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Challenging the Republican's Five Myths on Inequality
The Republican position on inequality rests on five statements, all false.
Recent comments by Mitt Romney, the probable Republican nominee for President all but guarantee the inequality issue will remain front and center this election year.
GOP candidate Mitt Romney, who thinks its okay to talk about wealth inequality and wage disparity "in quiet rooms" does not think it's appropriate for presidential campaigns.
When asked whether people who question the current distribution of wealth and power are motivated by “jealousy or fairness” Romney insisted, “I think it’s about envy. I think it’s about class warfare.” And in this election year he advised that if we do discuss inequality we do so “in quiet rooms” not in public debates.
A public debate, of course, is inevitable. And welcome. To help that debate along I’ll address the five major statements that comprise the Republican argument on inequality.
1. Income is Not All That Unequal
Actually it is. Since 1980 the top 1 percent has increased its share of the national income by an astounding $1.1 trillion. Today 300,000 very rich Americans enjoy almost as much income as 150 million.
Since 1980, the income of the bottom 90 percent of Americans has increased a meager $303 or 1 percent. The top 1 percent’s income has more than doubled, increasing by about $500,000. And the really, really rich, the top 10th of 1 percent, made out, dare I say, like bandits, quadrupling their income to $22 million.
Meanwhile a full-time worker’s wage was 11 percent lower in 2004 than in 1973, adjusting for inflation even though their productivity increased by 78 percent. Productivity gains swelled corporate profits, which reached an all time high in 2010. And that in turn fueled an unprecedented inequality within the workplace itself. In 2010, according to the Institute for Policy Studies, the average CEO in large companies earned 325 times more than the average worker.
2. Inequality doesn’t matter because in America ambition and hard work can make a pauper a millionaire.
This is folklore. A worker’s initial position in the income distribution is highly predictive of how much he or she earns later in the career. And as the Brookings Institution reports “there is growing evidence of less intergenerational economic mobility in the United States than in many other rich industrialized countries.”
The bitter fact is that it is harder for a poor person in America to become rich than in virtually any other industrialized country.
3. Income inequality is not a result of tax policy.
Nonsense. A painstaking analysis by economists Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez and Stefanie Stantcheva found “a strong correlation between the reductions in top tax rates and the increases in top 1% pre-tax income shares from 1975–79 to 2004–08”. For example, the U.S. slashed the top income tax rate by 35 percent and witnessed a large ten percent increase in its top 1% pre-tax income share. “By contrast, France or Germany saw very little change in their top tax rates and their top 1% income shares during the same period.”
4. Taxing the rich will slow economic growth
An examination of 18 OECD countries found “little empirical support for the claim that reducing the progressivity of the tax code has spurred economic growth, business formation or job growth”.
Indeed, Piketty, Saez and Stantcheva’s rigorous analysis came to the opposite conclusion. Our economy may be growing more slowly because we are taxing the rich too little, not too much. Economists Peter Diamond and Saez estimated the optimal top tax rate, that is the tax rate that would maximize revenue without slowing economic growth, could be as high as 83 percent.
Redistributing income stimulates economies in part because when 1% make more they save whereas when the 99% make more they spend. As a result, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s, a dollar in tax cuts on capital gains adds .38 cents of economic growth while a dollar in unemployment benefits gives the economy a boost of $1.63 and a dollar of food stamps adds $1.73.
5. Taxing the rich would not raise much money
Of course it would. If only the richest 400 families, whose average income in 2008 was an astounding $270 million actually paid the statutory rate of 39 percent (revived as of next January 1st) an additional $500 billion would be raised over 10 years, putting a substantial dent in the projected deficit.
In 2010 hedge fund manager John Paulson made $5 billion. That year, according to Pulitzer Prize winner David Cay Johnston, Paulson paid no income taxes. Am I envious Mr. Romney? You bet I am. But I’m also angry at the stark injustice of it all. And terrified of the power such wealth can wield in a country that allows billionaires to spend unlimited sums influencing legislation and elections.
A recent survey by the Pew Research Center found that two-thirds of Americans now believe the conflict between rich and poor is our greatest source of tension. I agree. It is a conflict that deserves to be aired fully and in public.


23 Comments so far
Show AllIt's good to know how your national myths are not true, but myth stems from repetition, and in the mindless repetition of a 500-TV channel universe, you don't stand a chance. Good story -- rinse, repeat recycle.
This article is based upon the MYTH that the democrats do not also believe these exact same things.
