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US Income Inequality Continues to Grow
In June 2009, the U.S. economy saw its second steepest decline in 27 years. New jobless claims increased, business inventories fell and exports plunged as bad economic news persisted.
Will the once high-flying American wealth machine continue to produce the vast inequalities of the past?
Only two years ago, Steve Forbes, CEO of Forbes magazine, declared 2007 "the richest year ever in human history." During eight years of the Bush administration, the 400 richest Americans, who now own more than the bottom 150 million Americans, increased their net worth by $700 billion. In 2005, the top 1 percent claimed 22 percent of the national income, while the top 10 percent took half of the total income, the largest share since 1928.
In June 2009, the Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Report estimated the number of the world's wealthiest people declined by 15 percent, the steepest decline in the report's 13-year history. The number of millionaires in the U.S. fell by 19 percent to 2.5 million people.
Analysts tell us the economy is being restructured, but how will the disparities in wealth between the rich and the poor play out?
"The source of wealth has changed over the past 30 years; corporations have become the engine of inequality in the U.S.," says Sam Pizzigati, associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington D.C. "In the past, wealth came from ownership: Today it comes increasingly from income."
The highest incomes come from executive pay at top corporations. In 2007, the ratio of CEO pay to the average paycheck was 344 to 1, lower than the record 525 to 1 ratio set in 2001, but substantial.
This year's ratio is estimated to decrease to 317 to 1. In the '60s, '70s and '80s, the average ratio fluctuated between 30 and 40 to 1.
Over 40 percent of GNP comes from Fortune 500 companies. According to the World Institute for Development Economics Research, the 500 largest conglomerates in the U.S. "control over two-thirds of the business resources, employ two-thirds of the industrial workers, account for 60 percent of the sales, and collect over 70 percent of the profits."
Corporations systematically created a wealth gap over the last 30 years. In 1955, IRS records indicated the 400 richest people in the country were worth an average $12.6 million, adjusted for inflation.
In 2006, the 400 richest increased their
average to $263 million, representing an epochal shift of wealth
upward in the U.S.
In 1955, the richest tier paid an average 51.2 percent of their
income in taxes under a progressive federal income tax that
included loopholes. By 2006, the richest paid only 17.2 percent of
their income in taxes. In 1955, the proportion of federal income
from corporate taxes was 33 percent; by 2003, it decreased to 7.4
percent. Today, the top taxpayers pay the same percentage of their
incomes in taxes as those making $50,000 to $75,000, although they
doubled their share of total U.S. income.
"Over the past 30 years, the income of the top 1 percent, adjusted for inflation, doubled: the top one-tenth of 1 percent tripled, and the top one-one-hundredth quadrupled," says Pizzigati. "Meanwhile, the average income of the bottom 90 percent has gone down slightly. This is a stunning transformation."
Meanwhile, wages for most Americans didn't improve from 1979 to 1998, and the median male wage in 2000 was below the 1979 level, despite productivity increases of 44.5 percent. Between 2002 and 2004, inflation-adjusted median household income declined $1,669 a year. To make up for lost income, credit card debt soared 315 percent between 1989 and 2006, representing 138 percent of disposable income in 2007.
According to Pizzigati, the wealth disparity
is the result of corporations squeezing more profits from
workers.
"In the past corporations laid off workers because business was
bad," Pizzigati says. "But over the past few decades, downsizing
has been a corporate wealth generating strategy. Today, CEOs don't
spend their time trying to make better products: they maneuver to
take over other companies, steal their customers and fire their
workers."
Progressive taxation used to prevent the rich from capturing a disproportionate share of national compensation, and the labor movement, which represented 35 percent of private sector employees and today represents 8 percent, once served as a political force to limit excessive executive pay. The Reagan backlash cut the top income tax rates, and saw the creation of right-wing think tanks that spent $30 billion over the past 30 years propagandizing for deregulation, privatization and wealth worship.
Bubble economies over the past 30 years helped CEOs pump up their income, and efforts to corral their pay are weak and ineffective. CEO pay may fall during these economic hard times, but disparity isn't going away. Without a strong movement for change, the wealth gap will only increase in this downturn.
"There won't be a restructuring of the economy unless we take on executive compensation," concludes Pizzigati. "Outrageously large rewards give executives an incentive to behave outrageously. If we allow these incentives to continue, we will just see more of the reckless behavior that has driven the global economy into the ditch."
