---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John A Imani <johnaima...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Oct 26, 2012 at 12:24 PM
Subject: Economist- "The Rich and the Rest": American Inequality
To: rac...@lists.riseup.net, rac-lasupport...@lists.riseup.net,
copwatc...@lists.riseup.net


(JAI-  Here are the 'low-lights' in the article below:

*LOWLIGHTS:*


 top 5% of the income distribution an annual income of at least $150,000

1% $340,000 a year

0.1% $1.5m

0.01%, with an annual income of $8m or more.


 During the 1980s the least-educated Americans fell behind those in the
middle. As the computer revolution increased the demand for skilled workers
and old manufacturing industries crumbled, those with just a high-school
degree or less saw their relative earnings sink.

90% of all income gains since the recession ended have gone to the top 1%.

High-school graduation rates stopped climbing in the 1970s, for the first
time since 1890.

America is one of only three advanced countries which spends less on the
education of poorer children than richer ones.

Decline increasingly affects the white working class too. Ever more
low-skilled white American men have left the labour force, many moving onto
disability rolls. Even before the recession, only around two-thirds of
white men with nothing more than a high-school diploma were working.

This decline of work among less skilled white men has had profound social
consequences, which in turn have exacerbated income inequality. Marriage
rates have fallen, divorce has increased and the share of children born to
single mothers has soared.

In 1979 over half of all federal social spending went to the poorest fifth
of households. Now it is only 36%.

*A disproportionate, and growing, chunk of the very rich, however, have
made their money in Wall Street.*

Share of investment bankers among the top 0.1% is larger than the share of
senior executives. America’s top 25 hedge-fund managers make more than all
the CEOs of the S&P 500 combined.

Financiers have also been among the biggest winners from changes to
America’s tax code.

America’s richest have gained more from reductions in the capital-gains
tax, which is now only 15%. Private-equity moguls have done particularly
well, since the tax code allows them to classify their income as capital
gains.

The combination of tax loopholes, bank bail-outs and massive lobbying has
led many observers to conclude that America’s growing inequality has
political roots.

“Citizens United” decision lifted any restrictions on political spending by
individuals or firms. That opened the way for the rise of “super-PACs”,
privately funded organisations set up to influence election outcomes.

The sources of this money are highly concentrated: one analysis suggests
that 80% of the total comes from fewer than 200 donors.

The gap in standardised test scores between schoolchildren from high- and
low-income families is roughly 30-40% bigger today than it was 25 years
ago.)




"The rich and the rest"

http://www.economist.com/node/21564418
American inequality is a tale of two countries

Oct 13th 2012 | from the print edition

 THE HAMPTONS, A string of small towns on the south shore of Long Island,
have long been a playground for America’s affluent. Nowadays the merely
rich are being crimped by the ultra-wealthy. In August it can cost $400,000
to rent a fancy house there. The din of helicopters and private jets is
omnipresent. The “Quiet Skies Coalition”, formed by a group of angry
residents, protests against the noise, particularly of one billionaire’s
military-size Chinook. “You can’t even play tennis,” moans an old-timer who
stays near the East Hampton airport. “It’s like the third world war with
GIV and GV jets.”

Thirty years ago, Loudoun County, just outside Washington, DC, in Northern
Virginia, was a rural backwater with a rich history. During the war of 1812
federal documents were kept safe there from the English. Today it is the
wealthiest county in America. Rolling pastures have given way to technology
firms, swathes of companies that thrive on government contracts and
pristine neighbourhoods with large houses. The average household income, at
over $130,000, is twice the national level. The county also marks the
western tip of the biggest cluster of affluence in the country. Between
Loudoun County and north-west Washington, DC, there are over 800,000 people
in exclusive postcodes that are home to the best-educated and wealthiest 5%
of the population, dubbed “superzips” by Charles Murray, a libertarian
social scientist.

