Will the standard of living in America continue to dwindle?

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And where did I say they had to spend ALL or even most of their income? People do need to be able to spend to keep the economy humming. When they can’t afford to buy anything and have only enough to keep a roof over their heads and the lights on, there’s not enough demand for goods and services to keep others working. There’s no sin in being able to buy the occasional new pair of jeans or shoes, take a vacation or go out to dinner once in a while.
That’s diferent, though, isn’t it?

Undoubtedly, many can’t afford to buy very much. But most people seem to spend pretty much everything they make, buy things they absolutely don’t need, and often borrow to do it. That’s a big part of the reason underlying the current recession. It may be observed that people have, on average, cut down on their debt. Unfortunately, the government is borrowing for them at present.
 
That’s diferent, though, isn’t it?

Undoubtedly, many can’t afford to buy very much. But most people seem to spend pretty much everything they make, buy things they absolutely don’t need, and often borrow to do it. That’s a big part of the reason underlying the current recession. It may be observed that people have, on average, cut down on their debt. Unfortunately, the government is borrowing for them at present.
I don’t know how old you are, but I’m old enough to remember a time when everyone didn’t even have a Visa card. Yet, my parents-neither of whom went to college-were still able to buy a house, keep the pantry filled and the lights on, have 2 cars, send me to Catholic school, buy me clothes and toys and we even went on vacation in the summers. They didn’t have credit cards until I was in high school in the late 70’s. They were able to earn enough for that life before credit cards were in everyone’s wallet.

You don’t have to believe me, look it up yourself. Search “income growth in US since 1970” and see for yourself. A young person starting out today is simply not going to see the kind of income growth my parents did. My generation didn’t see it. Sure, there are some, but the stories are like legends because they only happen to a few people.

We want to believe that we still live in a rags to riches, pull yourself up by your own bootstraps society, but the numbers prove it just isn’t working that way anymore for a huge portion of society. Being smart about money and credit is a part of it, as is our instant gratification society, but those are only parts of the equation.

It’s not about any single political party or candidate. It’s about years of policies that have changed the playing field to favor those who already have the money and power.
 
I don’t know how old you are, but I’m old enough to remember a time when everyone didn’t even have a Visa card. Yet, my parents-neither of whom went to college-were still able to buy a house, keep the pantry filled and the lights on, have 2 cars, send me to Catholic school, buy me clothes and toys and we even went on vacation in the summers. They didn’t have credit cards until I was in high school in the late 70’s. They were able to earn enough for that life before credit cards were in everyone’s wallet.

You don’t have to believe me, look it up yourself. Search “income growth in US since 1970” and see for yourself. A young person starting out today is simply not going to see the kind of income growth my parents did. My generation didn’t see it. Sure, there are some, but the stories are like legends because they only happen to a few people.

We want to believe that we still live in a rags to riches, pull yourself up by your own bootstraps society, but the numbers prove it just isn’t working that way anymore for a huge portion of society. Being smart about money and credit is a part of it, as is our instant gratification society, but those are only parts of the equation.

It’s not about any single political party or candidate. It’s about years of policies that have changed the playing field to favor those who already have the money and power.
Taxes and government deficit spending are the cause of that. Well over half our income goes to taxes so the government can spend over $60,000 per household on the poor. After you’ve taken my taxes the “poor” are now ahead of me.
 
Taxes and government deficit spending are the cause of that. Well over half our income goes to taxes so the government can spend over $60,000 per household on the poor. After you’ve taken my taxes the “poor” are now ahead of me.
If the “poor” are getting $60,000 a year, then how are they still poor ?

Actually, if you’re wealthy enough to deal in capital gains, you’re paying less than 20% In taxes. Maybe if those inequalities were fixed that would help a bit.
 
Taxes and government deficit spending are the cause of that. Well over half our income goes to taxes so the government can spend over $60,000 per household on the poor. After you’ve taken my taxes the “poor” are now ahead of me.
The government might take the equivalent of 60K per poor family from working families in terms of taxes. The government might spend 60K per poor family. But it’s more likely that the government wastes 60K per poor family, and that poor families receive far far less than 60K in terms of benefits.

If it’s so easy and so good and so beneficial being poor when don’t more middle-class people go on welfare voluntarily? Serious question, not a put down.
 
It’s true that the “middle class” has shrunk. But it’s because a significant number have joined the “upper class” in terms of wealth. That’s, to some extent, due to the aging of the population because elders have more in terms of “wealth” than younger people, having accumulated it over a lifetime.