- Posted in

81 Comments so far
Show All"The rich are the scum of the earth in every country." (G. K. Chesterton, conservative Catholic writer and thinker) Yet our rich live their lives of privilege without fear of the practically supine poor and working classes in the U.S. In any civilized country the rich would realize they represent the manure that Jefferson's tree of liberty needs for its refreshment.
Or you could quote Christ, you know the one about the wealthy person and the eye of the needle.
The rich and famous usually have self-destructive behavior. They have the heavy burden of having committed Sins that most of us poor common folk would not even dream of committing. May they all rot in hell.
stimpy,
Hi, how are you?
The rich I think destroy others on their path to wealth, trample the poor.
But once wealthy a Rot sets in, Fear, they want to Conserve(ative, hence the word conservative). But they must see everything backwards and upside-down to call themselves "right," when they know in their hearts they are wrong, hellbound filth hurting children.
May they rot forever in Hell.
While we play music in Heaven.
You don't need a sword to cut Flowers
You don't need a gun to blow your mind, (gh)
Lingum,
Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth
Blessed are the pure in Heart, for they will see God,
and
Wisdom is proved right by her actions
Author, Jesus Christ, amen
Mr. Monkerud spends much of this article spitting out statistics without supporting references. Since at least one statement, "Today, the top taxpayers pay the same percentage of their incomes in taxes as those making $50,000 to $75,000...", is demonstrably untrue (2009 IRS brackets show that single earners of 50k to 75k achieve a maximum bracket of 25%, while top earners reach a maximum bracket of 35%, while being phased out of deductions and personal exemptions still available to the lower earner group - IRS.gov), we must be suspect of the rest of the data. By representing patently untrue information he undermines what, otherwise, might be a substantive argument.
Tax "brackets" are no indication of how much tax an individual or corporation actually pays in taxes.
Prior to 1986, the IRS gave wage earners a few meaningful deductions. Ronny Raygun's 1986 tax "reform" took nearly all of those deductions away and gave corporations and the top 1% more deductions than ever. Since 1986 Congress has ordered the IRS (visa legislation) to delete the few remaining meaningful wage earner deductions while increasing deductions for corporations and the top 1%.
John McCain was 100% correct when he repeated (at least 2000 times) during his campaign that the US has some of the highest corporate tax "rates" in the world.
McCain never mentioned that corporations actually pay very little tax due to the ever increasing deductions they are allowed.
The author's statistics that 33% of income tax was paid by corporations in 1955, 7.4% in 2003 are correct. Obama and Congress appear to be working toward fullfilling McCains's dream of corporations paying zero% of US income tax within the next decade.
Every dollar that a corporation is not paying in taxes is another dollar you and I need to pay in taxes, dpjr !
In my original post I indicated the source for the FACTS I sighted, the IRS 2009 tax brackets (IRS.gov). Now I will also sight the following data, from ntu.org, whose original source the sight as the IRS: the top 1% of taxpayers paid 39.89% of all personal income tax in 2006, while the bottom 75% paid 13.73% (obviously post Ronnie). Deductions available for the average "wage earner" in fact ARE NOT available for earners over $200,000. Again these FACTS are easily accessable via irs.gov.
Additionally, since over 70% of us work for corporations, every dollar they pay in taxes is less they have available for benefits, new hiring, and wage earner increases. Like all organizations of human endeavor, they are subject to the flaws of those who make them up.
JFK rightly observed that "The great enemy of the truth is often not the lie - deliberate, contrived and dishonest, but the myth, persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic. Belief in myths allows the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."
If the politicians (of any and every party) who are running the government are going to use the government to borrow money in order to pay for wars to make the rich richer . . . then they can borrow money to make me one of the rich.
Yeah, gimme a million bucks. That won't add much to the deficit. I'll yap about loving the free market and liberating wogs in exchange.
Who cares what a CEO makes? It's not gonna affect you. If you're making enough money and can pay your monthly bills, then don't worry, be happy. So what if the CEO of my company makes 1000 times more money than me? I'm enjoying my lifestyle even with my salary plus with all the good benefits, I think I'll make it to flying rich and they thought couch potatoes couldn't be rich. LOL ! If you wanna get the same pay as a CEO then be a CEO and shut up.
