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Extinction Of The Middle Class
By Greg O’Brien, Codfish Press
Deep impact, as they say in the movies! Millions of years ago, scientists suspect, a giant meteor hit the earth, knocking the planet off its axis and wiping out much of life (as was known then). With far less hype, but perhaps with equal impact, historians in the future might record that the “trickle down theory” of the Reagan Administration—a policy of lowering taxes on high incomes and business activity—walloped the planet more than two decades ago and slowly brought about the extinction of the middle class. In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan initiated a new era of American economics by axing the top tax bracket on the theory that what’s good for business and the rich is good for the country. Or as Gordon Gekko, the Teldar Paper tycoon in “Wall Street” would put it: “Greed is right. Greed Works. Greed clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit.”
David Stockman, then Reagan’s budget director and once the essence of the evolutionary spirit (who happened to be indicted Monday on unrelated fraud charges), later termed trickle down economics “a Trojan Horse.” Stockman conceded that “when one stripped away the new rhetoric emphasizing across-the-board cuts, the supply-side theory was really new clothes for the unpopular doctrine of the old Republican orthodoxy.” And former House Speaker Jim Wright, a Democrat, asserted at the time that tax increases fell instead on low and middle-income individuals in the form of “user fees” and “revenue-enhancers.”
Earlier this month, economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman noted in a speech posted on the web that “the American economy went from having the world’s most dynamic middle class to being on the verge of a rich-poor state in only 30 years.” Krugman, reflecting on the widening gap in the U.S. between the rich and poor, and predicting the gap would expand, wrote several years ago in a New York Times Magazine piece, “Even my liberal friends tell me not to worry, that our system has great resilience, that the center will hold. I hope they’re right, but they may be looking in the rearview mirror. Our optimism about America, our belief that in the end our nation always finds its way, comes from a past—a past in which we were a middle-class society. But that was another country.”
Krugman’s friends were wrong. The breach between the rich and poor in New England, for example, has now grown at a faster pace than any region in the country, according to a newly released University of New Hampshire study, presaging similar trends in the Northeast and beyond with the loss of manufacturing jobs and the displacement of these jobs over seas. “The changes,” the report states,” are not simply the ‘rich getting richer,’ rather they reflect the hollowing out of the middle caused by significant changes in the nation’s economy.”
Wrote Krugman almost five years ago, “You might think that 1987, the year Tom Wolfe published his novel “The Bonfire of the Vanities” and Oliver Stone released his movie “Wall Street,” marked the high tide of America’s new money culture, But in 1987 the top 0.01 percent earned only about 40 percent of what they do today, and top executives less than a fifth as much. The America of “Wall Street” and “The Bonfires of the Vanities” was positively egalitarian compared with the country we live in today.”
Corporate profits and executive salaries in 2007 have hit new nosebleed highs, with CEO’s earning the equivalent of the gross national product of some third world nations. The “trickle down” seems to have slowed to a dribble at best; more likely the faucet has been shut off.
And why not? “Greed for life, for money, for love, for knowledge—has marked the upward surge of mankind,” as the spruce Gekko preached.
Looks like most of us won’t be making the trip. The middle class—an apparent dinosaur of society with its teachers, assembly line workers, fire fighters, police, nurses and the like—is fast on its way to extinction, and the lower class in slipping deeper into the abyss. This is one deep impact that could and should be avoided. Without a firm backbone, our society is spineless.
54 comments
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I think you need to define what middle class means.
I also think the big gap between the two in New England is due to: property values and the aging of the population. The old are rich, the young are poor by comparison.
But don't forget that millions of people come to this country to be poor, because being poor in America is better than being poor in Colombia.
What's the fastest-growing business on Cape Cod? Health care. So go to CCCC's and become a nurse, or a physical therapist.
Retrain. Adapt. So what if there aren't as many assembly line jobs? Would you want to work on one?
Your idyllic memory of overpaid union factory jobs, stay-at-home moms and apple pie is over. It had to be; it was unsustainable.
Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans are going to bring back the Irish nirvana that Cod and Opinionator bemoan.
Agree. Reality is that it doesn't always take high intelligence to make a lot of money. It just has to be a passion.
O'B.