But median income has also shrunk. To some extent, that’s due to shrinkage of the “middle class” as abovementioned, which “skimmed off” some of the high earners,
So let’s have it cut and dry, from your best guestimate. What % of the middle class has moved into the upper class, compared to what % has moved down? And what would you consider ‘upper class’?

Unemployed Poor
Working Poor
Working Class
Middle Class
Upper Middle Class
Upper Class
Rich
Wealthy
Super Wealthy

Using the different catagories above, assuming the super wealthy is the very top and is the smallest catagory by % of people, say .0000001%, effectively excluding them as a class, with the wealthy being say .001%, the rich being say the difference to rounding off to make the top 3 in the list equal to 1%.

Now we have ‘society’ from unemployed poor up to upper class. This wouldn’t be the president’s or michael moor’s 1%, this is the way I would break down things where the upper class is NOT included in the 1% ie the 99% vs the 1%.

What % of the population would you consider to be in the upper class? The unemployed poor, the working poor, the middle class, the upper middle class. If your considering the ‘upper class’ to be older retired people who have accumulated money, how much money do they have to have to be in the ‘upper class’? Are all doctor’s in the upper class? Where do CEO’s with 500 million fall? Which class are nurses in, middle class or working class? I wouldn’t consider them to be working poor, but I would not consider a nurse living alone as an adult to be middle class either. Are only people making minimum wage or very close to it in the ‘working poor’ class? I wouldn’t agree with that at all.
 
I took a History of Capitalism and Labor in the U.S. class at community college a while back.

The decline in American standard of living was decided by the captains of industry in the United States by at least the 1970’s. They released that the rest of the world was beginning to make strides in catching up with the United States. Our former allies - as well as Japan - from WWII were redeveloping their former industrial base, cities, enough that they could increasingly join in exporting, and competing to export, products around the world.

One of my grandfathers used to brag that when he was a younger man in Milwaukee there were so many non-skilled, well paying jobs, that he could (and did) get fired from one job, walk down the street and could get (and did) another good paying factory job the same day.

It was a time in the Midwest when the saying went, “All you need is a strong back and a good alarm clock,” and you could have a non-skilled or skilled labor job that could support a large family (12 kids and wife) off your single paycheck. A lot of these men never even finished high school. Some never even finished grade school.

Today both parents usually need to work even if both have undergraduate degrees or graduate degrees and no more than 3 children. In part this is because companies need to compete with foreign competition and companies need to keep their costs low enough to compete. For companies that are public (stock exchange/stock holders) in the United States the problem is exacerbated by the fact companies are obligated to providing high returns to their stock holders first and foremost, so, labor on the floor usually takes the first pay hit.

Organized labor has not kept up with the pace of change in corporations either. Organized labor is still nationalistic while corporations are increasingly becoming multinational or global in identity. In other words corporations fly the flags of many nations - not just the United States (or their country of origin or headquarters) - but organized labor in the United States only flies the flag of the United States.

This disparity can be seen in the situation of and over NAFTA. Corporations from the U.S. being involved with both the governments of the U.S. and Mexico but organized labor in the U.S. having nothing to do with organized labor in Mexico.

It’s also within corporate interests to keep a divide and conquer policy among the worlds labor force.

As for the U.S. poor and how much the U.S. Government pays per house hold - or any calculated averages - there are wealth disparities even among the U.S. poor.

My brother is on a long waiting list for a kidney transplant and is on dialysis I believe twice a week. Because he was indigent at the time the government foots the medical bills. The Government provides him something like $600 a month to live on with the stipulation he can’t have more than a total of $2,000 in assets (e.g., bank account, life insurance policy) with the exception of a house and car. Since he was indigent at the time - and given he can’t have over $2,000 in the bank - he did not purchase a home but he rents. And he rents in a high crime area. He has no car either (in Milwaukee you by law must pay for an insurance policy on a car you own). I believe he get food stamps too. But I suspect less than $200 a month.

So, with regards to the cost of living today that is not a whole lot of money. Even if my brother were happy… why would a rich man be jealous of the joy a poor man has over a small gift he received.

The movie The Count of Monte Cristo: youtube.com/watch?v=UVpAKifBfTo

The rich boy given the pony as a gift is jealous and angry over the poor boy delighted in the small gift of a whistle he’s given.
 