Absolutely. What corporations do has absolutely no effect on me as long as I can pay my monthly bills.
We need to support corporations through:
1) DEREGULATION. Get government (we the people) out of the way. Pass no laws that control what a corporation can do. Lets have corporate sovereignty.
2) PRIVATIZATION. No government (we the people) competition. Corporations must be bigger than government (we the people). Everything in private/corporate hands.
3) WEALTH WORSHIP. Corporations are good. Corporations are ethical. Wealth equals the highest calling. Wealth equals privilege. Wealth equals what we say goes.
4) INCREASE SUPPORT FOR CORPORATE ARMED FORCES. Why can any tinhorn dictator threaten the interests of multi-nationals just because the corporations are in his country? Now that the U.S. military is so bogged down that it can't give timely aid to corporations whose assets might be nationalized, they need additional tax breaks and government funding so they can defend themselves.
Fee Fi Fo Fum, I smell a "Joe the Plumber" floozie here ! LOL !
Two lines/truths are RACING to a point on a graph. A point in reality. To REVOLUTION.
1st is the amount of wealth being updrafted by the corporations, their kings and princes.
2nd is Population Growth, this increasing number.
The (A) Exploding number of people (B) dividing fast diminishing, vanishing resources (C) creates the dynamic for REVOLUTION. Because they see their Lives Destroyed Before Their Eyes. Key point that one.
Karl Marx wrote this script line for line, and so far has gotten every word right.
Thus the Great Lurch Backwards towards a replay of the Robber Baron era, combined with Third world income disparities, continues apace in the USA. Only whacked out douche bags think that is good.
The robber barons of a century ago are turning over in their graves, they are so envious of how much more successful today's robber barons are at looting the government and 98% of the US population.
Sioux Rose
RAY: In the course of that century some had ample time to reincarnate and perfect their art, the art of the great CON job. That is, "they're back! New and improved as per their past exploits!" Of course it helps one's mission if government insiders come aboard; and since most have a price, and "excessive greed disorder" knows no limits, this is a match made in heaven's antithesis, econo-hell.
Only a nice big war can stop this divergence.
Sioux Rose
The author didn't point out that some in the upper wealth brackets don't create anything of use to society, particularly those in the Hedge Funds/Wall St "business" where by trading paper (the sum of others' substantial labors) they skim impossible rewards off the top.
Reading about the premise known as "Natural Capital" that sought to place on corporate balance sheets the PRICE of replacing the natural resources either stolen, misused, or left in tatters, proved a revelation for me. The whole way in which so-called wealth (and GNP) is gauged is based on what money does, as opposed to what is created versus destroyed. For instance, the damage done by the Exxon Valdes oil spill is rendered into a GNP PROFT. It's that "Disaster Capitalism" modus operandi that sees paper profit based on something awful that ultimately will cost society far more than what the repair crews will get paid.
What is the replacement cost of the forests on those West VA mountains so SAVAGELY blasted away? What is the replacement cost of the animals, waterways, fantastic skylines? This model is scavenging the entire world stealing the ecosystem staples that make for a planet with well-regulated seasons and harvest cycles. The damage is so enormous; but much like what's happened to the U.S. economy with its actual industries sent overseas and its income based mostly on false instruments of faux-wealth, we have not yet experienced the full ramifications for these actions that have worked against decency, sound ecology, and for the most part, sanity.
Good summary, Sioux Rose. 99% of the US population functioned just fine prior to Congress decriminalizing Wall Street's "financial products" that serve no purpose other than to enrich 1% of the population at the expense of the rest of us.
Sioux Rose
RAY: Thank you. I appreciate your succinct right-on analyses. I suppose you feel the way I do, that watching the behemoth come asunder as the criminals are set loose on what's left of the body politic (its valuables) is like being inside a horror movie. Most are going about their lives as if it's all been taken care of, the economy is slowly recovering. Of course when PR can take the absolute ruination of a country like Iraq and mask it with positive sounding phrases about progress, the disconnect between what is reported (and taken as mass consensus) and what IS forms its own cognitive chasm.
