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Inequality Against Democracy: 10 Facts About the 1 Percent

Inequality Against Democracy: 10 Facts About the 1 Percent
Thu, 2/11/2016 - by Richard Eskow
This article originally appeared on Campaign for America's Future

Economic inequality inspired Occupy Wall Street, a movement that in a few short months transformed our political discourse with the concept of the “1 percent” and the “99 percent.” Today the presidential candidacy of Bernie Sanders is altering the political landscape with a call to reduce inequality.

Why does this theme resonate with so many voters? How does it intersect with other issues like social justice, national security and the environment? Is inequality irreversible?

We are living through the greatest “wealth grab” in history. But inequality is not produced by immutable forces. It’s the result of a legislative agenda promoted by the rich and executed by their political allies. The struggle to change this agenda and end inequality is inseparable from the other critical struggles of our time.

What follows are 10 facts about the 1 percent – but they’re not just statistics. They’re a paint-by-numbers picture of an economy, and a democracy, in urgent need of change.

1. Not so long ago, growth and prosperity were more widely shared in this country.

There was a time in living memory when the growth in American productivity was shared much more broadly than it is today.

As economist John Schmitt wrote in 2013, “From the end of World War II through 1968, the wages for workers in the middle, and even the minimum wage, tracked productivity closely.”

This led to the growth of a middle class whose members could meet their own needs, afford some luxuries, and raise and educate their children – often on a single working person’s income.

While many people, especially people of color, were shamefully excluded from this prosperity, the postwar American experience shows us that it is possible to promote broadly shared economic growth.

2. Then something changed.

But then, as Schmitt observes, something changed. Increases in prosperity were no longer being shared in the same way. He writes:

 

“Between 1979 and 2012, after accounting for inflation, the productivity of the average American worker increased about 85 percent. Over the same period, the inflation-adjusted wage of the median worker rose only about 6 percent, and the value of the minimum wage fell 21 percent. As a country, we got richer, but workers in the middle saw little of the gains, and workers at the bottom actually fell behind.”

If the national minimum wage had kept pace with productivity, says Schmitt, it would have been $22 per hour by 2013.

Instead it’s $7.25 today.

A slightly more conservative calculation from economist Dean Baker said the minimum wage would have been $18.42 per hour in 2015 had it kept pace with productivity. This graph illustrates the broadening of this gap:

2016-02-01-1454351133-54164-bakerminwageproductivity.jpg

3. Most of the nation’s income gains are now going to the top.

On the other end of the spectrum, income gains for the top 1 percent now dwarf those of other households. In 2011 the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found that “between 1979 and 2007, income grew by: 275 percent for the top 1 percent of households; 65 percent for the next 19 percent; just under 40 percent for the next 60 percent; and 18 percent for the bottom 20 percent.”

And most of the gains since the 2008 economic crisis have gone to the wealthiest among us.

Meanwhile, in what is sometimes called “the middle-class squeeze,” the middle-class cost of living has risen significantly. Even after wages are adjusted for inflation, middle-class income has failed keep up with increases in such costs as child care, higher education, health services, retirement, and housing – expenses that disproportionately affect middle-class households.

4. Wealth inequality has returned to levels not seen since the Roaring ’20s.

Economists Emanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman found in 2014 that the concentration of wealth held by the top 0.1 percent has reached levels not seen since the 1920s:

2016-02-01-1454351164-9463991-top01pctwealthsaezzucman.jpg
Source: Saez and Zucman

Saez and Zucman found that in recent years there has been, as the caption to one chart puts it, “a surge in top wealth shares concentrated in (the) top 0.1 percent.”

5. The 0.01 percent – a tiny group of people – controls a vast amount of wealth.

As a result of this surge, 16,000 Americans hold as much wealth as 80 percent of the nation’s population – some 256,000,000 people – and as much as 75 percent of the entire world’s population.

The combined wealth of these 16,000 people is more than $9 trillion.

6. 536 people, $2.6 trillion dollars

A few billionaires are even wealthier. In the United States, 536 people had a shared net worth of $2.6 trillion at the end of 2015. These days even the top 0.01 percent isn’t immune from inequality.

