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  • America should be mad as hell

    An interesting Business Insider article I just read. The charts are pretty eye-opening, especially when you look at the wealth that corporations have been accruing over the last 50 or so years.



    [Part 1]

    DEAR AMERICA: You Should Be Mad As Hell About This [CHARTS]


    In November, Americans will have a chance to speak their minds.

    And there's one thing everyone should agree on: America just isn't working right now.

    It's not just Americans who aren't working. It's America itself, a country whose economy once worked for almost everyone, not just the rich.

    In the old America, if you worked hard, you had a good chance of moving up. In the old America, the fruits of people's labors accrued to the whole country, not just the top. In the old America, there was a strong middle class, and their immense collective purchasing power drove the economy for decades.
    No longer.

    Over the past couple of decades, the disparity between "the 1%" and everyone else has hit a level not seen since the 1920s. And there is a widespread and growing sense that life here is not fair or right.

    If America cannot figure out a way to fix these problems, the country will likely become increasingly polarized and de-stabilized. And if that happens, the recent "Occupy" protests will likely be only the beginning.

    The problem in a nutshell is this: In the never-ending tug-of-war between "labor" and "capital," there has rarely—if ever—been a time when "capital" was so clearly winning.

    And that's not just unfair. It's un-American.


    Let's start with the obvious: Unemployment. Three years after the financial crisis, the unemployment rate is still at one of the highest levels since the Great Depression.




    St. Louis Fed



    A record percentage of unemployed people have been unemployed for longer than 6 months.




    St. Louis Fed



    Our 8% unemployment rate, by the way, equates to about 13 million Americans—people who want to work but can't find a job.




    St. Louis Fed



    And when you include people working part-time who want to work full-time, plus some people who haven't looked for a job in a while, unemployment is at 15%




    St. Louis Fed



    Yes, the number of jobs has started to grow again, and unemployment's coming down slowly. But we still have miles to go. We haven't yet recovered even half of the jobs we lost in the recession.






    Put differently, a lower percentage of Americans are working than any time since the early 1980s (And the boom prior to that, by the way, was from women entering the workforce).




    St. Louis Fed



    So that's the jobs picture. Not pretty.




    And now we turn to the other side of this issue ... the Americans for whom life has never been better. The OWNERS.





    Corporate profits just hit another all-time high.




    St. Louis Fed



    Corporate profits as a percent of the economy also just hit an all-time high. Profits are now VASTLY higher than they've been for most of the last half-century.



    St. Louis Fed



    If corporations are doing so well, everyone who works for them should be doing great, right? Wrong. The folks who are doing well are at the top. CEO pay is now 350X the average worker's, up from 50X from 1960-1985.




    G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz
    The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.

  • #2
    [Part 2]

    CEO pay has skyrocketed 300% since 1990. Corporate profits have doubled. Average "production worker" pay has increased 4%. The minimum wage has dropped. (All numbers adjusted for inflation).



    G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz



    After adjusting for inflation, average hourly earnings haven't increased in 50 years.





    In short ... while CEOs and shareholders have been cashing in, wages as a percent of the economy have dropped to an all-time low.



    St. Louis Fed



    In other words, in the struggle between "labor" and "capital," capital has basically won. (This man lives in a tent city in Lakewood, New Jersey, about a hundred miles from Wall Street. He would presumably be "labor," except that he lost his job and can't find another one.)



    Robert Johnson



    Of course, life is great if you're in the top 1% of American wage earners. You're hauling in a bigger percentage of the country's total pre-tax income than you have at any time since the late 1920s. Your share of the national income, in fact, is almost 2X the long-term average!



    David Ruccio



    And the top 0.1% in America are doing way better than the top 0.1% in other first-world countries.



    David Ruccio



    It wasn't always this way ... From 1917 to 1981, the bottom 90% of wage earners in this country (blue) captured 69% of the total wage growth. The richest 10%, meanwhile, got 31% of the wage gains.