Codfish Press
Not sure where you are going with this. Perhaps I missed your point. Entirely possible that I did.
Middle class, as you note, is an elusive definition. But the fact is that we are headed to a two-class society, the rich and the poor. I'm not talking about a dead end street called Cape Cod; my concern is more global.
Any way you measure it, the middle of the income stream, once the majority in many countries worldwide, is fast slipping away.
That's undeniable, and that's a real problem.
O'B.
Codfish Press
"Walloped the planet more than two decades ago"? If by that he means policies that led to domestic prosperity and the demise of Soviet communism, perhaps we should pursue "wallop" policies more often.
The middle class is hardly extinct, as anyone struggling to find parking at the mall on any given weekend can attest. As extinctions go, it's among the most crowded in history.
But in this country, what is now considered upper middle class used to be considered rich. What is now considered poor used to be considered lower middle class.
This is not the Depression, with millions unemployed, with no food stamps, no WIC, no ADC, no unemployment insurance, no Medicare or Medicaid, no worker's comp, no social security.
Nowadays, the truly poor are marginalized people such as illegal aliens (although most are working 3 jobs and doing quite alright) or the homeless who most often have addiction problems.
It is true that there are homeless families and this is a shame. But there really aren't that many of them as a percentage of the population.
The fact is, we are a nation that is fat and happy. 2/3 of our population is overweight, 17 pets die from poisoned food and it's a national scandal, the poor from other countries come here to be poor, poeple are living to be 104. What's the problem?
So? They're not paying any taxes!
The liberal stance is always to punish the rich. I'm not wealthy, but I certainly believe in my potential to acheive any income level I desire. The literacy rate in this country is very high--the tools to succeed are there for everyone. We guarantee an education to EVERYONE for 13 years. Is it perfect? No. But our system has been perfect enough to catapult people out of poverty for two hundred years.
Statistics show most people in the US are doing better than their parents did.
Our standard of living is at an all time high.
Communism doesn't work. Education, passion and drive are still the standard bearers.
You should get across the bridge more.
O'B.
Codfish Press
The reason for this shift is complex. See next comment.
The bottom 80% of wage earners pay just 22% of the federal income tax burden. Now, how in the world can anybody with a brain come forth and say, "I am against tax cuts for the rich. I'm only going to have a tax cut for the middle class." If you give a tax cut to people in the bottom 20%, you're not going to stimulate the economy,. They're not paying any taxes!
The only country where a well-publicized UN Report found the poor actually getting poorer is Nigeria. That nation's economy has shrunk and its poverty has skyrocketed. Was this due to too much laizez-faire capitalism? No! The problem is corruption and too little freedom. Even the limited amount of capitalism in China is trickling down to the people.
Your stance is that capitalism leads to corruption and that successful people are greedy. This country features the opportunity for ordinary, everyday people to do extraordinary things. And I'm telling you, it happens every day and if it didn't, the country wouldn't be what it is.
Someone above mentioned that the rich pay 38% of the taxes and the poor don't pay enough to get much of a break. That's income tax which is still a progressive tax in US although much less so than it was before Reagan's era. What most of us neglect to mention is the Social Security tax. This is a flat tax that kills the poor and middle class. The tax disappears for incomes over $89,000 leaving most of the income of the super rich untaxed.
There are numerous studies that bear out the fact that the rich are getting richer at the expense of the middle and lower classes.
Read Johnston to find out how the alternative minimum tax is crippling the middle class.
Those with genuine disdain for soundbite analysis would do well to read Margot's comments here.
Jack's comment about Kennedy refers to a time when the highest bracket paid well over 50% of their income in taxes to help pay for the World War II and Korea. It was still very hight after Kennedy's cut.
I think the real issue is the impact on the shrinking middle class. Just the fact that we need two people working in a family to maintain what our parents did with on wage earner is a detriment to society and the middle class.
How many kids have been raised in absentia of an adult compared to the boomer generation. And there is no longer an affordable college education for low to moderate income kids that qualify academicaly but don't have the money or family resources to go.
If that's not what OB meant... never mind.
Fair criticism, Jack! I should have been more thoughtful. I was running off to handle a pressing family matter.
O'B.
Codfish Press
You're on target in many ways.
O'B.
