http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/dec2006/ineq-d12.shtml

60 million Americans living on less than $7 a day
US income figures show staggering rise in social inequality

By Jerry White
12 December 2006

A recent analysis of Internal Revenue Service tax data sheds further
light on the enormous gap that has grown between America's wealthy
elite and the masses of working people over the last quarter of a
century. The examination of IRS figures was conducted by the New York
Times and reported in its November 27 article, "'04 Income in U.S.
Was Below 2000 Level" by David Cay Johnston.

The article begins by noting that total US income in 2004-the latest
year for which tax information is available-was $7.044 trillion, down
from more than $7.143 trillion in 2000. The decline was attributed to
two factors: the stagnation of median household income-which fell by
3 percent, or about $1,600, between 2000 and 2004-and the fact that
the earnings of the richest Americans have not yet caught up with the
peak reached before the Internet bubble on Wall Street burst in 2000.

Incomes in 2004 rose by an average 6.8 percent but the vast bulk of
the increase went to the richest one-tenth of 1 percent of all
Americans-living in some 130,500 households with an average income of
$4.9 million-who saw their incomes rise by 27.5 percent over the
course of one year. During the same period the income of the poorest
one-fifth of the population-some 60 million people-rose by only 1.8
percent.

The sharp rise in income for the wealthiest Americans-due in large
measure to the Bush administration's cuts in capital gains taxes,
corporate profit rates not seen in nearly 40 years and the recovery
of the stock market-has led to a further concentration of wealth in
the hands of the super-rich. According to a separate study by
University of California-Berkeley economist Emmanuel Saez, the
richest one-tenth of 1 percent of Americans took in 9.5 percent of
all pretax income, or about $679 billion in 2004, excluding
unreported income.

Referring to this elite group, the New York Times article notes,
"those very top households, which include about 300,000 Americans,
reported significantly more pretax income combined than the poorest
120 million Americans earned in 2004, the data show. This is a sharp
change from 1979, the oldest year examined by the I.R.S, when the
thin slice at the top received about one-third of the total income of
the big group at the bottom."

This staggering fact reveals a great deal about the economic and
political processes that have unfolded over the last quarter century.
While the portion of national income controlled by America's
corporate and financial elite declined in the aftermath of the Great
Depression and stabilized during the postwar period, over the last 25
years a massive social transformation has occurred and the share of
the national income now controlled by America's social oligarchy is
at the highest levels since 1929.

The Times article goes on to note, "Over all, average incomes rose 27
percent in real terms over the quarter-century from 1979 through
2004. But the gains were narrowly concentrated at the top and offset
by losses for the bottom 60 percent of Americans, those making less
than $38,761 in 2004." It continues, "The bottom 60 percent of
Americans, on average, made less than 95 cents in 2004 for each
dollar they reported in 1979, the analysis of IRS data showed. The
next best-off group, the fifth of Americans on the 60th to 80th rungs
of the income ladder, averaged 2 cents more income in 2004 for each
dollar they earned in 1979.

"Only those in the top 5 percent had significant gains," the
newspaper notes. The average income of those on the 95th to 99th
rungs of the income ladder rose by 53 percent, almost twice the
average rate. The largest gains, however, went to those at the very
heights of American society. "A third of the entire national increase
in reported income went to the top 1 percent-and more than half of
that went to the top tenth of 1 percent, whose average incomes soared
so much that for each dollar, adjusted for inflation, that they had
in 1979 they had $3.48 in 2004," the Times article says.

The last 25 years has seen an enormous transfer of wealth from
working people into the hands of America's economic elite. With the
full backing of both the Democrats and Republicans, corporate America
responded to the decline of its competitive position in the 1970s by
launching an unrelenting attack on the jobs and living standards of
the working class that continues to this day. The enrichment of those
at the top has come at the direct expense of the vast majority of the
working population in America, whose share of national wealth has
plummeted.

At the other pole of society is an increasingly impoverished working
class, including some 25 percent of all workers who labor for poverty
wages. The Times article notes that the bottom fifth of all taxpayers
earned below $11,166 and their average reported income was only
$5,743 each. Because the IRS includes a single individual or a
married couple in its definition of a "taxpayer" the poorest 26
million taxpayers account for the equivalent nearly 48 million adults
and about 12 million dependent children. According to the Times
analysis, this means the poorest 60 million Americans have reported
incomes of less than $7 a day!

The official poverty line in 2004 was $27 a day for a single adult
below retirement age and $42 a day for a household with one child-
although the real cost of attaining basic necessities is far higher.
The Times article notes that the IRS income data does not include the
value of government benefits like food stamps, earned-income tax
credits and subsidized medical care. But the social programs for the
poor-including federal welfare assistance-have largely been wiped out
or curtailed and what programs do remain are not sufficient to lift
families out of poverty.

It is often noted that 3 billion of the world's poorest people live
on less than $2 a day. In the US, where the cost of living is far
higher, $7 a day is only enough to guarantee a life of destitution.
The fact that 60 million people live in such dire poverty-and tens of
millions more could face the same fate if they lost their jobs or
confronted some other financial catastrophe-is a damning indictment
of American capitalism and the free market model it touts around the
world.

The levels of social stratification and inequality in the US are
incompatible with genuine democracy. Political life in America is
completely subordinated to the needs of a financial aristocracy whose
pursuit of ever greater levels of personal wealth constantly collides
with the social needs and democratic rights of the broad masses of
people in the US and internationally. The needs of this elite-for
further wars of conquest, tax cuts, the elimination of social
programs and a drastic reduction of living standards-cannot be
imposed, in the final analysis, without recourse to authoritarian means.

The social transformation that has occurred over the last 25 years
has coincided with a shift to the right by both big business parties
and in particular the abandonment of any program of social reforms by
the Democratic Party, whose leading personal, such as House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi and leading presidential contender Senator Hillary
Clinton, are themselves multimillionaires. Insulated from the
majority of the people and unwilling and unable to respond to their
needs and concerns, the leading members of the incoming Democratic
majority in Congress have already made it clear that they will not
roll back the Bush-era tax cuts that have helped bring unimaginable
wealth to their real constituents.

See Also:
The slide into poverty-an increasing likelihood for workers in
Detroit's suburbs
[6 November 2006]
Forbes publishes list of 400 richest Americans
[16 October 2006]

================
Richard Ménec
Book reviews and more at: http://booksinternationale.pbwiki.com

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