of us?

Mr. Bush seems to think people can eat gross domestic product. But a growing economy doesn't mean a whole lot if it's not creating jobs. Unless you happen to be Ken Lay or one of those Bush pioneers who don't need a job to earn money. For them, so long as the rest of us keep mortgaging our future, they can keep getting richer.

Not a surprising result, really. Look at Mr. Bush's economic plan. He says the tax cuts were about "your money." But the truth is, if you're like 80 percent of Americans, most of the taxes you pay from "your money" are in the form of payroll taxes. And until Mr. Bush gave it away, you got "your money" and more back in the form of Social Security, Medicare and disability income.

Mr. Lay and his friends pay most of their taxes in the form of income taxes, dividends and capital gains. Guess which ones Mr. Bush cut? Not your payroll taxes. What's the biggest pot of money subject to double taxation? "Your money" - the payroll tax. What double taxation did Mr. Bush eliminate? Ken and friends' dividend tax. For some reason, Mr. Bush thought it was OK for you to be double taxed, but not all right for Ken and his CEO friends. Bottom line: Mr. Bush traded away "your money" to give his wealthiest millionaire buddies an annual tax cut of $40,000 or more each.

The Democrats seem to be trembling at the recent numbers on the economy. They shouldn't. We can't be a nation of Wal-Mart shoppers if we're all employed at Wal-Mart. And that's exactly where Mr. Bush's plan is taking most of us. Democrats should just quit worrying and give credit - or blame - where it's due.

John Atcheson has held a variety of policy positions in several federal government agencies.

Saundra Hummer
December 24th, 2003, 12:59 PM
It's like I have said before Chris A, "People believe what they want to believe!"

For some reason unbeknownst to me, everyone wants to believe that George W. Bush is the best thing since white bread!

Willy Nilly they follow him down the garden path, like the goat to the slaughter.

I will grant that at times he seems a perfectly likeable fellow, but it is like Sam Donaldson said about Ronald Reagan, and it goes something like this, He will give you the shirt off of his back in a one on one situation, but 7 minutes later he will take it all away with the legislation he signs.

GWB is taking away more than the shirts off of our backs, he is putting us into terrible debt, and you know who will have to pay for it, it won't be the money boys he and his administration cater to.

It has been proven that Corporate Welfare doesn't benefit our country, it benefits the corparations, and foreign banks and bankers, as it is very seldom spread around in this country, so it just causes us more concern!

They say he models his presidency more after Reagans than his fathers, and we all know why, he saw him re-elected, where his father was soundly defeated.

Remember Reagans trip to Japan to give a speech? They say he made a few million, which turned out to be around 10 million, not the 3 they were saying. We then hear it was a payoff for him letting the Japanese flood this country with electronics, which put several U.S. companies out of business. True or not, he was another one that thought more of the Corporate world, than the average individual.

They are all forgetting what this country is susposed to be about.

Tenorman
December 24th, 2003, 01:02 PM
In the UK, the Government hasn't been borrowing it's way out of trouble (not until recently, that is) It is the general public. Cheap interest, and interest free offers from Credit card companies (Switch your balance to us and get 6 months interest free).

The price of houses has gone through the roof (OK not the best metaphor but it will do). But the debt level without mortgages is horrific. On average people had the equivalent of almost 2 months net salary of un-secured loans to re-pay - this is store cards, credit cards, and overdrafts. The interest rates have started to rise again. Levels of personal bankruptcy are rising. Some friends of mine in the retail trade tell me that it is becoming increasingly common for people to proffer several credit cards and say "see which one works" and then have two or three "refused", obviously because they are on the limit.

This is scary. A couple of points on the interest rates, and our economy will go down the drain. We have even been warned about this by the IMF. If you want to be even more scared. The amount of unsecured credit taken out by the over 40s is negligible, which indicates that the 20-40 age group have several month's salary worth of unsupportable credit round their neck. Go figure - who would you rather have with the debts - Government or the wage earning public???

alsa
December 30th, 2003, 10:42 AM
for every Paul Krugman there's George Will.