Codfish Press
I take offense to that. Better to come to the table armed with facts--published and provable facts, than to throw blame around without any attempt to back up your claims.
I believe that we live in a country where each persom has access to the tools to acheive amazing things, where hard work, education, creativity and imagination are still the back bones of success. Rather than addressing that-and many of the other facts that I put forth in my threads--you choose to be derogatory. But I'm hardly surprised. It's hard to contest reality.
Your liberal leanings--that the rich are to blame for society's ills-have begun to wear thin on the American public.
My beliefs aren't soundbites, sir. They come from facing my own adversity in life and a willingness to find solutions to my own problems rather than looking to other people (or the Government) to solve them for me. I believe in the power of each person to do the same. If that's a spiffy sound bite, well, I'll take that as a compliment, then.
I never said your beliefs were soundbytes, and haven't, in fact, responded yet to your earlier posts. I'm attending to a family matter at the moment, as noted above. Perhaps you're referring to a post from someone else on this.
O'B.
Codfish Press
What would our gevernment do with more tax revenue anyway? Create an efficiently run, universal health care system? No. It would probably blow more money on the Iraq quagmire.
The problem isn't that the rich aren't paying their share, it's that the goverment doesn't spend the money it has efficiently.
In his "The Triumph of Politics," David Stockman wrote that he originally had the naive thought that the Reagan Revolution would take off as the Federal budget deficits fade away. He's 1 for 2 from the three-point arc on that one. And therein lies the demise of the middle class. Someone has to pay for the attitude of government greed. Furthermore, who is the government? I think we all know the answer.
Tim
"What would our government do with more tax revenue anyway?
Give it to Jim Gordon, GE and the American Wind Energy Association.
Cape Wind would benefit by available tax sheltering, too.
Tim, did you happen to notice that the federal deficit has plunged over the last few years? This after three major tax cuts since Bush became president, and in the wake of 9/11, and while we are fighting two wars abroad and defending the homeland from Islamic fanatics. You'd be hearing plenty about the incredible shrinking deficit if the president's last name was Clinton or Obama.
Keep commenting, Margot, your intelligence and insights are refreshing.
I agree with your observation about Margot's refreshing insights and intelligence. As a member of a family who gives a greater percentage of our income to the government than we are allowed to retain, I welcome Margot's continued participation.
Even a revenue stream will bounce a little bit when dropped from the Great Depression heights George bungled a to in his first term.
I respectfully disagree, and I'm drawing from statistics on the national debt as a percentage of gross domestic product as offered by whitehouse.gov. At the end of Clinton's second term. national debt was 50 percnet of GDP. Presently, national debt as a percentage of GDP is 68 percent. And, as a point of information, since WWII the only times this number increased were during the Reagan-Bush 41-Bush 43 years.
Tim
You're on point. And yes, the column has "banged the gong," as you note. It's a subject worthy of great debate, regardless of your point of view on it. One thing is clear: most comprehend the significance of the middle class, as we all should.
O'B.
Codfish Press
FYI: NYT reports today that the income gap is widening. "Income inequality grew significantly in 2005, with the top 1 percent of Americans — those with incomes that year of more than $348,000 — receiving their largest share of national income since 1928, analysis of newly released tax data shows," the story, available on line, reports.
"The new data also shows that the top 300,000 Americans collectively enjoyed almost as much income as the bottom 150 million Americans. Per person, the top group received 440 times as much as the average person in the bottom half earned, nearly doubling the gap from 1980."
For what it's worth...
O'B.
Codfish Press
Monponsett, in lieu of absurd analogies you prefer to empirical fact, I'll rely on the latter - according to the Congressional Budget Office, the federal deficit for the current fiscal year will fall to $172 billion from a peak of $412 billion three years ago. This in the wake of 9/11 - and Katrina - while fighting two wars abroad and protecting us at home from a threat that Bush's critics allege doesn't exist. And these are just the dollar amounts - as a percentage of GDP, the deficit has shrunk even more. Hence, the puzzling dearth of mainstream media coverage. Were this happening under President Clinton or Obama, you'd be leading the chorus of praise. Alas, it's happening with the Anti-Christ at the helm.
I know we don't always agree, but I do appreciate your articulate passion, knowledge and wit. You have a good touch.
O'B.