The Hamptons and Washington’s chic suburbs offer two snapshots of the most
striking characteristic of American inequality: the surge in wealth at the
top. Washington’s superzips are full of the rich: people in *the top 5% of
the income distribution (which means an annual income of at least $150,000)
and the top 1% (those earning more than $340,000 a year). The helicopter
passengers in the Hamptons epitomise America’s ultra-wealthy, the 0.1% of
the population whose annual household income is at least $1.5m, and the top
0.01%, with an annual income of $8m or more.* Over the past 30 years
incomes have soared both among the wealthy and the ultra-wealthy. The
higher up the income ladder, the bigger the rise has been. The result has
been a huge, and widening, gap—financially, socially and
geographically—between America’s elite and the rest of the country.

How this happened is a story in three acts. *During the 1980s the
least-educated Americans fell behind those in the middle. As the computer
revolution increased the demand for skilled workers and old manufacturing
industries crumbled, those with just a high-school degree or less saw their
relative earnings sink. *Over the *past decade the squeeze moved to the
middle of the income distribution, to those who attended college but did
not earn a degree.* *Incomes at the top, meanwhile, rose smartly during the
whole period.*

The* result was a dramatic divergence in fortunes.* *Between 1979 and
2007 *(just
before the financial crisis) the *real disposable income after taxes and
transfers of the top 1% of Americans more than quadrupled*, a cumulative
rise of over 300%. Over the same period the *bottom fifth’s income rose by
only 40%.* (JAI: 1/10 as fast as top) The *middle class shran*k, both as a
share of the population and geographically. Only *40% of American
neighbourhoods now have an average income* within 20% of the national
median, *compared with 60% in the 1970s*.

The *recession temporarily upended this trend*. America’s wealthiest fared
poorly in 2008 and 2009, largely because the tanking stockmarket ravaged
their bonuses and share options. The government safety net prevented a
collapse at the bottom. But the *sluggish recovery has brought back the old
pattern. More than 90% of all income gains since the recession ended have
gone to the top 1%.*

What lies behind these widening gaps? A big reason, particularly in the
bottom half, is education, or rather the lack of it. Just as the
information-technology revolution demanded more skilled workers, the
continuous improvement in Americans’ education stalled. *High-school
graduation rates stopped climbing in the 1970s, for the first time since
1890.* College completion rates also slowed. Many Americans were failing to
match the new technologies with better skills. According to Harvard’s Ms
Goldin and Mr Katz, this explains 60% of America’s widening wage inequality
between 1973 and 2005.

*College and/or bust*

 Both the soaring cost of a college education and the shortcomings of
America’s schools system played a part. In the 1970s a year’s tuition at a
public university cost 4% of a typical household’s annual income; at a
private university it took about 20%. By 2009 tuition fees had jumped to
over 10% of median income for a public university and around 45% for a
private one. Even with the surge in subsidised student loans, many
potential graduates were priced out or dropped out early without a degree.

In primary and secondary schools the problems are partly financial but
mainly organisational. America spends a lot on its schools, but that
funding comes largely from state and local governments. Richer
neighbourhoods can afford better schools, which reinforces the growing
geographical gap between different social groups. According to the
OECD, *America
is one of only three advanced countries which spends less on the education
of poorer children than richer ones. *And unlike most OECD countries,
America *does not put better teachers in poorly performing schools*, where
teachers’ unions often obstruct reform efforts.

Not everything can be pinned on schooling. American women (like women
almost everywhere) are better educated and earn more than they did 30 years
ago. It is less skilled men who have fallen behind. Almost uniquely among
rich countries, American men now aged between 25 and 34 are less likely
than their fathers to have a college degree. The *damage from this has been
compounded by institutional changes, such as the weakening of unions and,
particularly, the erosion of the minimum wage. But the main culprit is
educational slippage.*

This *poor performance has a racial tinge. High-school dropouts are
disproportionately black or Hispanic. America’s habit of locking up large
numbers of young black men does not help their employability.* But the *decline
increasingly affects the white working class too. Ever more low-skilled
white American men have left the labour force*, many moving onto disability
rolls. *Even before the recession, only around two-thirds of white men with
nothing more than a high-school diploma were working.*

This *decline of work among less skilled white men has had profound social
consequences*, which in turn have *exacerbated income inequality*. *Marriage
rates have fallen, divorce has increased and the share of children born to
single mothers has soared. *Mr Murray calculates that fewer than 30% of
children in the poorest third of white America live with both parents by
the time their mother turns 40. Among the most affluent fifth, around 90%
of children live in a household with both parents. Marriage has become a
fault-line dividing American classes.

