Edward Luce in the FT about median wage stagnation:
"In contrast to the Clinton years – when there was some growth in median income, although still at lower rates than productivity growth – people such as Mr Summers and Robert Rubin, his predecessor, are now openly sceptical of the market economy’s ability to distribute socially desirable rewards.
“It is critically important that the next administration makes it a priority to focus on the structural causes that hold back growth in workers’ wages,” says Mr Summers. “That means reversing the perverse Bush tax cuts, empowering labour in strategic ways, as well as investing in healthcare, education and infrastructure.”
But Mr Summers, along with many of his peers, concedes that finding the right policies will prove difficult for such a complex and deep-seated problem. Many reach for parallels with the “gilded age” of the 1920s that gave rise to unprecedented Great Gatsby-style incomes at the top and was brought to a close by the 1929 stock market crash and the ensuing Great Depression.
Today’s numbers also closely track that period. According to Emmanuel Saez at the University of California, Berkeley, the distribution of income today almost exactly matches that of 1928 on the eve of the Wall Street crash. In 1928, the top 1 per cent of Americans took in 24 per cent of national income, compared with 23 per cent today. Between 1940 and 1984 their share never exceeded 15 per cent and it was in single digits for most of the 1960s and 1970."
I believe that this is an essential issue. Why? Because without a significant middle class that feels middle class, not barely above destistution, there is no way that we can ever have a smaller government. Period.
No comments:
Post a Comment