Quantcast
Channel: Life on a Shoestring Budget » Politics
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 6

Rich Man’s Burden, Poor Man’s Bane

$
0
0
IncomeGap

While those of us in the less-than 95th percentile of the American income scale celebrated a long Labor Day weekend with family and friends, the 2008 Presidential race heated up, took a bizarre turn, and looks more like a “North Country”-like sit-com every day. The New York Times published some Labor Day editorials that are as remarkably honest as they are politically timely in this era of double-digit inflation for basics like food and fuel, the mortgage crisis tossing millions of families out on the streets, and ever-faster distancing between ‘rich’ and ‘poor’ that can positively cause major depression if you think too much about it.

Why? Because things are getting worse, not better. Our shoestring budgets can no longer be thought of a a temporary condition, but something we’ll have to work with all our lives. This is what op-ed contributor Dalton Conley commented on Tuesday in his opinion piece, Rich Man’s Burden.


Conley begins by noticing that less wealthy Americans actually took the weekend off and were happy about it, while wealthier Americans mostly fretted over their BlackBerries and laptops and worked anyway, as if frightened of being left behind if they weren’t working constantly to get ahead. He describes a sort of “red shift” – like that of light reaching us from distant galaxies rushing ever further away from us ever faster – between the middle income group [~$200,000 a year] and the actually rich. The disparity between the middle and the bottom rungs on the economic ladder is not so great and isn’t accelerating much. But once you reach the middle, the rungs get further and further apart.

Princeton economics professor and former vice-chair of the Fed Alan Blinder offered a contrast between the political parties and their economic plans over the weekend that is well worth reading and digesting. He lays things out clearly and simply in what he calls the Great Partisan Growth Divide. The US economy has, on average, grown faster under Democratic presidents than under Republicans.

I call this the Economic Ag Cycle. Where Democrats grow the economy during their ascendency, so that Republicans can move in and reap the money crop (i.e., rob the country blind). Which one might think would balance out over time, but it doesn’t. And that’s why we find ourselves where we are today. From 1948 to 2007, Republicans occupied the White House for a total of 34 years, while Democrats held it only 26 years. There’s simply not been enough wealth grown for the amount of reaping the rich folks have been doing, so we are now worse off than we have been at any time since World War 2.

Income inequality has been on the rise for 30 years. It gets greater and greater the higher up the ladder you go, and Blinder went all the way to the 95% vs. 5% level. Which, btw, is well below the $5 million income level John McCain set as his idea of when people become “rich.” In fact, it’s under $200,000.

Finally, Bob Herbert offers his advice to Head for the High Road and not let ourselves be swayed or fooled by ‘the usual’ political distractions and overblown pandering, but to pay attention to reality on the ground after the last 8 years of Republican reaping. Just as school districts all over the country are suddenly having to deal with huge increases in the number of officially poor and homeless children, those school districts have had to cut funding for programs serving those children due to concurrent huge increases in the costs of food and fuel.

So while I hope you all had a happy Labor Day and enjoyed yourselves immensely, do check out these editorials. They’ll put this political Silly Season into some realistic perspective. Many of us enjoy our lives way too much to be desirous of 24-hour workdays 7 days a week 365 days a year. It’s a rat race that would detract from our quality of life significantly, we only want ‘enough’. Yet if we’re not careful this November, we’re going to get another 4-8 years of less and less, until the American philosophy and the American Dream will become something most citizens can never even hope for. Their children will be less well-educated, they’ll make less money, they’ll have to work harder, they’ll suffer more, and suddenly there won’t be anything left to protect and defend. We must not allow this to happen.

Links:

Rich Man’s Burden
Head for the High Road
Is History Siding with Obama’s Economic Plan?


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 6

Trending Articles