Tax and benefit changes have also had an effect, but a subtle one. Most
Americans below the median income level pay no federal income tax (and,
thanks to the Earned Income Tax Credit, the working poor get substantial
rebates). *Poorer Americans are hit disproportionately by payroll taxes,
which are regressive and have grown in importance.* But the *biggest hit is
on the benefit side*. *Although America’s social spending has rocketed (it
is now worth some 16% of GDP), it is becoming less redistributive* as
Medicare, the universal health plan for the elderly, swallows up ever more
(see article <http://www.economist.com/node/21564407>). According to the
Congressional Budget Office, *in 1979 over half of all federal social
spending went to the poorest fifth of households. Now it is only 36%.*

Part of the trend at the top of America’s income ladder is simply the
mirror image of that at the bottom. The rising skill premium has rewarded
those with lots of education, and social shifts have reinforced the income
concentration. Not only are the *well-off and well-educated far more likely
to marry and stay married than poorer folk, they tend to marry each
other.*In 1960 American couples with two college-educated partners
accounted for
only 3% of the total. Today that figure is 25% and in the top 5% of the
income distribution it is 75%. Apart from the cleaning lady, it is hard to
find an adult without a degree (or two or three) in super-zip households.

But if educational differentials and assortative mating lie behind much of
the gap between those in Loudoun County and poorer Americans, they do not
explain the Hamptons phenomenon. America’s top *0.1% are no better educated
than the top 1%. Income gaps at this level have less to do with the
skills-bias of the modern economy and more to do with its global reach.*

In a classic paper published in 1981, the late Sherwin Rosen of the
University of Chicago pointed out that the very best in a field, be they
entertainers or textbook authors, earned vastly more than the next best.
Modern communications, he mused, would transform the market for superstars.
And so they have, as Chrystia Freeland, a journalist, points out in her new
book, “Plutocrats”. Moreover, in the past three decades the potential
market has become dramatically bigger, whether for Hollywood blockbusters
or celebrity dentists.

Celebrities do not account for a large share of America’s ultra-rich. But
the same factors—winner-takes-all economics coupled with an incomparably
bigger global economy—explain part of the rise in the incomes of the chief
executives who make up a bigger share of the very wealthy. During the 1980s
CEO pay surged more in America than anywhere else. *Until the early 1980s
American chief executives, on average, earned 40% more than their next two
lieutenants. By 2000 they earned two-and-a-half times as much.*

In a global market for the best CEO talent where winner-takes-all economics
prevails, the gap between the top and the rest is bound to be vast

This rise is widely put down to failures of corporate governance and a
collapse in social norms which once set an informal limit on the earnings
gap between bosses and workers. There is truth to both explanations, and it
is not hard to find chief executives earning tens of millions of dollars
despite lacklustre performance. But these effects should not be
exaggerated. In a recent paper Steven Kaplan, of the University of Chicago,
finds that CEO pay has fallen in recent years and that, contrary to myth,
CEOs who perform badly get paid less and are fired more often than
successful ones.

There is also a less bothersome *explanation for CEO pay* that is based on
superstar economics. *America is home to a lot of the world’s biggest
companies, and globalisation has made many of them a lot bigger*. In a
global market for the best CEO talent where winner-takes-all economics
prevails, the gap between the top and the rest is bound to be vast.

For all the attention focused on CEO pay, the numbers of *chief executives
among America’s ultra-rich are neither particularly big or growing. The
very richest Americans*—those who feature in the *Forbes* list of
billionaires—tend to be *entrepreneurs, from the icons of the tech
era*(Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg) to many whose money has more prosaic
roots
(Sara Blakely, America’s youngest female billionaire, made her fortune from
women’s underwear).

