US income gap widest since 1917
19 August 2009
The social chasm separating America’s financial oligarchy from working
people, the vast majority of the population, is wider than at any time
since 1917, according to the latest statistics from the Internal
Revenue Service.

The income gap between the top 10 percent and the bottom 90 percent
has reached “a level higher than any other year since 1917 and even
surpasses 1928, the peak of the stock market bubble in the ‘roaring’
1920s,” according to an analysis of the data published earlier this
month by University of California economist Emmanuel Saez.

Saez’s report, entitled “Striking it Richer: The Evolution of Top
Incomes in the United States,” shows that the real increase in the
concentration of wealth has taken place at the pinnacle of the social
pyramid—the top 1 percent, with annual incomes of $400,000 and above.

The figures released by the IRS are from 2007. They indicate that for
most of the top 10 percent (families with incomes of $110,000 or
more), there was little change in terms of income growth and share,
but the top 1 percent increased their share of the national income to
23.5 percent, compared with 22.8 percent in 2006.

Between 2002 and 2006, this social layer, consisting of one out of 100
American households, accounted for 65 percent of income growth
nationwide. This trend has held for the better part of the past
decade.

During the period 2002-2007, the top one percent saw an annual growth
in income of just over 10 percent annually. During the same period,
the bottom 99 percent saw an increase of only 1.3 percent per year,
falling well below the rate of inflation. As a result, the top one
percent accounted for two thirds of income growth over the six-year
period.

Bringing this income stratification into still sharper focus provides
a staggering indication of the concentration of wealth in the US. The
top .01 percent of the population, (less than 15,000 families) saw its
share of total income rise from 5.46 percent in 2006 to 6.04 percent
in 2007 (compared to just 0.9 percent in 1979). This 2007 figure
amounts to roughly double the total combined income for the bottom 20
percent, some 30 million families.

As Saez comments, “2007 was an incredibly good year for the super
rich.”

It was also, of course, the year preceding the greatest financial
collapse since the Great Depression of the 1930s. This was no mere
coincidence. The accumulation of obscene amounts of wealth by this
tiny minority is a major factor in the bankrupting of the country and
the plunging of the entire world into economic crisis and misery.

Professor Saez points to the dramatic changes in the economic
landscape since 2007, noting that real income is falling across the
board. He points out that in previous recessions, the income share of
the top 1 percent has tended to decline because business profits,
capital gains and stock option returns tend to fall faster than
average income.

“Based on the US historical record, falls in income concentration due
to recessions are temporary unless drastic policy changes such as
financial regulation or significantly more progressive taxation are
implemented and prevent income concentration from coming back,” Saez
writes.

The present crisis, however, is not just another recession. Rather, it
signals the final collapse of the post-World War II global capitalist
order, which depended on the economic supremacy of the United States.
The ruling elite, not just in the US but in all the major capitalist
countries, aims to resolve this crisis through a drastic reduction in
the income and social conditions of the working class, accompanied by
attacks on basic democratic rights and an increasing turn to military
aggression.

As part of this global process, the working class in the US has
already suffered severe blows. Some 30 million are jobless or
relegated to involuntary part-time work, while wage-cutting is
rampant.

At the other end of the social spectrum, wealth accumulation continues
unabated. Seven of America’s top ten CEOs took home total compensation
of $100 million or more last year, according to a report by the
independent research group The Corporate Library. This compares to
just three who pocketed that much the year before.

Topping the list (which includes the heads of seven major oil
companies) is Stephen Schwarzman of Blackstone Group LP, the private
equity firm, who took in $702.4 million—nearly $2 million a day.

Meanwhile, Wall Street has set aside tens of billions of dollars for
annual bonuses, with 2009 set to be the most lucrative year yet for
the bankers and financial traders.

The Obama administration has no intention of imposing the kind of
financial regulation or tax increases on the rich that Saez suggests
could lessen social polarization and the concentration of wealth. On
the contrary, all of its policies have been directed at bailing out
the banks and the financial elite, while demanding that workers accept
drastic pay and benefit cuts, the destruction of their jobs, and a
series of counter-reforms in health care and other essential social
programs.

Commenting on the controversy over Wall Street pay and benefits last
week, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs defended the bankers’
plundering of the economy, telling the press “I don’t think the
American people begrudge that people make big salaries, as long as
they’re not jeopardizing the good will of the public in doing so.”

The only alternative to the destruction of working class living
standards to maintain the wealth of the financial aristocracy is a
socialist one. It requires a break with the Democratic Party and the
building of an independent mass political movement of the working
class fighting for an end to the domination of society by the
financial parasites of Wall Street.

The banks and finance houses must be taken out of private hands and
placed under public ownership and the democratic control of working
people. The vast fortunes accumulated by the CEOs and financial
speculators should be reclaimed to pay for jobs, education, health
care, housing and other vital social needs.

The return of income polarization to the level of 1917 has profound
significance. That was the year of the October Revolution in Russia,
marking the first time that working people took political power and
initiated the task of placing society on socialist foundations on a
worldwide basis. The social gap that now dominates US society, and
indeed the entire planet, cannot continue without producing an
explosive resurgence of class struggle and a new period of social
revolution.

Bill Van Auken

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