7. CEOs are taking up a bigger piece of the pie, and workers are getting less.

Fortune 500 CEOs earned about 42 times as much on average as the typical worker in 1980. Today they earn 373 times as much.

In fact, seven of this country’s 30 largest corporations paid their CEOs more than they paid in taxes.

8. The average American household is falling behind on wages.

The median household income in the United States fell by more than 7 percent between 1999 and 2014. It’s now slightly over $53,000.

9. The average American owns less wealth than people in many other developed countries.

The median wealth of an American adult is roughly $34,316.

That’s far below that of adults in countries like Japan ($78,862), Luxembourg ($78,453), the United Kingdom ($75,734), Norway ($54,362), the Netherlands ($52,649), Switzerland ($43,700), and Australia ($47,477.)

10. More than one child in five lives in poverty.

The U.S. poverty rate for children is over 20 percent, higher than that of all other major developed countries. The only other nations in the OECD with similarly high rates are Chile, Israel, Mexico, Spain, and Turkey.

By contrast, child poverty is less than 9 percent in the Nordic countries and Austria, and is less than 10 percent in the United Kingdom. Even those rates, which are less than half the American rates, should be considered unacceptable.

Overall, more than 48 million Americans live in poverty.

The Challenge

According to experts like Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, the expansion of the financial sector has contributed significantly to the current crisis. So has the lack of jobs and growth in minority communities; lax federal oversight of banks and corporations; the stock market’s focus on short-term gains over long-term growth; the waning influence of labor unions; the offshoring of American jobs; and tax policies which have increasingly favored corporations and ultra-wealthy individuals.

Political choices are shaping a new class of super-wealthy Americans. And, conversely, the super-wealthy are shaping our political choices. A Princeton study by political scientists Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page concluded that “economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while mass-based interest groups and average citizens have little or no independent influence.”

A government controlled by wealthy individuals and large corporations will be much more likely to harm the environment and subvert democratic processes. It will cater to the defense industry abroad and the for-profit prison industry at home. It will hamper racial justice, because true equality cannot be achieved without effort and cost. Its policies are likely to foster growing instability at home and abroad, affecting virtually every aspect of foreign and domestic policy.

That is why runaway inequality is the central issue of our time. It stifles democracy and leads to a more dangerous world. We should, of course, demand that political candidates advocate the right social, foreign policy, and environmental decisions. But even the best candidates will find it impossible to consistently carry out the best policies in a society where so few have so much and so many have so little.

Here’s the good news: Today’s inequality was created by choice, which means we can make different choices. We can end the great wealth grab – by strengthening collective bargaining rights, regulating Wall Street and large corporations, fixing our tax system, and renegotiating bad deals like NAFTA while blocking such deals in the future. Ending the great wealth grab will improve life for most Americans, and will make it easier to reclaim our democracy.

It can be done. To say otherwise is to encourage a false cynicism that breeds permanent despair. It’s true that it will take a major political shift, the kind of mass movement Bernie Sanders calls a “political revolution.” But it can be done, once we understand and accept the challenge that lies before us.

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Comments

JOIN THE MOVEMENT
THE WORKING AMERICA WAGE EQUALITY & REBUILDING AMERICA’S INFRASTRUCTURE ACT

THE WORKING AMERICA WAGE EQUALITY ACT - will incrementally raise the minimum wage to $15.00 an hour by 2020 including raising tipped employees minimum wage to $7.50 an hour. This Act will also raise the income of all working Americans with individual incomes between $15.01 an hour or $28,819 up to $200,000 a year. Minimum Wage will automatically adjust annually keeping pace with inflation.

THE WORKING AMERICA WAGE EQUALITY ACT will raise Working America salaries by at least $12,000.00 and up to $18,000.00 annually. This Act will also remove hundreds of thousands of Americans off of Food Stamps.

REBUILDING AMERICA’S INFRASTRUCTURE ACT will create more than 20 million jobs by initiating the largest Infrastructure rebuilding project in U.S. history. According to the 2013 Infrastructure Report Card http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org we have a D+ Infrastructure Grade and it will take $3.6 trillion investment by 2020 to get to an A+ Grade. This is how we will incrementally enact the bills in (5) steps.