Condemning one hand of the corporate control will not only NOT keep the other hand from stabbing you in the back,
it will guarantee it.
The knife gets tossed back and forth, but the purpose remains the same.
The real issue for the GOP base is not envy, but spite: the fear that someone else might get a free nickel from their pockets.
Stop wasting everyone's time on the bipartisan puppet show! How thick must one be not to realize there's a dime's worth of difference between parties, never mind candidates?
Part of the national myth has a religious overtone, never more true than with Romney and the Mormons. In his Mormon church, if someone's sick--even with the stomach flu or, especially, pregnancy--everyone comes to help. But if someone has financial trouble, only his or her very, very true friends believe in him and will help. All others, who called him "brother" for three hours each Sunday, assume it's partially or all of his fault, and won't help except for tepid ideas or referrals. Even if it is similar to the Great Depression (which it is now), and he tells them he's not getting any sleep and his family will have to split up, which, in reality, could mean the death of that family, no one will help very much. They won't dig into their savings of 10s of thousands of dollars, kept to send each of their five kids on missions to convert the whole world to Mormonism. Usually, during one of the three-hour segments on Sunday, IF the Mormons talk about service projects, they emphasize little ones. On a recent Sunday, a priest in the LDS church (Latter-Day Saints, pretentious? yes), said that members should always be on the lookout for things that take only five minutes and seem easy to you, but can be very important to someone else. For example, bringing cookies or candy to someone in the hospital. This all goes hand-in-hand with the nonrecognition by religions overall, not just Mormonism, of mental "weakness" or differences. Religion, to me, seems very bestial. In it, you can see that humans have evolved from hunters and gatherers who would battle to the death over pieces of land that were necessary to feed their own tribe or family.
I've had three very close friends for over forty years who're Mormon, have lived next door to Mormon families, and I got to know many of the church members who worked in the church's Family History Centers while doing my family genealogy research. From all of them I learned a lot about the Mormon faith. This church has sent their members around the globe to collect vital records from every source there is, and puts those records on microfilm and microfiche for not just their members to find their ancestors in, but anyone who wants to use those services - and when non-members are in the church center doing their search, not one word is spoken there regarding their religion. There's also nothing in the center except genealogy related things.
The Mormon boys are sent on missions around the world to spread the word of the Mormon faith, thats true. It's a bit like the Native American young boys used to do to attain adulthood, in my book. But every other big church send out adult missionaries. Catholics are world wide; Christian Missionaries are converting people to christianity from the deepest darkest parts of Africa to the origional natives of Alaska, and throughout every country in the world.
The church takes care of its own, and helps them in time of need. The Mormon church does have a lot of money. The members are no different from any of us. They have jobs, kids, and problems, and have to budget. The church has large farms, and other types of businesses, and members out of work, needing food, or money, can go to the farm or one of the businesses, and work for the money or the food they need. They don't get handouts.
The head of the Morman church where I grew up was also the local pharmacist, and when my mother needed her medicine when she was elderly, he would bring it to her because she didn't drive. He was the Bishop, I think. I've never heard of a priest in this church. And this guy was an ordinary, middle aged man, a little overweight, nice guy, who worked for a living, drove an older model car, and his wife worked in the center where I did my research, and I got to know her quite well. She was just an ordinary person like myself.
I would never consider joining this church, or any others for that matter, and I don't go along with a lot of the church's management, where women are in the church. but just their record gathering has done more for humanity than any other church in existence, and for that service, because I was able to find ancestors back many generations, and could have found more if I'd known what I was doing (and if I'd known what questions to ask, the members would have happily helped me, and often did), and because of that service, they have my regard.
As for all of the Republicans having to be judged by a panel of church leaders to be judged religious enough to be considered presidential enough to run for the office, I think is terrible. They're already one of the biggest corporations running our government, and Romney is no different from any of the others running.
The parties don't matter. They're all corporate puppets as everyone understands now. Income IS that unequal because the corporations have been systematically turning two jobs into one, cutting back on everything, and squeezing every cent they can find from their workers' pay for many years, and getting rich on the proceeds. I've watched this happening in my own family for years.
Nothing will change as long as the 99% measure wealth the same as the 1%. If the 99% stopped buying what the 1% are selling, the latter would be standing at ramps with cardboard signs.
How about starting with a boycott of ALL corporate sporting shows, including the Olympics, and a boycott of all energy-guzzling "amusement" and "leisure" activities? Boycott, not just personally, but get friends, family and neighbors, coworkers, and strangers to do, as well. And buy only the most essential from the 1% where there is no choice at present.
