Re: One more bit of ecconomic data
On 20 Jan 2004, at 12:31 am, Erik Reuter wrote: On Sun, Jan 18, 2004 at 09:14:41PM -0600, Dan Minette wrote: OK, first analysis of income by 20% grouping and top 5%. RR + GB^2Clinton 1st 20% 7.6% 15.9% 2nd 20% 8.9% 15.5% 3rd 20% 11.2% 14.6% 4th 20% 14.0% 15.8% 5th 20% 24.8% 28.8% top 5% 40.7% 43.4% The numbers don't exactly match with the GDP numbers for a couple of reasons. There was approximately 2%-3% greater growth in the numbers of households under RR + GB^2 than under Clinton. The share of the GDP growth that went to household income was greater under Clinton. That is fairly strong evidence in support of your contention that Democrats are better for the poor than Republicans. Under Clinton, the bottom 40% had approximately DOUBLE the rate of growth as under the best 8 years of RR + GB^2, as you said. I wonder why JDG hasn't commented. One wouldn't want to let contingent facts get in the way of revealed truth :) -- William T Goodall Mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED] Web : http://www.wtgab.demon.co.uk Blog : http://radio.weblogs.com/0111221/ "It is our belief, however, that serious professional users will run out of things they can do with UNIX." - Ken Olsen, President of DEC, 1984. ___ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
Re: One more bit of ecconomic data
On Sun, Jan 18, 2004 at 09:14:41PM -0600, Dan Minette wrote: > OK, first analysis of income by 20% grouping and top 5%. > > RR + GB^2Clinton > 1st 20% 7.6% 15.9% > 2nd 20% 8.9% 15.5% > 3rd 20% 11.2% 14.6% > 4th 20% 14.0% 15.8% > 5th 20% 24.8% 28.8% > top 5% 40.7% 43.4% > > The numbers don't exactly match with the GDP numbers for a couple of > reasons. > > There was approximately 2%-3% greater growth in the numbers of > households under RR + GB^2 than under Clinton. > > The share of the GDP growth that went to household income was greater > under Clinton. That is fairly strong evidence in support of your contention that Democrats are better for the poor than Republicans. Under Clinton, the bottom 40% had approximately DOUBLE the rate of growth as under the best 8 years of RR + GB^2, as you said. I wonder why JDG hasn't commented. -- Erik Reuter http://www.erikreuter.net/ ___ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
Re: One more bit of ecconomic data
OK, first analysis of income by 20% grouping and top 5%. RR + GB^2Clinton 1st 20% 7.6% 15.9% 2nd 20% 8.9% 15.5% 3rd 20% 11.2% 14.6% 4th 20% 14.0% 15.8% 5th 20% 24.8% 28.8% top 5% 40.7% 43.4% The numbers don't exactly match with the GDP numbers for a couple of reasons. There was approximately 2%-3% greater growth in the numbers of households under RR + GB^2 than under Clinton. The share of the GDP growth that went to household income was greater under Clinton. But, we see that, while richer households did approximately as well under 8 cherry picked years from the last 14 under Bush^2 & RR as under Clinton, they bottom 40% only did half as well, and the middle 20% did about 20% worse. Dan M. ___ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l