1. In April 2017 Congress would pass the most aggressive infrastructure jobs bill in U.S. history.

2. In February 2018 Congress would raise minimum wage to $11.00 an hour and $5.00 an hour for tipped workers.

3. In February 2019 Congress would raise the incomes of working individuals between $28,819 & $200,000.

• $28,819 – $29,999 20% increase
• $30,000 – $39,999 20% increase
• $40,000 – $49,999 15% increase
• $50,000 – $59,999 13% increase
• $60,000 – $69,999 10% increase
• $70,000 – $79,999 09% increase
• $80,000 – $89,999 08% increase
• $90,000 – $99,999 07% increase
• $100,000 – $100,500 06% increase
• $100,500 – $200,000 03% increase

4. In February 2020 we would raise minimum wage to $15.00 and $7.50 for tipped workers.

5. In February 2021 we would raise the incomes of working individuals between $28,819 & $200,000.

• $28,819 – $29,999 20% increase
• $30,000 – $39,999 20% increase
• $40,000 – $49,999 15% increase
• $50,000 – $59,999 12% increase
• $60,000 – $69,999 10% increase
• $70,000 – $79,999 09% increase
• $80,000 – $89,999 07% increase
• $90,000 – $99,999 07% increase
• $100,000 – $100,500 06% increase
• $100,500 – $200,000 03% increase

6. In February 2022 Congress would raise minimum wage for to $15.00 an hour for all workers while initiating inflation adjustment. The minimum wage will automatically adjust annually keeping pace with inflation. The Wage Equality Act would be amended and be renamed to the Working America Living Wage Act.

The Bush-Cheney Iraq War, a war we should never have waged, will total $3 trillion by the time the last veteran receives needed care. The Iraq war could swell to more than $6 trillion, according to a study released by the Watson Institute for International Studies http://watson.brown.edu/news/explore/2015/CoWPapers on the cost of war at Brown University, drew from actual expenditures from the U.S. Treasury and future commitments.

Investment in our infrastructure can create up to 20 million decent paying jobs and make this country more efficient and productive allowing America to once again have the greatest Infrastructure in the World. Our Democratic Party must give people a reason to vote in 2016 and 2018 by creating this Jobs Bill & Giving America A Raise once we take back the Senate and the House with this 50 State Strategy.
(For the Republican Misinformation Campaign)
With the money being generated by the creation of millions of jobs and the increase in incomes for WORKING AMERICA you remove millions off of Food Stamps and Welfare while increasing the tax rolls therefore lowering our deficit in which WORKING AMERICA will spend money buying products and goods effectively putting money back into the economy. This will create more demand for product and services therefore lowering the cost for goods as we all learned in basic High School Economics.
Details being worked out by Anthony Craig Webb a New Breed of Democratic Strategists and will be scored and research by institutes such as the CBO.

THE BUSH TAX CUTS FOR THE RICH
The Bush tax Cuts did not trickle down and go into the economy it trickled into Overseas Tax Havens and Corporate Greed. THE REBUILDING AMERICAS INFRASTRUCTURE & WORKING AMERICA WAGE EQUALITY ACT OF 2017 would power record economic recovery and growth. This is fact not Fox News and Republican Party Programmed Propaganda and lies for the ignorant and not well informed.

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Sign your name to demand Congress pass, THE WORKING AMERICA WAGE EQUALITY ACT - will raise minimum wage to $15.00 an hour including raising tipped employees wages to $7.50 an hour. THE WAGE EQUALITY ACT - will also raise the pay of all working Americans with individual incomes between $15.01 an hour or $28,819 up to $200,000 a year. Working American’s salaries would increase by at least $12,000.00 and up to $18,000.00 annually. - THE REBUILDING AMERICAS INFRASTRUCTURE ACT – will create more than 20 Million Jobs. - http://petitions.moveon.org/sign/the-working-america-wage

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GREG ABBOTT will keep TEXAS WORKERS wages low VOTE BLUE in 2016 & 2018 - JOIN THE MOVEMENT
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