Will you lose your job as a consequence of the boycott? My less than average income job would be gone along with untold millions of others. We will be left struggling hopelessly and the 1% will not even notice.
I didn't mean to sound callous, Thumper. But it is so with so many things. When people start boycotting Monsanto and Dow Chemical, and when other countries stop buying so many weapons, people WILL lose jobs. And it will be painful. But these jobs only serve the 1% and the empire at the direct expense of everyone else. Plus, these things contribute directly to environmental destruction as do so many other "jobs" in oil drilling and fracking operations. And when people stop eating so much meat, more jobs will be lost.
I wish I had an easy answer, Thumper, for what to do about these "jobs" lost, but it is a reality that must be faced, and a transition made to something more sustainable, more dignified for all and not so environmentally destructive. People should start thinking of new rules, instead of playing by "their" rules all the time.
Yes, you have no answer just like myself and everybody else. There is no hope. All of this would not hurt so much if I had realized as a child that this world is not the beautiful place that I was taught to admire. People should this and people should that and nothing will ever change. My neighbor cannot even park his god damned car without interfering with the rights of everyone else on the block. The best thing I could do for the environment. is die. You are saying that we will have to suffer in order to realize a healthy and dignified society: is that not the conservative mantra?
>>Thumper wrote: "You are saying that we will have to suffer in order to realize a healthy and dignified society: is that not the conservative mantra?"
Nope. Things are changing, Thumper. People are waking up. While I may not have an answer that would be convincing to everyone right now, I never said that the situation is hopeless, and I certainly did NOT say that switching to a sustainable society has to necessarily mean "suffering". I merely pointed to the reality of "jobs" being lost during a move to a sustainable system. Other "jobs" will be created and other means of livelihood will become available.
>>"My neighbor cannot even park his god damned car without interfering with the rights of everyone else on the block."<<
See? You get it! And the USA (and a few other rich countries) are this "neighbor" that is currently jeopardizing the lives and the future of everyone else and of all life on this planet. Certain things will need to go. After all, they did not exist about a 100 or 150 years ago. And life, including, and especially, humans, can continue, or even thrive, without them in the future. I just hope that the transition is easy on everyone, particularly for the 99%.
Like yourself I agree that the transition could possibly be made without suffering but it will never happen that way as long as the definition of "socialist" remains; Stupid dirty hippie that don't wanna work. Throngs of conservatives would revel in the suffering and all those "lazy louts" would just be getting what they deserve. I know that I am just a bonehead who barely made it through high school and maybe I have no business making the following statement but it seems that about 70% of the population hate to think about much of anything besides what their truck would look like with chrome wheels.
Suffering is what we have. The transition we are fighting for is away from suffering.
It does not matter how people define "socialist." It isn't a product with a brand name or a religious creed.
70% of the population is concerned about economics and the environment, about the well-being of others, about the battle between the haves versus the have-nots, not about chrome wheels. They may be more interested in chrome wheels than they are in partisan politics, but that would only be rational. Who isn't?
God damn the million ways of looking at things. The ache is unbearable
View things from the point where you actually stand (once you recognize that.) In other words, make your point of view consistent with your actual social position. No more ache.
"Will arbitrage for food!"
I like it!
That is not possible, and even if it were it would not have the effect that you imagine it would have.
We should encourage the the growth of the rich and help as many become become so as possible, that way when we finally start eating them there will be enough to go around.
"Challenging the Republican's Five Myths on Inequality"
_______________________
Just a passing observation, since the wonky pastime of deconstructing Republican Party myths doesn't especially interest me:
Unless "the Republican" is meant to refer to an individual, e.g. Mitt Romney, the apostrophe in the headline belongs after the "s".
The one truth about republicans is that they cannot play by any rules that they cannot manipulate. Nor can they adhere to every citizen having a voice, makes it hard to hedge their leverage. All of which exposes them as the truth psychopaths they are, as functioning without a conscience is so germane to their persona. Hook or by crook, cheating, lying, extortion, all these and more are their operational tactics.
Sucks that the M$M is narrowing down the rethug field to just a 'long time has been with newt' and a slick operator like mitten. That really gives o the title of 'least worse and evil' choice for people to vote for and that is the M$M's function as it was in 2008 and even in 1980 on to today. And not to give a pass, so many dims are on this samo ideology as slick willie and o prove by their actions because they are making out like the bandits that they are being elected or getting reelected to the elite world.
David Morris;
If you read these forums; THANK YOU for writing this article.