Codfish Press
To turn your point back at you, I can imagine that you'd be singing a whole different tune if some dimwit Demo prez butchered a surplus that a GOP 2 termer left him/her... especially if the GOP had to build that surplus out of the debt the dimwit's father left after his war-filled term.
If Bush can a turn a surplus out of this, I'd be happy to praise him. However, I doubt that even you think he can do that.
If my facts about Bush creating a deficit from a surplus are wrong, correct me. If they aren't, don't try that GOP spin bullshi* on me. Even my children see through it.
Thank you for allowing me to be part of this "brawl."
Tim
" ... for halving the debt he created .." Monponsett? Wow, you really are unhinged when it comes to Bush. Think any of the 300-million rest of us played a role in building up the debt, to say nothing of the destructive miscreants in al-Qaeda?
Given your odd and overcompensatory inclination to boast of your vast wealth, how about doing your part to reduce the debt by repaying the government the amount you've received from the expanded child tax credit, which has risen several hundred dollars annually under Bush. The benefit to you must be in the thousands by now.
Consider it your chance to demonstrate something, anything, in the way of noblesse oblige, mon petite ami.
Call me crazy all you want, Jack... if it makes you feel better about not being able to defend Bush's record with the budget. You look a little crazy yourself. You may one day be the last American left praising that clown after two failed wars and the ravishing of our economy.
Think any of us 300 million had a role in building up the surplus Bush squandered? For the sake of your cute children, I hope your wife handles the Coleman family finances.
"Give War A Chance" = OK
"The CEO Of The Sofa" = Insipid
Not too late, Monponsett, couple of weeks to go before April 15. With two children, the child tax credit is worth $2,000 to you this year; with three it comes to $3,000. Here's your chance to demonstrate character rather than knee-jerk disparagement. Unless you'd rather continue pointing the finger at convenient boogeymen like Big Oil, Cheney, black helicopters, etc.
Warning - making a sacrifice like this may require tapering off the wine and bong hits, at least temporarily. Do hope you were sitting down for that.
I'd be a hypocrite if I was bitching about concentration of wealth. While I'm not rich/rich, I've concentrated quite a bit in my hands.
Realistically... I wouldn't be opposed to paying a much higher tax rate because I'm wealthier than 99% of my countrymen, even those risking their ass in Iraq. Doing so would make me a hypocrite of the lowest sort.
Let's see Romney jump up at the GOP Convention espousing a tax-the-rich strategy. Rove'll probably dig up those four other wives Mitt is stashing.
Am I going to write a check to Bush II, as Jack seems to be asking? May as well pound holes into the bottom of a leaking ship, to let the water drain out.
You can even stipulate on your tax return, if you were inclined to make this marginal sacrifice, that the extra amount you're willing to pay goes directly toward reducing the national debt. Many hundreds of similarly inclined liberals do this every year in our vast nation.
Given your keen suspicion of all things Dubya, you may want to send Monopoly money - that'll fool him!
Now get out of here, for God's Sake!! King Kong Bundy has been spotted in Sandwich!
As the wealth concentrates into the upper 1% more & more we slide deeper into plantation working condtions.
Of course the highly skilled worker has a place, but the security of higher education is far less than it has been.
We live in a world where we can only afford items made in china, burn coal, and require 2 adults in a household to afford to raise a child.
As the common man goes, so goes the world!
Index the minimum wage to the cost of living at least!
Prosperity isn't achieved by redistributing wealth from those who created it to those not inclined to do so. Is government responsible to those who can't care for themselves? You bet. Should it also punish initiative? Absolutely not. Can it accomplish both? Yes, when those on both sides of the aisle are willing to eschew dogma.
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About This Blog
Greg O'Brien is editor and president of Codfish Press, a publishing and political /communications strategy company. He is the author/editor of several books, a Boston Metro newspaper columnist, a contributor to New York Metro, a freelance writer for national and regional magazines, a television script writer and a documentary producer.
He has contributed in the past to Boston Magazine, the old Boston Herald American, USA Today, The Arizona Republic, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, UPI, and is former editor and publisher of The Cape Codder newspaper and a former managing director of Community Newspaper Company of Boston.
He comments here about Boston and the world beyond, and about Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket on his local blog, Codfish Press.
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