Also… many electronic gadgets today are relatively inexpensive and accessible to the poor.

Anything accessible to the poor by definition is not luxury.

Fernand Braudel in his volumes on capitalism notes that anything the rich have - life table forks and knives - will eventually become accessible to the poor. Once they do they lose their value status as “luxury” Braudel points out. Thus Braudel says… luxury has some subjectivity to it.

Table forks and knives - first used in Europe by Italians - were originally considered such items of luxury that they were regarded as decadent and Catholic and Protestant preachers alike warned anyone that used them would be damned eternally in hell.

The point is… even the poor in Brazil and Latin America have cell phones. China even has a larger cell phone market than the United States with far more brands. Some Chinese youth change to new cell phones once every month. Of course, there are millions of other Chinese in rural areas of China living like they are in the 19th Century.
 
So, thinking it through, back when one family member could support the whole family, that family probably paid almost nothing in taxes and there weren’t nearly as many things to buy. “Keeping up with the Joneses” didn’t really apply to children. Now, children are into the latest fashions and gadgets.

If people today lived like people did in 1950, I don’t much doubt most could do with one income only.
The way you describe it above, the people living this way are living for free off of other people’s taxes. They might not live in houses, they live in apartments- but as you said houses were much smaller so it’s almost the same thing anyway. And they might not have cars, but public transportation in big cities is pretty efficient and trouble free so not much of a difference there either, a small trade off for having a free apartment, free money to live on, free everything and not having to work at all- a free, 52 week per year paid vacation!

So using your standards the non working poor are actually the middle class of the 50’s, and they don’t have to work!

Peace,
Bill
 
History teaches that economies rise and fall. The question when falling is, HOW FAR DOWN and for how long?

The Crash of 1929 took us down pretty far and we stayed down for more than 10 years. Then World War II and then the greatest economic growth for 60 years with only minor, short term falls.

Today’s economy faces the largest threat since the Crash of 1929. We just do not know how far down or for how long we could go if wrong decisions are made.

The government can either help create new growth or it can hinder it.

History also teaches that when a national government tries to manage the economy too much, it usually fails and makes matters much worse. There are simply too many decisions to be made in too many industries and bureaucrats, nice as they are, are simply not businessmen who risk THEIR OWN MONEY and thus are more highly motivated than bureacrats, to make smarter decisions. I love football. I love to talk about it and analyze it and predict it. BUT I cannot play football the way it needs to be played to win. Same with most bureaucrats.

Government needs to encourage business and not become business itself. Too much government control results in too little freedom to succeed.
I agree with you about the key difference between businessmen and gov’t bureaucrats. Unfortunately also IMO has the gov’t long since become a business and I think the bureaucrats are motivated to create nothing, to make things LESS efficient. They risk nothing, they are one grain in a whole field of wheat. There is no punnishment for these individuals to grow and multiply and accomplish less and less for society. Actually there is a punnishment, but they are not the ones who suffer it, we do.

Peace,
Bill
 
It’s possible, I suppose, that some VERY wealthy people put their money offshore. But most wealthy people don’t. I know lots of them,
Either you know a lot of people who belong to the most exclusive clubs in the world and can get almost anything they want by pushing a button or making a phone call or we have a large disagreement when it comes to the definition of ‘very wealthy’.

For me, VERY wealthy means they have servants full time and drivers on stand by full time. If it doesn’t mean this, and means dr’s and lawyers who are doing quite well what would you call the people who can buy them 100x over?

Peace,
Bill
 
It’s possible, I suppose, that some VERY wealthy people put their money offshore. But most wealthy people don’t. I know lots of them, and it’s considered an invitation to an IRS audit…which it is. Most wealthy people in this country do not have overseas investments and therefore no reason to have offshore accounts.

Wealth growth has stagnated or dropped in the U.S. for several reasons:
First, a lot of people are no longer in the “lower” or “middle” classes. Part of that is due to demographics, as I mentioned before. Older people are by far the wealthiest segment of the population in the U.S., because they have the accumulated wealth of a lifetime. At their death, it goes to someone else; usually someone lower than they on the “wealth scale”.
It seems to me that your talking about people who have worked their entire lives and accumulated say 4-5 million to leave behind. If this is in the ballpark of what your talking about, what do you call the people who make that in a bad year or a very bad year, or a very, very bad year?

And what do you call the people who can park enough money in bond funds and other low to very low risk investments and earn 4-5 million doing that?