If I try to warn friends they accuse me of being NEGATIVE. And after all, the astrologer is no economist, so why believe her predictions about financial affairs? Truth is NOT appreciated in our times. Often I reflet on the ruins of other civilizations, and how it was that persons were going about their ordinary daily routines when "the big one" (earthquake, flood, volcanic ash) hit. This may soon be the fate of our land, if not literally, than certainly on a symbolic level.
correct -- the hoarding of wealth that upper classes have as their MAIN or ONLY reasons for existence - is basically USELESS to society - and acts more like the TRUE WELFARE and PARASITIC entity upon the REST of the body of society.
the wealthy can NOT EXIST without society of which they are BUT a SMALL part .
society CAN EXIST without THEM and their - so-called "trickle down" MUMBO JUMBO.
in fact - if one were to erase ALL THAT -- society would do JUST FINE without THEM , their ilk and their "philosophy of wealth".
their entire existence is based on nothing more noble or more banal than
PURE EGO satisfaction through the accumulation of wealth beyond their needs. what are the members of the "wealthy class" REALLY -- but just a BUNCH OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS no different from another human being? that just happens to BELIEVE that they are more "worthy" and THEREFORE MUST amass great wealth by FEEDING UPON the rest of society?
they are THE REAL PARASITIC class in society.
As far as Capitalism is concerned, Mother nature provides a service for FREE and Capitalism can not handle that sort of competition so MUST destroy her.
In the Modern world FREEdom has come to mean "How much money do you have in your pocket and we will decide what that entitles you to"
When France was settling New France in the area we now called Quebec thay ran into a huge problem.
The young men who settled there would simply pick up and leave and vanish into the forests to live as Natives. They would abandon their JOBS and farms. They were of the lower class in France. The Peasants, the laborers working to make some titled landowner rich.
In what was to become Canada they experienced true freedom. The Native tribes accepted them, even adopted them as their own. A whole new people arose that we call the Metis.
Canadas one major insurrection was against these same Metis and their Native allies who did not want to see their FRREDOM usurped by the system of Capitalism. They KNEW what would follow. Land OWNERSHIP. The wealthy and the POOR.
Sioux Rose
GW NORTH: Interesting post. You have diversified interests and offer a lot of unique anecdotes to this forum. Thank you.
Let's just shoot the minimum wage up to $1000 an hour and cause a major inflation. Socialists !
"let's just shoot DOWN the wages to ZERO"
CAPITALISTS!
Maybe someone can help me with this. Suppose I work at Walmart for ten bucks an hour or whatever. And in a year I take home--what, 18000 dollars. Now, at the same time the Fed creates one trillion dollars to support shaky investment banks. So, what is the connection between the units of wealth handed to me by Walmart and the units of wealth created by the Fed? In my case, each dollar points to a unit of time and effort. In the banker's case, the money has a different meaning altogether. Never had a course in economics. Can someone explain this to me?
Wal mart is one of the businesses which has had representation at previous SPP meetings (ie NAFTA on steroids).
Wal-Mart is also notorious for trying to keep the wages of their employees down and their own profits up.
In other words, Wal-Mart is trying to make sure that there is as little connection between what you make and they and the banks CEOs make as possible.
Sioux Rose
DROSERA: I see it through the analogy of a pot of chicken soup. Most people who eat chicken soup want it to have flavor and some pieces of chicken. If the soup gets watered down by a huge percentage, it will taste mostly like water and be devoid of nutrients (although arguably, the hormones fed to the chickens would also be diluted). That's how I see the new money game. By just printing it, and as you said, detaching it from the remotest premise of earning, there now is much more OF it; and usually when there is more of something, it has less relative value.
A lot of people are holding onto cash now but my instincts told me to buy everything I thought I'd need, short of food, for the next few years. And I have. Ultimately we don't need much; and I have made it a lifestyle of buying furniture from 2nd hand shops, clothes, books, and just about everything.
I intend to buy heirloom seed soon, too.
For other posters, I recently related a nemesis with Bank of America as per credit card additional fees. I managed to pay that one off, when like a game of Whack-a-mole, Citi began the same nonsense. It is beyond hubristic that these banks that WE bailed out, that now post profits and give their insider circle ridiculous bonuses, are squeezing credit card holders.