*A disproportionate, and growing, chunk of the very rich, however, have
made their money in Wall Stree*t rather than Main Street. An analysis by Mr
Kaplan and Joshua Rauh, now of Stanford University, shows that the *share
of investment bankers among the top 0.1% is larger than the share of senior
executives*. America’s *top 25 hedge-fund managers make more than all the
CEOs of the S&P 500 combined*. The financial industry’s outsize pay partly
reflects its growth. For good or ill, finance’s share of American GDP
soared between 1980 and 2007. Capital markets have globalised faster and
more comprehensively than any other part of the economy, enabling hedge
funds and other asset managers to deploy ever bigger pools of funds.
According to Thomas Philippon of New York University and Ariell Reshef of
the University of Virginia, financiers also have higher skill levels than
they did a generation ago.

These fundamental economic shifts explain part of the rise in Wall Street
incomes, but not all of it. *Messrs Philippon and Reshef argue that between
a third and half of Wall Street’s higher pay is unjustified, deriving from
rents rather than productivity <http://www.nber.org/papers/w14644.pdf>.*But
*what explains these rents*? Luigi Zingales of the University of Chicago
points out that one source is the *implicit subsidy (through lower
borrowing costs) that banks enjoy by being too big to fail*. He reckons
this subsidy is worth some $30 billion a year, enough to fund a fair few
bonuses. Others point to a broader *cronyism between Wall Street and
Washington over the past 30 years which has allowed financiers to tilt
rules in their favour.* The finance industry (along with property and
insurance) employs more lobbyists than virtually any other industry, around
four per Congressman.

*Financiers have also been among the biggest winners from changes to
America’s tax code.* The country’s top rate of income tax has been
repeatedly slashed since 1980, from 70% to 35%. By itself, that reduction
has not greatly affected average tax burdens at the top (since there have
been enough loopholes to ensure that few people paid the top rate). *America’s
richest have gained more from reductions in the capital-gains tax, which is
now only 15%. Private-equity moguls have done particularly well, since the
tax code allows them to classify their income as capital gains.*

*Scratching each other’s backs*

The *combination of tax loopholes, bank bail-outs and massive lobbying has
led many observers to conclude that America’s growing inequality has
political roots*. The wealthy, in this logic, control the political system
and rig it to their advantage. In an influential book, “Unequal Democracy:
The Political Economy of the New Gilded Age”, Larry Bartels of Vanderbilt
University showed that senators’ votes are influenced by the preferences of
their rich citizens but not their poor ones. As money plays an ever bigger
role in politics, goes the argument, so the clout of the ultra-wealthy
grows, particularly to block things they don’t like.

This claim is hard to prove, but circumstantial evidence for it seems to be
mounting, particularly since the Supreme Court’s 2010 *“Citizens United”
decision lifted any restrictions on political spending by individuals or
firms. That opened the way for the rise of “super-PACs”, privately funded
organisations set up to influence election outcomes*. These have now raised
hundreds of millions of dollars. The *sources of this money are highly
concentrated: one analysis suggests that 80% of the total comes from fewer
than 200 donors.* America is still a long way from the first Gilded Age,
when the robber barons openly bought unelected senators’ loyalty by giving
them shares in their companies. But it is hard to believe that this surge
of cash from the richest will have no impact at all.

Whatever its causes, the s*tratification of American society is having
profound consequence*s. A country that prides itself on its social mobility
is already less mobile than most people think and is almost certainly
becoming even less so. As the box with the previous article showed,
standard measures of inter-generational mobility in America are lower than
in Canada and much of Europe. Most of this has to do with the *difficulty
of escaping from the bottom rungs of America’s income ladder*. According to
Markus Jantti, a Finnish economist who has studied mobility across
countries, more than *40% of the sons of the poorest 20% of Americans stay
in that quintile, compared with around 25% in Nordic countries*. The
evidence is mixed on whether social mobility has lessened or simply stayed
the same over the past 30 years. But it is clear that there has been *no
improvement in mobility to compensate for widening inequality.*

And even the most recent studies of social mobility look at the earnings of
people who were children over two decades ago. Since disparities in income,
education and social behaviour now strongly reinforce each other, future
mobility might be a lot lower still. A study by Sean Reardon of Stanford
University suggests that the* gap in standardised test scores between
schoolchildren from high- and low-income families is roughly 30-40% bigger
today than it was 25 years ago.* Bob Putnam, of Harvard University, puts it
starkly. Put away the rear-view mirror and look at future social mobility,
he says, and *“we’re about to go over a cliff.”*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to