What do you call the people who have died in the last decade with a net worth of 500 million dollars or more?

Peace,
Bill

Peace,
Bill
 
. It makes wage slaves of its devotees. It is just a fact that during the last couple of decades, consumerism drove the incurring of unsustainable debt. There is nothing at all wrong with being prudent with one’s earnings.
How would you define a ‘wage slave’? To me it can’t include people who live off of the government (off of taxpayers). To me it is anyone who can’t afford to stop working for a few years, then jump back into doing whatever it is they were doing before to make money- or do something else to make money- and be completely fine with no worries.

As far as I am concerned every single working poor person is obviously a wage slave. They live hand to mouth, paycheck to paycheck. I would also consider a large portion to almost all of the working class wage slaves. By the very definition IMO of being ‘working class’ someone basically continue working to continue surviving (assuming they don’t get on the dole to survive).

Also, if someone is in the middle class and simply couldn’t afford to stop working and live off of what they already have for the rest of their lives and also put their children through college and grad school they are wage slaves (good luck being born today and living a life where you dont’ worry about your bills unless you have a post grad degree). I’m not saying this is a bad thing, I’m simply pointing out what I consider to be reality. I suppose one could technically exclude from the catagory of ‘wage slaves’ people who cut all financial ties to their children once they turn 18. But if someone has to keep a job and can’t stop working and still get by, they are a wage slave, aren’t they? Can people in the middle class afford to stop working and still manage to get by and live out their entire lives without working anymore?

Peace,
Bill
 
So let’s have it cut and dry, from your best guestimate. What % of the middle class has moved into the upper class, compared to what % has moved down? And what would you consider ‘upper class’?

Unemployed Poor
Working Poor
Working Class
Middle Class
Upper Middle Class
Upper Class
Rich
Wealthy
Super Wealthy

Using the different catagories above, assuming the super wealthy is the very top and is the smallest catagory by % of people, say .0000001%, effectively excluding them as a class, with the wealthy being say .001%, the rich being say the difference to rounding off to make the top 3 in the list equal to 1%.

Now we have ‘society’ from unemployed poor up to upper class. This wouldn’t be the president’s or michael moor’s 1%, this is the way I would break down things where the upper class is NOT included in the 1% ie the 99% vs the 1%.

What % of the population would you consider to be in the upper class? Which class are nurses in, middle class or working class? I wouldn’t consider them to be working poor, but I would not consider a nurse living alone as an adult to be middle class either. Are only people making minimum wage or very close to it in the ‘working poor’ class? I wouldn’t agree with that at all.
I don’t pretend to be an economist or a demographer. And, “upper class” or any “class” is pretty subjective. I do recall reading that a great deal of the shrinkage in the “middle class” is due to their joining the next rung up, whatever one wants to call it. I would have to look it up again to be able to state the author’s premises for saying it.

But regardless, an aging population is going to shift people from one class to another. Some it will shift into a lower “rung” in terms of income eventually but not in terms of “wealth”. Some it will shift into an upper “rung” in one or both, depending on what the person did with his “wealth” (i.e., convert it to “income”).

Some nurses would be middle class in most peoples’ reckoning, but it would depend on the nurse’s education and experience. A nurse who went through a two year RN program and works in a nursing home? Probably not. A degree RN with postgraduate work qualifying her to be a nurse anaesthetist? Most people would say she is definitely on the upper income scale and in the upper part of the middle class in terms of earnings. An NP? Yes. A degree RN with significant experience in cardiac surgery assistance? Yes. A PRN charge nurse who works regularly? Probably, due to the very high pay for anyone qualified to do it, and if the nurse has established a “circuit” of regular clients.

Totally subjectively, I would say that a person who does not have sufficient food, clothing or shelter is “poor”. But I can’t assign an income level to that because I have known people whose income was less than $10,000 who had everything they reasonably wanted, and lived decently in basic terms. Most, however, would be considered “poor” if their income was that low and they did not receive some form of assistance. But a person earning no more than that would most likely be receiving some form of assistance.

Most would consider the upper 5% to be “wealthy”. But I don’t, necessarily, because I know people (mostly farmers) who are that “wealthy” in terms of land, but only earn a cornbread living doing what they’re doing in terms of discretionary income.

I have also known of small business owners and farmers who have an AGI over $250,000 now and then, but are barely holding on due to the costs of their business and their business debt.