The new game is they are reducing their "billing cycle." Years ago I got a bill at the beginning of the month, and made sure it was received before the end of the month. That's a lot easier than having to memorize what date the phone bill is due, ditto electric, ditto water, ditto several credit cards, etc. Well, I got the bill early in June and the check was received on June 17, but they determined June 15 as the new "bill cycle" cut off, and proceeded to charge me $39 plus too much interest. I called to complain and spoke to someone in India who told me he'd send my request in. I got a rejection. I called again, same outcome. Figuring out how to mickeymouse what I owed to place it with the other 2 credit cards via those offers to make a transfer at a low interest rate, I decided I'd first attempt one last call. This time I managed to get to a manager and she explained there is no FIXED date of the month the bill is due. It varies from month to month. She erased the "late" fee. Look at all the energy that took!
Just to share with friends in this forum the mechanics of this, I pose this analogy. My younger daughter was an exceptional gymnast and one of the exercises she was expected to do (I kid you not, and she COULD do it) was to do 2 back handsprings as 2 jumpropes were circling around her from opposite directions. One had to have the timing down to complete both moves before being caught in the ropes! That's what it's like getting your check into these pipelines "in time" for their billing cycles!
I just cashed in my savings bonds to buy a higher mileage vehicle. The bonds were 10 years old. Since a dependable vehicle is a necessary evil where I live, I thought it would be good to use my money while it still had some value. I'd love to invest in real gold at the actual (or close to actual) price per ounce (not buy PAPER that SAYS I own gold, or fancy coins that cost twice as much).
Sioux Rose
CHESS: I think that's pretty much how brokers do it: sell you a certificate that supposedly symbolizes X amount in gold. But a friend of mine recommended buying gold AT pawn shops... the thing is when you are hungry (or IF you are hungry) do you trade a gold bracelet for a head of broccoli? I mean who knows the going rate. I am half-kidding here. I tell people to buy things now and they look at me like I am crazy; that one should be saving their money now. It's true there is some deflation (housing prices) going on, but it seems to me that what goes up (all that newly printed money) must come down, and I wonder what this influx of dollars is ultimately going to mean to our PERCEPTION (collectively) of what a dollar is worth? And perhaps more importantly, what all those nations that bet on the dollar only to have Wall St knocks their socks off (while stealing their assets via trade in all those exotic "instruments") take its worth to be!
The banks are tightening the screws on those with credit card balances, I see that happening. To the extent one can pay these "indentured servitude sums" off, the better. It seems for many of us when we really commit to this we either need a car repair, or an appliance breaks, or we (me!) need dental work. The latter makes me hope that some stem-cell research into how sharks do it (they have a rotating band of teeth and once one goes down, like a pin ball game, another readily pops up!) might become the dental breakthrough of the future!
Don't they show the due date on your credit card statements or is that just a Canadian thing?
Discover did indeed roll back the due date--on both our cards. If possible, though, set up an online account, and pay that way. You can pay right on the due date without penalty when it's too late to send a check. From my understanding, new regulations are about to go into effect for credit card companies, and my guess is that they are trying to milk us for all they can before that date.
Sioux Rose - wonderful posts as always , blessed with Mother Earth's inherent benevolence.
concerning these banks with cards - if people are not yet aware :
banks - such as chase - have recently been "offering" that anyone that uses DEBIT cards, where checking accounts pay directly to the vendor everytime one uses it - that these cards, though marked as "DEBIT" - people are "encouraged" to tell the vendor "on CREDIT, please" - as if you're feeling GREAT that you have CREDIT ...
and the BAIT is : by using the DEBIT card (remember that means you OWE NOTHING to the bank because you are paying INSTANTLY from your own checking account - like in cash) - you are "accumulating points" that you check online to get "gifts"...blah blah. fine. so far?
HOWEVER - someone told me - a small store owner in the neighborhood , that IF you ever "overdraft" - you might be able to be "covered" - but get HIT a huge penalty AS IF you had a "credit card".....something of that sort....and all the "compound interest" penalties that presumably go with that.
the point is - it's ANOTHER scam .
so - be careful. use DEBITS AS DEBITS - not "as credit" cards...unless of course you want the "gifts".
and oh - yeah - they DO charge you a yearly fee for that - i think 20.00$ - if you ever use it as a "credit" anytime in the year.
so either way - you are hooked.
in any case - one thing is clear:
the USA is a GREAT COUNTRY if you know how to be a GREAT THIEF -- it's LEGAL --
just ask the banks, insurance companies, and corporations.
it's "the american way".