    Economic Policy Institute



    Between 1981 and 2008, however, things changed. The richest 10% grabbed 96% of the income gains in those years, leaving only 4% for the bottom 90%.



    Economic Policy Institute



    And from 1997-2008, things got grossly unfair. ALL of the wage gains went to the top 10%. The wages of the bottom 90%, meanwhile, declined.



    Economic Policy Institute



    In fact, income inequality has gotten so extreme here that the US now ranks 93rd in the world in "income equality." China's ahead of us. So is India. So is Iran.



    G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz
    The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.

    Comment


    • #3
      [Part 3]

      And, by the way, few people would have a problem with inequality if the American Dream were still fully intact—if it were easy to work your way into that top 1%. But, unfortunately, social mobility in this country is also near an all-time low.





      So what does all this mean in terms of net worth? Well, for starters, it means that the top 1% of Americans own 42% of the financial wealth in this country. The top 5%, meanwhile, own nearly 70%.



      G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz



      That's about 60% of the net worth of the country held by the top 5% (left chart).



      G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz



      And remember that huge debt problem we have—with hundreds of millions of Americans indebted up to their eyeballs? Well, the top 1% doesn't have that problem. They only own 5% of the country's debt.



      G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz



      And then there are taxes ... It's a great time to make a boatload of money in America, because taxes on the nation's highest-earners are close to the lowest they've ever been.



      National Taxpayers Union



      The aggregate tax rate for the top 1% is lower than for the next 9%—and not much higher than it is for pretty much everyone else.



      G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz



      As the nation's richest people often point out, they do pay the lion's share of taxes in the country: The richest 20% pay 64% of the total taxes. (Lower bar). Of course, that's because they also make most of the money. (Top bar).



      G. William Domhoff, UC Santa Cruz



      And now we come to the type of American corporation that gets—and deserves—a big share of the blame: The banks. Willie Sutton once explained that the reason he robbed banks was because "that's where the money is." The man knew his stuff.





      Remember when we bailed out the banks? Remember WHY we bailed them out? We bailed them out, we were told, so that the banks could keep lending to American businesses. Without that lending, we were told, society would collapse ...





      So, did the banks keep lending after we bailed them out? No. Bank lending dropped sharply, and it has yet to fully recover.



      St. Louis Fed
      The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.

      Comment


      • #4
        [Part 4]

        Real-estate loans are still down ...



        St. Louis Fed



        Commercial loans are still below their peak.



        St. Louis Fed



        So, what have banks been doing since 2007 if not lending money to American companies? Lending money to America's government! By buying risk-free Treasury bonds and other government-guaranteed securities.



        St. Louis Fed



        And, remarkably, the banks have also been collecting interest on money they are NOT lending—the "excess reserves" they have at the Fed. Back in the financial crisis, the Fed decided to help bail out the banks by paying them interest on this money that they're not lending. And they're happily still collecting it. (It's AWESOME to be a bank.)



        St. Louis Fed



        Meanwhile, of course, the banks are able to borrow money FOR FREE. Because the Fed has slashed rates to basically zero. And the banks have slashed the rates they pay on deposits to basically zero. So they can have all the money they want—for nearly free!



        St. Louis Fed



        When you can borrow money for nothing, and lend it back to the government risk-free for a few percentage points, you can COIN MONEY. And the banks are doing that. According to Institutional Risk Analytics, the "net interest margin" made by US banks in the first six months of last year was $211 Billion. Nice!



        Institutional Risk Analytics



        And that helped produce $58 billion of profit in the first six months of the year.



        Institutional Risk Analytics



        And it has helped generate near-record financial sector profits—while the rest of the country struggles with its 8% unemployment rate.



        Reuters (Felix Salmon)



        And these profits are getting back toward a record as a percentage of all corporate profits.