Composition of assets varies greatly. Is a Californian whose house is worth $2 million but who has no other significant assets as “wealthy” as a Mississippian who has $2 million in cash, stocks and bonds and a house worth $80,000? The former would probably not think of himself as “wealthy”, but the latter would. The ability of the latter to do discretionary things would be considerably greater than the former.

Looking at one source, it appears that until 2007 the relative wealth of individuals in the U.S. did not change very much over several decades. After 2007, it did, but everybody’s wealth declined as well.
www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

But perhaps the thing that is the most troubling about the complaints people have about the distribution of wealth is that they never draw a cause/effect relationship, though they vociferously claim it. Am I poor because John Kerry is rich, or am I poor for reasons that have nothing to do with John Kerry or anybody like him? Personally, I know too many self-made wealthy and too many poor to think one man’s wealth has anything at all to do with another man’s poverty.

There is one additional thing that gives me considerable pause if I am ever tempted to think that accumulation of wealth has anything to do with the fortunes of others. Since 1929, the percentage of national income going to capital relative to that of “labor+ paid non-labor” has remained almost constant at a 1/3-2/3 ratio. The percentage going to capital is at its lowest during full employment, but increases during high unemployment, though in actual dollars it moves up for both during full employment and declines for both during high unemployment.

Employment is actually the causative and moving metric in determining how well off people are, not the relative distribution of wealth.

But it’s also true that the share of “paid non-labor” comes entirely from “labor’s share”. In other words, when transfer payments go up as a percentage of national income, the percentage of national income going to working labor goes down.

Just for the record, I consider Obama’s “care for the poor” and “care for the middle class” a total sham. He has done nothing for either and has brought harm to both.

Sorry to shorten your post, but I had to.
 
How would you define a ‘wage slave’? To me it can’t include people who live off of the government (off of taxpayers). To me it is anyone who can’t afford to stop working for a few years, then jump back into doing whatever it is they were doing before to make money- or do something else to make money- and be completely fine with no worries.

As far as I am concerned every single working poor person is obviously a wage slave. They live hand to mouth, paycheck to paycheck. I would also consider a large portion to almost all of the working class wage slaves. By the very definition IMO of being ‘working class’ someone basically continue working to continue surviving (assuming they don’t get on the dole to survive).

Also, if someone is in the middle class and simply couldn’t afford to stop working and live off of what they already have for the rest of their lives and also put their children through college and grad school they are wage slaves (good luck being born today and living a life where you dont’ worry about your bills unless you have a post grad degree). I’m not saying this is a bad thing, I’m simply pointing out what I consider to be reality. I suppose one could technically exclude from the catagory of ‘wage slaves’ people who cut all financial ties to their children once they turn 18. But if someone has to keep a job and can’t stop working and still get by, they are a wage slave, aren’t they? Can people in the middle class afford to stop working and still manage to get by and live out their entire lives without working anymore?

Peace,
Bill
I think you are making too much of the term “wage slave”, though I confess my role in triggering that. It isn’t a technical term having a particular meaning anyway. To me, though, a person can be called a “wage slave” if it takes everything he receives to support his lifestyle. Some such people have employment mobility, but probably most do not, to any significant degree. If they have no “wealth”, their immobility increases. If they have more “wealth”, their mobility increases. The person who has no mobility does not have much in the way of choices when it comes to the hours they work, the kind of work they do, the moral environment in which they work.

Consumerism encourages “wage slavery”. To the extent I extend myself to the maximum of my ability to pay, I lose freedom of action because I’ll go under the month in which I stop doing what I’m doing. The Social Encyclicals discourage consumerism mightily, and undue dependence on business resulting from it is one of the reasons.

Undue dependency on government is also condemned by the Social Encyclicals.

I would not say “wage slavery” is defined by whether I could quit working for a few years and be just fine for the experience. Virtually everyone who is able-bodied ought to work regardless of his wealth, and few could do it anyway.

And just in passing, I know a lot of people without post-graduate degrees or even four-year degrees who are doing better than most. Unfortunately, a lot of them live exactly at their means or above their means and will never accumulate wealth. There is no correllation between high earnings and wealth. There is a correllation between living below one’s means and wealth.
 
