GOOD ECONOMIC TIMES?
Many Americans know that, despite a family income
level that looks pretty good on paper, it is harder and harder
to make it. Even middle-class families with household incomes
above the U.S. median of $48,201 report that they struggle to
cover just their expenses, let alone put anything aside in savings.
While today’s average two-income family
earns more money than yesterday’s single-income family,
today’s families have only about half the discretionary
income available to single-income families of the 1970s. The media
may report middle-class spending on lattes, designer clothes,
and large vehicles, but the real culprits of the middle-class
squeeze are fixed expenses -- housing, car payments, taxes, and
health insurance premiums. These basics, according to Harvard
University law professor Elizabeth Warren, now consume three-fourths
of each family’s purchasing power, compared to just half
in 1973.
Average Americans pay twice as much for housing
than they did during the 1970s. Meanwhile, health insurance premiums
are rising at an astronomical rate: 6.1 percent this year alone
and 78 percent since 2001. Over the past six years, inflation
went up 17 percent; wages increased 19 percent. Says economist
Jared Bernstein: “Consumers are asking, ‘If the economy
is doing so well why am I feeling so squeezed?’ Well, they
feel squeezed because they are squeezed.”
Today’s families live with two new and
very scary prospects. First, their adult children lack health
insurance. Adults between 19 and 29 now make up 30 percent of
the 45 million uninsured Americans. Second, they have no money
to fall back on in case of emergency. Forty percent of Americans
don’t have savings of even one month’s income, even
though the chances of being laid off have doubled since the 1970s.
Meanwhile, the gap between rich and poor is growing
at a rate not seen in this country since the 1920s. Consider these
examples:
• For the first time since Jimmy Carter
was in office, homeownership is set to decline over a President’s
tenure in office, to the tune of 700,000 fewer homes today than
in 2001.
• The share of national income controlled by the richest
Americans has hit a postwar record. The wealthiest one percent
of Americans earns over 21 percent of all income; the bottom 50
percent earn less than 13 percent of all income.
• Median earnings for full-time workers fell one percent
last year, continuing a quarter century-trend of stagnating median
family income despite higher productivity.
• Over the past two decades, the net worth of the top two
percentiles of American families doubled from $1.071 million to
$2.1 million — while the net worth of the poorest quarter
of Americans actually declined.
• The top 25 hedge-fund managers earned more money in 2004
than the CEOs of all the companies in Standard & Poor’s
500-stock index combined.
“We’ve had a 30-year trend of increasing inequality,”
says Brookings Institution scholar Jason Furman. Yet, writes journalist
Harold Myerson, it is difficult for a people “who are conditioned,
as Americans are, not to see their nation in terms of class”
to recognize that “their nation’s class structure
has slowly but fundamentally altered.”
Economist Amelia Warren Tyagi has an idea why,
in the face of such inequality, people tend to focus on lattes
and designer jeans:
“Frivolous spending is visible, and it’s
easy to pass judgment on. There is a comforting notion that if
you’re not spending wildly you are safe. If you are deeply
invested in the belief that everyone can solve their problems
on their own, then there’s no systematic problem…
Perhaps the most important thing we can do is persuade people
that it’s not about the lattes. [The] ‘latte factor’
is a way to distract people from the real changes in the economy.
Those who shake their fingers . . . can feel good about themselves,
both for their own economic prosperity and for the fact that those
who are in trouble are there because of their own personal failings.”
--Glenn Feldman
Dr. Glenn Feldman is the Director of CLEAR
(Center for Labor Education and Research) on the
campus of the University of Alabama Birmingham (UAB). CLEAR designs
and presents university level education programs for workers and
their representatives. Each class provides the information and
skills workers and their representatives need to be more effective.
Classes are tailored to meet the needs of each group.