        The Big Picture



        Those profits, of course, are AFTER the banks have paid their bankers. And it's still great to be a banker. The average banker in New York City made $361,330 in 2010. Not bad!



        New York Times, New York State Comptroller
        The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.

        Comment


        • #5
          [Part 5]

          So it REALLY doesn't suck to be a banker.





          So, the 1% is doing great, and the 99% are getting the shaft, but maybe the government's stepping in to help everyone ... by building roads or something?



          Flickr/Andrew Oliver



          Nope. Public construction spending is falling.



          St. Louis Fed



          Including on roads ...



          St. Louis Fed



          and transportation ...



          St. Louis Fed



          and schools.



          St. Louis Fed



          In short, America just isn't America anymore.



          Wikimedia Commons



          So that's what Americans should be mad as hell about.



          AR McLin via Flickr

          The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.

          Comment


          • #6
            Let's just take all the money from the 1% and give it to the 99%. That will fix everything right?

            Comment


            • #7
              If corporations are doing so well why don't you start one?

              That's the greet thing about this country, you don't have to be some corporations cog if you don't want to be.
              "Don't measure yourself by what you have accomplished, but by what you should accomplish with your ability."
              -John Wooden

              Comment


              • #8
                Flat tax no deductions...
                “Losers Average Losers.” ― Paul Tudor Jones

                Comment


                • #9
                  The point of rjl's post, I think, is related to inequality of effective tax rates. Effective tax rate is taxes paid divided by taxable income, in other words the amount of taxes actually paid as a percentage of income. From what I have read and heard from Bloomberg Radio is that trading/investment income skews the numbers significantly and provides for great contrast between the upper incomes from the middle to lower income because they have more oftheir income invested.

                  I believe everyone should pay their fair share, richer or poorer and a flat tax with no deductions is the best approach. But I do love my SASO, St James, & other charity write offs not to mention interest payments and state deductions.

                  God Bless America.

                  Go Shocks!
                  “Losers Average Losers.” ― Paul Tudor Jones

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    My take on corporations versus everyone else is that corporations are only interested in profits. When the economy is doing good, corporate profits are doing good. More people are buying and corporations are hiring. When the economy is doing bad, less people are buying and the corporations are laying off in order to keep their profits up.

                    So whether the economy is doing good or bad, the corporations will adjust their workforce in order to keep their profits up. They don't care whether they hire anyone as long as they maintain their profits. If they could use automation to completely run all their product lines, they wouldn't hire anyone. If they can increase their profits by hiring cheap labor or by moving their business to another country, that's what they will do. They don't care about the welfare of people, only profits, even if some people say that corporations are people, too.

                    In the past, when the economy was doing bad, the government would stimulate the economy in order to get consumers buying again. This time that isn't happening, and corporations aren't hiring because no one is buying their products.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      *sigh*

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Corporations only care about profits, workers only care about their paychecks. Nobody cares about the consumer.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Why shouldn't corporations care about profits? Everyone that runs a business cares about profits. And they care about their workers and consumers enough to make sure they have profits and can continue to stay in business. If they don't, they'll be working for someone else soon enough.
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                          • #14
                            Do you mean to say that corperations have to hire people, have to provide jobs and wages in order to generate their products?

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Thank God for corporations. If government burdens weren't so great we would probably have a lot more of them. If we had more of them prices would probably be lower, unemployment would be lower and employment packages would be better.

                              But let's just keep taxing and regulating the bejesus out any company that wants to provide a product or service to somebody until there's not a single one left to hire anyone. I speak from experience. The profits better be good or it's just not worth it to put up with all of the legal and regulatory bs to be a business owner.

                              Find a way to make a profit and I guarantee that the local, state or federal government will find a way to take a cut of it from you or somebody will come after you for some type of legal claim that will make you question why you didn't just sit on your ass and find a way to take a government hand out. We (Our Country) has forgotten what made it so great. It certainly wasn't government handouts, that's Greece you're thinking of.

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