I’m still puzzled by the degree to which people assert that our standard of living is on a long slide! I’m barely in my 40’s and when I was growing up, here was my standard of living:
  1. Family of 5 had a 1,300SF ranch with a psuedo finished basement.
  2. single window air conditioner for the whole house.
  3. Until I was 9, we had 1 19" B&W TV, then we got a 19" color.
  4. Was nearly in HS before we got a VCR.
  5. House had one phone in the kitchen with a LONG cord.
  6. The good car had AC and FM radio. Dad’s commuter had neither. None of them had cruise control, power windows/locks, etc.
  7. Music came from vinyl LP records (Some had 8 tracks, then cassettes. I got a Walkman cassette in HS).
  8. When I was 18 I had traveled on an airplane precisely three times in my life. I was not terribly unusual among my peers.
  9. I was about to enter HS when we got our first computer, an Apple IIe. (It took less time to boot up than my Pentium 4 does today!)
  10. When I was about 12, we got a video game machine. It was called… PONG.
I wasn’t considered poor, we were a solidly middle class family. There are certainly kids growing up today with less than what I had, but they ain’t middle class kids. Even the high end poor today have cable TV, cell phones, laptops, cars with luxury features unheard of in my youth, etc. The average standard of living has INCREASED dramatically since I was a kid.

What has declined is the rate of ADVANCE in standard of living. If you are OK with the standard of living my folks had back then, you still CAN live that way on an HVAC repairman’s salary, tenured public teacher salary or teamster’s pay. It’s just that we’ve been conditioned to believe we are destitute if we don’t have the latest ipad. IMO the secret to financial success is to obstinately refuse to buy into all the consumer crapola your coworkers all have. Be purposely WAY behind the Joneses. Then you’ll keep your house when the bank kicks the Joneses out.
 
It seems to me that your talking about people who have worked their entire lives and accumulated say 4-5 million to leave behind. If this is in the ballpark of what your talking about, what do you call the people who make that in a bad year or a very bad year, or a very, very bad year?

And what do you call the people who can park enough money in bond funds and other low to very low risk investments and earn 4-5 million doing that?

What do you call the people who have died in the last decade with a net worth of 500 million dollars or more?

Peace,
Bill

Peace,
Bill
I was not talking about any of the people you mention. I was talking generally about the accumulation of wealth by ordinary people. I don’t have a classification for people who make 5 million/year or have estates of $500 million, one way or another, and don’t call them anything. They do not affect my life except on those occasions when I am called upon to do work for them. On those occasions, I charge them a fair amount for what I am doing.
 
Some nurses would be middle class in most peoples’ reckoning, but it would depend on the nurse’s education and experience. A nurse who went through a two year RN program and works in a nursing home? Probably not. A degree RN with postgraduate work qualifying her to be a nurse anaesthetist? Most people would say she is definitely on the upper income scale and in the upper part of the middle class in terms of earnings. An NP? Yes. A degree RN with significant experience in cardiac surgery assistance? Yes. A PRN charge nurse who works regularly? Probably, due to the very high pay for anyone qualified to do it, and if the nurse has established a “circuit” of regular clients.

Totally subjectively, I would say that a person who does not have sufficient food, clothing or shelter is “poor”. But I can’t assign an income level to that because I have known people whose income was less than $10,000 who had everything they reasonably wanted, and lived decently in basic terms. Most, however, would be considered “poor” if their income was that low and they did not receive some form of assistance. But a person earning no more than that would most likely be receiving some form of assistance.

Most would consider the upper 5% to be “wealthy”. But I don’t, necessarily, because I know people (mostly farmers) who are that “wealthy” in terms of land, but only earn a cornbread living doing what they’re doing in terms of discretionary income.

I have also known of small business owners and farmers who have an AGI over $250,000 now and then, but are barely holding on due to the costs of their business and their business debt.

Composition of assets varies greatly. Is a Californian whose house is worth $2 million but who has no other significant assets as “wealthy” as a Mississippian who has $2 million in cash, stocks and bonds and a house worth $80,000? The former would probably not think of himself as “wealthy”, but the latter would. The ability of the latter to do discretionary things would be considerably greater than the former.

Looking at one source, it appears that until 2007 the relative wealth of individuals in the U.S. did not change very much over several decades. After 2007, it did, but everybody’s wealth declined as well.
www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

But perhaps the thing that is the most troubling about the complaints people have about the distribution of wealth is that they never draw a cause/effect relationship, though they vociferously claim it. Am I poor because John Kerry is rich, or am I poor for reasons that have nothing to do with John Kerry or anybody like him? Personally, I know too many self-made wealthy and too many poor to think one man’s wealth has anything at all to do with another man’s poverty.