ROBBERY As THE American Institution.
those "corrupt" countries are NOTHING in comparison...
Sioux Rose
Hi, TEDDY. You are always so kind and committed to the exposure of Truth!
The one credit card I like is American Express, and here's why: about 10 years ago I rented a car and exercized their THEN option (I think they changed this recently) to reject the car insurance offered at the rental agency. These days that insurance runs about $16 a day! Well, I totaled that car (I believe its steering had been made faulty from college kids playing "chicken" with that auto. It was rented in Gator-land Gainesville where such antics would not be inconceivable) and did not have to pay a dime. I spoke to several attorneys and they lived up to the term "ambulance chasers" as none wanted to take my case because "I wasn't injured enough" to go after G.M. Thank Goddess American Express picked up the tab! And Sears was the first to give me a chance with a credit card. I was a single mother at the time, and my freelance writer salary was a parabola. I never missed a payment and was always grateful they extended credit to me. That was 24 years ago and credit was far more difficult at that time to obtain.
drosera, I'll try an explanation.
This piece of paper, the $1 bill, is a promissory note. It used to be that I could go to the central bank, give them this paper $1 bill and they would give me a certain amount of gold. Not any more. These days the $1 bill is legal tender and the government passes laws that forces people to accept this paper to settle debts. In other words, you can buy things with a $1 bill. Walmart buys your labor for $1 bill which you can save in a bank or buy (exchange for) goods.
When a bank gets a $1 bill from the central bank (the fed) they, the recipient bank, can loan out (borrow) the $1 bill. (The bank gets repaid the principal of $1 plus interest, say, $0.10 for a total of $1.10. The $0.10 is profit for the bank.) Now the person who received the $1 bill from the bank, spends it, meaning exchanges it for a good from a second individual. That second individual now saves that same $1 bill in a bank, sometimes in the same bank that loaned it out in the first place. The bank can now, again, loan out that $1 bill to another person. In effect, the banks are allowed to continue doing this up to 10 times. So the bank has loans of $10 but capital, actual dollar bills, of $1. If all the people who saved their money at the bank now ask for their $1 bill back, the bank can't do it (for the 10 savers there's only $1) and we have "a run on the bank."
The investment banks were leveraged up to 50 or 60 times. When people, the borrowers, defaulted on mortgages other people, the savers, asked for their money back from the banks. The banks couldn't repay. To avoid a complete collapse of the financial system, the fed had to give money to the banks so they could repay the savers. Of course, not everyone got their money back.
For a couple of good documentaries explaining all of this, just google "Money as Debt" and "The Ascent of Money."
Let's just SHOOT the rich mf'ing parasites!
Pithily stated!
It's not just here in the USA. It seems that, in Paul Simon's words ("Boy in the Bubble"), a "loose affiliation of millionaires and billionaires" has decided that rules are for fools, and we, the people of the world, are the fools.
Globalization is inevitable, surely, even though it may take many years; its shape, however, has yet to be determined. If we have enough sense to make common cause with our planetary neighbors, a life of serfdom to corporate feudalism need not be our collective fate.
Nice Comments!
There is an SPP meeting with the Three Amigos in Guadalajara on August 8-9, pass it on!
I guess that the reason we haven't heard about it is that it is going to be another closed meeting with the Three Amigos and 30 CEOs.
Sioux Rose,
Perceptive post as usual. Your analogy comparing Fed bucks to watering down soup is classic! The only thing is, those Wall Street CEO's can convert their Fed bucks into tangible goodies just as easy as the Walmart slob who committed his life and energy to the omnipresent God of consumption. They can cash in any time they want: yachts--one with blue sails and one with red, please; cars--one Bugatti in red and one Ferrari in--do you have mauve?; and, yes, I'll take both houses--the one with turrets and a moat and that other one with the greenhouse on the roof which will work for my guest house. Ain't the system wonderful!
Sioux Rose
Thank you. To be quite honest, apart from a very lucrative job with a major NY magazine (l990-l995), my income was probably at or below the poverty level for too many years. And then my father passed over and left me stock JUST when the s--t hit the fan! So here I am, basically a hippie mystic at heart, but no one's fool. Yet I feel like I am getting a crash course in trying to preserve some semblance of security, something to perhaps pass onto my daughters, especially if my writing never wins recognition (or greater income) in times of intensified uncertainty.
