-Caveat Lector-

Talk about "keeping a low profile"!

A couple of relevent quotes from the below article:

"That top 0.25 owns more wealth than the other 99¾ percent combined."

"To grasp the true extent of wealth and income inequality in the United
States, we should stop treating the "top quintile"--the upper-middle
class--as the "richest" cohort in the country. But to do that, we need
to look beyond the Census Bureau's cooked statistics. We need to catch
sight of that tiny, stratospheric apex that owns most of the world."

These are truly the folks who control EVERYTHING, and they manage to do
it invisibly by staying off the radar of public attention.  Let's shine
a little light on 'em, eh?


The Super Rich Are Out of Sight
by Michael Parenti
Published on Friday, December 27, 2002 by CommonDreams.org

The super rich, the less than 1 percent of the population who own the
lion's share of the nation's wealth, go uncounted in most income
distribution reports. Even those who purport to study the question
regularly overlook the very wealthiest among us. For instance, the
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, relying on the latest U.S.
Census Bureau data, released a report in December 1997 showing that in
the last two decades "incomes of the richest fifth increased by 30
percent or nearly $27,000 after adjusting for inflation." The average
income of the top 20 percent was $117,500, or almost 13 times larger
than the $9,250 average income of the poorest 20 percent.

But where are the super rich? An average of $117,500 is an upper-middle
income, not at all representative of a rich cohort, let alone a super
rich one. All such reports about income distribution are based on U.S.
Census Bureau surveys that regularly leave Big Money out of the picture.
A few phone calls to the Census Bureau in Washington D.C. revealed that
for years the bureau never interviewed anyone who had an income higher
than $300,000. Or if interviewed, they were never recorded as above the
"reportable upper limit" of $300,000, the top figure allowed by the
bureau's computer program. In 1994, the bureau lifted the upper limit to
$1 million. This still excludes the very richest who own the lion's
share of the wealth, the hundreds of billionaires and thousands of
multimillionaires who make many times more than $1 million a year. The
super rich simply have been computerized out of the picture.

When asked why this procedure was used, an official said that the Census
Bureau's computers could not handle higher amounts. A most improbable
excuse, since once the bureau decided to raise the upper limit from
$300,000 to $1 million it did so without any difficulty, and it could do
so again. Another reason the official gave was "confidentiality." Given
place coordinates, someone with a very high income might be identified.
Furthermore, he said, high-income respondents usually understate their
investment returns by about 40 to 50 percent. Finally, the official
argued that since the super rich are so few, they are not likely to show
up in a national sample.

But by designating the (decapitated) top 20 percent of the entire nation
as the "richest" quintile, the Census Bureau is including millions of
people who make as little as $70,000. If you make over $100,000, you are
in the top 4 percent. Now $100,000 is a tidy sum indeed, but it's not
super rich--as in Mellon, Morgan, or Murdock. The difference between
Michael Eisner, Disney CEO who pocketed $565 million in 1996, and the
individuals who average $9,250 is not 13 to 1--the reported spread
between highest and lowest quintiles--but over 61,000 to 1.

Speaking of CEOs, much attention has been given to the top corporate
managers who rake in tens of millions of dollars annually in salaries
and perks. But little is said about the tens of billions that these same
corporations distribute to the top investor class each year, again that
invisible fraction of 1 percent of the population. Media publicity that
focuses exclusively on a handful of greedy top executives conveniently
avoids any exposure of the super rich as a class. In fact, reining in
the CEOs who cut into the corporate take would well serve the big
shareholder's interests.

Two studies that do their best to muddy our understanding of wealth,
conducted respectively by the Rand Corporation and the Brookings
Institution and widely reported in the major media, found that
individuals typically become rich not from inheritance but by
maintaining their health and working hard. Most of their savings comes
from their earnings and has nothing to do with inherited family wealth,
the researchers would have us believe. In typical social-science
fashion, they prefigured their findings by limiting the scope of their
data. Both studies failed to note that achieving a high income is itself
in large part due to inherited advantages. Those coming from
upper-strata households have a far better opportunity to maintain their
health and develop their performance, attend superior schools, and
achieve the advanced professional training, contacts, and influence
needed to land the higher paying positions.

More importantly, both the Rand and Brookings studies fail to include
the super rich, those who sit on immense and largely inherited fortunes.
Instead, the investigators concentrate on upper-middle-class
professionals and managers, most of whom earn in the $100,000 to
$300,000 range--which indicates that the researchers have no idea how
rich the very rich really are.

When pressed on this point, they explain that there is a shortage of
data on the very rich. Being such a tiny percentage, "they're an
extremely difficult part of the population to survey," pleads Rand
economist James P. Smith, offering the same excuse given by the Census
Bureau officials. That Smith finds the super rich difficult to survey
should not cause us to overlook the fact that their existence refutes
his findings about self-earned wealth. He seems to admit as much when he
says, "This [study] shouldn't be taken as a statement that the
Rockefellers didn't give to their kids and the Kennedys didn't give to
their kids." (New York Times, July 7, 1995) Indeed, most of the really
big money is inherited--and by a portion of the population that is so
minuscule as to be judged statistically inaccessible.

The higher one goes up the income scale, the greater the rate of capital
accumulation. Economist Paul Krugman notes that not only have the top 20
percent grown more affluent compared with everyone below, the top 5
percent have grown richer compared with the next 15 percent. The top one
percent have become richer compared with the next 4 percent. And the top
0.25 percent have grown richer than the next 0.75 percent. That top 0.25
owns more wealth than the other 99¾ percent combined. It has been
estimated that if children's play blocks represented $1000 each, over 98
percent of us would have incomes represented by piles of blocks that
went not more than a few yards off the ground, while the top one percent
would stack many times higher than the Eiffel Tower.

Marx's prediction about the growing gap between rich and poor still
haunts the land--and the entire planet. The growing concentration of
wealth creates still more poverty. As some few get ever richer, more
people fall deeper into destitution, finding it increasingly difficult
to emerge from it. The same pattern holds throughout much of the world.
For years now, as the wealth of the few has been growing, the number of
poor has been increasing at a faster rate than the earth's population. A
rising tide sinks many boats.

To grasp the true extent of wealth and income inequality in the United
States, we should stop treating the "top quintile"--the upper-middle
class--as the "richest" cohort in the country. But to do that, we need
to look beyond the Census Bureau's cooked statistics. We need to catch
sight of that tiny, stratospheric apex that owns most of the world.

Michael Parenti is a noted author and political commentator. Among his
widely read books are "The Terrorism Trap," "Democracy For the Few,"
"History as Mystery," and "Against Empire." His most recent forthcoming
book is "The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People's History of
Ancient Rome." For more information, visit his web site,
www.michaelparenti.org.

http://commondreams.org/views02/1227-06.htm

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