http://www.truth-out.org/welcome-1-percent-recovery/1331396893



Welcome to the One Percent Recovery
Saturday 10 March 2012
by: Mike Konczal, New Deal 2.0 | News Analysis

As the 1% reap 93 percent of the income gains from the recovery, we’re
rapidly returning to pre-New Deal levels of inequality.

There was a brief debate focused on the following question: would the
gains of the economy continue to accrue to the top 1% once the recovery
started, or would they have a weak post-recession showing in terms of raw
income growth as well as income share of the economy? The top 1% had a
rough Great Recession. They absorbed 50 percent of the income losses, and
their share of income dropped from 23.5 percent to 18.1 percent. Was this
a new state of affairs, or would the 1% bounce back in 2010?
We finally have the estimated data for 2010 by income percentile, and it
turns out that the top 1% had a fantastic year. The data is in the World
Top Income Database, as well as Emmanuel Saez’s updated “Striking it
Richer: The Evolution of Top Incomes in the United States” (as well as
the excel spreadsheet on his webpage). Timothy Noah has a first set of
responses here. The takeaway quote from Saez is, “the top 1% captured
93% of the income gains in the first year of recovery.”
First off, let’s get some absolute numbers here. Here is income by
important percentiles, as well as the change from 2009-2010. I include the
change with and without capital gains to make it clear that this is a
phenomenon both in and independent of a strong stock market (click through
for larger image):

The bottom 90 percent of Americans lost $127, the bottom 99 percent of
Americans gained $80, and the top 1% gained $105,637. The bottom 99
percent is net positive for the year due to around $125 in average capital
gains. They can take comfort in efforts by the right to set the capital
gains tax to 0 percent, which would have netted them an additional couple
dozen bucks.
(Also, just to show “the top 1% captured 93% of the income gains in the
first year of recovery” isn’t some sort of stats juke, you can take
$105,637 and divide it by the the number you get when you add $80 times 99
to $105,637 times 1. That number is 93 percent, which is the share of
income gains the 1% took home.)
And if this wasn’t obvious, you can see the gains become quite high the
farther you walk up the inequality ladder. When we discuss things like the
Buffett Rule or taxing capital gains as ordinary income, it is important
to see how top-heavy that capital gains distribution actually is.
This should also be put in the historical frame of looking at 2002 onward.
I’m going to normalize some percentiles by their average income in 2002
and show how they have moved going into and out of the recession. This
takes the income distribution in 2002 as granted — and any movements
from there on out reflect changes from that income. I’m going to exclude
capital gains for this chart to show it’s a deeper phenomenon than the
stock market, though the effects are the same in either case (click
through for larger image):

The Great Recession dropped income for the bottom 99 percent by 11.6
percent, completely wiping out the meager gains of the Bush years. And
crucially, while 2010 was a year of continued stagnation for the economy
as a whole, the 1% began to show strong gains even when capital gains are
excluded.
As you can imagine, this has increased the percentage of the economic pie
that the top 1% takes home. As Saez notes, “excluding realized capital
gains, the top decile share in 2010 is equal to 46.3%, higher than in
2007.”
There are two things worth mentioning. There’s an interesting debate
within left-liberal circles about whether or not elite economic interests
benefit from a weak recovery, benefit morefrom a strong recovery, are
vaguely indifferent to the United States economy, are impotent during the
recession, or are more interested in pursuing other agendas during the
instability caused by mass unemployment. These numbers are certainly a
point for the argument that the rich are doing just fine, and to whatever
extent they’d be doing better with more robust growth and employment, it
isn’t putting a damper on their earnings.
It’s also worth mentioning that, pre-recession, inequality hadn’t been
that high since the Great Depression, and we are quickly returning to that
state. It’s important to remember that a series of choices were made
during the New Deal to react to runaway inequality, including changes to
progressive taxation, financial regulation, monetary policy, labor
unionization, and the provisioning of public goods and guaranteed social
insurance. A battle will be fought over the next decade — it’s already
been fought for the past three years — on all these fronts. The
subsequent resolution will determine how broadly shared prosperity is
going forward and whether our economy will continue to be as unstable as
it has been.




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