There is one additional thing that gives me considerable pause if I am ever tempted to think that accumulation of wealth has anything to do with the fortunes of others. Since 1929, the percentage of national income going to capital relative to that of “labor+ paid non-labor” has remained almost constant at a 1/3-2/3 ratio. The percentage going to capital is at its lowest during full employment, but increases during high unemployment, though in actual dollars it moves up for both during full employment and declines for both during high unemployment.

Employment is actually the causative and moving metric in determining how well off people are, not the relative distribution of wealth.

But it’s also true that the share of “paid non-labor” comes entirely from “labor’s share”. In other words, when transfer payments go up as a percentage of national income, the percentage of national income going to working labor goes down.

Just for the record, I consider Obama’s “care for the poor” and “care for the middle class” a total sham. He has done nothing for either and has brought harm to both.

Sorry to shorten your post, but I had to.
Thanks for your reply, I enjoyed reading it.

Based on your post I would say that I would consider maybe 5% of single adult nurses to be middle class. As far as being ‘poor’ we definitely have a considerable difference of opinion when it comes to what that means (I’m only considering people in the USA for the purposes of this discussion, not people across the world).

As far as one individual’s wealth having anything to do with anothers, I would agree with you if we happened to live in a capitalistic society. But in the USA we have a government, with individuals who hold considerable power over the population and can be bought. Since they can’t really be bought by anyone except the rich, and since the rich definitely buy political favors, votes, influence, etc I would have to say that there are rich people whose wealth is connected to other peoples lack of wealth. I don’t agree with the concept of the redistribution of wealth, but I firmly believe that there is a portion of rich people who are richer than they would be because government exists and they can buy political influence, essentially owning a piece of government. And they use this influence to get government to do their bidding, which in turn impacts other individuals incomes. If there were no government and simply people living and owning businesses and individuals working I would agree with you that one indiviudals wealth does not have a causitive effect on anothers wealth, or lack thereof.

Peace,
Bill
 
Tell that to the people working minimum wage jobs because that’s all they can get. In West Va or Arkansas, it would take you 63 hours a week just to afford rent for a 2 bedroom apt and those are the states where you have to work the least amount of hours. (National Low Income Housing Coalition) I doubt any of them were in line for the latest iPhone.

Again, back in the 50’s and 60’s people could work at a grocery store and still afford the minimum “luxuries” of the time, like a house, a car or a TV and have a little extra to put aside. The cost of living has simply outpaced wages and placed a comfortable life out of reach for too many in our society, which has led to less demand for goods and services here.

Yes, there are plenty of people who will live beyond their means and buy things they don’t need with money they don’t have, but there are also people who treat their workers unjustly to gain their success. Yes, there are people who have incomes too low to pay income tax, but why are they condemned when those who CAN afford to pay are praised for finding loopholes to avoid paying? Yes, there are people who abuse the system and get what they aren’t entitled to, but again-they are condemned while the bankers and Wall Streeters who find ways to circumvent regulations are praised for their “street smarts”.
 
I’m still puzzled by the degree to which people assert that our standard of living is on a long slide! I’m barely in my 40’s and when I was growing up, here was my standard of living:
  1. Family of 5 had a 1,300SF ranch with a psuedo finished basement.
  2. single window air conditioner for the whole house.
  3. Until I was 9, we had 1 19" B&W TV, then we got a 19" color.
  4. Was nearly in HS before we got a VCR.
  5. House had one phone in the kitchen with a LONG cord.
  6. The good car had AC and FM radio. Dad’s commuter had neither. None of them had cruise control, power windows/locks, etc.
  7. Music came from vinyl LP records (Some had 8 tracks, then cassettes. I got a Walkman cassette in HS).
  8. When I was 18 I had traveled on an airplane precisely three times in my life. I was not terribly unusual among my peers.
  9. I was about to enter HS when we got our first computer, an Apple IIe. (It took less time to boot up than my Pentium 4 does today!)
  10. When I was about 12, we got a video game machine. It was called… PONG.
I wasn’t considered poor, we were a solidly middle class family.
While I recognize and agree with what your saying, I wouldn’t put a whole lot of weight behind it with respect to it being used as the basis for argument because the same thing could be said by past generations about the generations before them… no electricity… no plumbing… the ‘rich’ caveman having all the meat and fruit he wanted to eat… the poor caveman eating nuts and seeds and grass…

Peace,
Bill
 
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