My life has always carried a huge element of risk. One lives "on the edge" when they are a freelance writer, particularly when their belief structure runs antithetical to that which represents the predominant cultural milieu. And so I have tried to wrap my mind around the economic machinations that have become the norm since all wise & intelligent regulations have been done away with, regardless of history's lessons in the form of major pain to so many people, and the Biblical admonition regarding GREED.
Some say we should buy gold or buy silver, some say to stock up on ammunition (not my thing), and some remind us to tend our garden and invest in seed. Those who left all the accoutrements of status behind and elected to live simply may be onto something, and that's been my strategy. With time traveling a circle, the one perceived as behind the times may actually be the one who's ultimately ahead of the curve.
The High priests of the Temple of Greed do not seem to understand that when the Temple collapses, they will be beneath the rubble along with the rest of us. For our part we keep offering up sacrifices to them for the slaughter.
Of course inequality has grown. What else were the bailouts for?
As the economy falls, government gives away money as stimulus. In a sense, this works. Those who receive money spend more, so people work, produce, receive pay, and purchase themselves.
However, if Goldman Sachs has money, people have to do what Goldman Sachs wants to get it.
So government and The Fed gave out 1600 billion dollars or so openly and reportedly some unimaginable sum not-so-openly. It didn't go to schools. It didn't go to hospitals. It didn't go to farmers. It didn't go to workers. It didn't go to keep factories in the US.
It went to financiers, militarists, and other high-end lobbyists.
So the rest of us are supposed to do their bidding and be happy we have the jobs to pay the taxes to pay all this off.
Theft.
This exactly why we need to return to Pre-Reagan Tax Rates.
It's futile to try and cap or regulate salaries and bonuses. Just tax the hell out of them ... it's not like we couldn't use the money ...
Yet all our liberal and progressive economists shy away from what really needs to be done ...
It was encouraging that the House is trying to use a surtax on high income to pay for health care ... but this is far too little ...
Hear Hear mmckinl. By the way, your name sounds familiar. Have we met before on Alternet? If so, you're not alone. I hear that alt has been going nuts lately. Anyway, welcome.
maxpayne, mmckinl has posted a lot there but I'm not surprised to see him here. I too welcome him aboard. :)
Yes, I usually haunt Alternet business posts ...
This Income Gap problem falls right into my category of interest ~
Econ / Taxes / The Budget ...
I just wish the left took more interest in these fields ...
My modus operandi ...
FOLLOW THE MONEY TO SEE "CUI BONO" (who benefits)...
Yep it is I ...
thanks for the hello ...
I post here from time to time when I see an article that I think I can
add some perspective to ...
While I certainly agree with the fact that taxing the wealthy and the big corporations even a little more would help cut down some of the inequality, another helper could be cutting the government spending where it really counts and shutting down the cultural barriers tied to it which I shall explain. A great deal of government spending on military, Wall Street subsidizations, corporate subsidizations, and religious fundamentalists are tied towards rewarding the already uber rich with even more money while leaving the working class with crumbs at best. This need not be limited to rich vs poor. Government will throw money towards rightwing religious programs but guess who gets the largest sums of cash? The very rich pastors who are rightwing while the followers get none of it. There's also the taxation issue. Time and again, the IRS shows its blatant double standards on who can exploit the most of tax deductions vs auditing those they suspect or want to suspect politically. A church that screams against abortion is far more likely to receive more government aid and can dodge their taxes while a church that speaks against the war in Iraq is likely to get hounded by the IRS on false charges of tax evasion. Here's another blatant double standard I witnessed. Washington will be happy to raise taxes on small businesses who provide benefits to their employees and do not outsource while simultaneously rewarding the big corporate crooks who outsource to "cheap" foreign labor and slash as many benefits as they can. Contrary to what people say about social issues not being important, I have been finding out that this cannot necessarily be true. The conservatives are very slick and clever at tying economics to culture and playing the divide-and-conquer game as they see fit. I was wondering if the Main Street Party that BeforKids has proposed would remove the cultural double standards tied to the economic policies such as what I have described in the above examples.