The Democratic Party Platform's Missing Plank
Belief:
What if People Actually Treated Religion as Just a Metaphor (Like Trekkies and Secular Jews)?
Greta Christina
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Labor Against the War Shifting Sights to Afghanistan Occupation
Jane Slaughter
DrugReporter:
The War on Weed: Marijuana Is Basically Harmless -- The Monumentally Stupid Drug War Is Not
Jim Hightower
Environment:
20 Weird, Crazy Ideas for Helping the Earth
Food:
10 Tips for a Sustainable Thanksgiving
Sarah Newman
Health and Wellness:
Is the House's Health Bill Really Worse than Nothing?
Joshua Holland
Immigration:
What Denying Unauthorized Immigrants Health Insurance Will Cost You
Media and Technology:
The Memory Scrub About Why Ft. Hood Happened Is Almost Complete ... If It Weren't for Archives
Mark Ames
Movie Mix:
The Yes Men: Pranksters Out to Fix the World
Mark Engler
Politics:
Just When You Thought It Was Safe: 3 Potential Obstacles to Health-Care Reform
Adele M. Stan
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Why Can't We Look Away From Sarah Palin?
Vanessa Richmond
Rights and Liberties:
Feeling Nervous? 3,000 Behavior Detection Officers Will Be Watching You at the Airport This Thanksgiving
Liliana Segura
Sex and Relationships:
Hot Mormon Muffins and Models for Jesus: What's With All the Sexy Christians?
Liz Langley
Take Action:
G-20 Meetings: Nothing Much Happened in the Suites, and There Was Too Much Punch in the Streets
Laura Flanders
Water:
Poseidon's Financial Shell Game: Why Is a Private Desalination Plant Asking for Public Money?
Peter Gleick
World:
Did American Commandos Slaughter Afghan Civilians in Bala Murghab? Residents Say Yes.
Mustafa Saber
Ready to get in the mood for the Democratic Party national convention? Just click your way online to the draft 2008 Democratic Party platform. You’ll find, stuck inside, some stirring passages that make an eloquent case for change. But you won’t find, unfortunately, a single explicit line about what most needs changing in the United States today: America’s alarmingly top-heavy distribution of income and wealth.
This shouldn’t be particularly surprising. Over the past quarter-century, America’s richest 0.1 percent have tripled -- and the richest 0.01 percent have quadrupled -- their share of the nation’s income. Over this remarkable span of time, not one Democratic Party platform has suggested that American politics ought to concentrate on undoing this concentration.
Unchallenged, this concentration just continues merrily along. America’s most affluent 400 took home an average $214 million in 2005, the most recent year with figures available. A half-century ago, in 1955, the top 400 averaged, after adjusting for inflation, a mere $12 million.
What have the rich been doing to advance so handsomely?
"The standard explanation," UCLA economist Sanford Jacoby noted this past spring in an insightful analysis of the dynamics that have left the United States so dangerously unequal, "has to do with market forces."
The market is rewarding America’s corporate and financial elites, the story goes, for the economic value their smarts and skills create.
But these corporate and financial elites, Jacoby's analysis shows, haven’t really been creating value. They’ve been extracting it.
"Executives and shareholders," he notes, "take resources that otherwise would have been reinvested or returned to other factors of production" -- research and development, for instance -- and, in the process, leave companies less competitive in global markets.
This extraction of value enriches executives and America’s already wealthy -- who own the overwhelming bulk of corporate stock -- and, at the same exact time
enhances "income stagnation for the working poor
and middle class."
Last week, in the Chicago Tribune, Jacoby explored a concrete example of this extraction process -- at General Motors, once the single most important corporation in the United States, the mighty engine of post-World War II American prosperity.
"As GM goes," the old saw went, "so goes the nation."
GM these days,
daily headlines remind us, is not going particularly well.
The company’s low-mileage Yukon and Suburban SUV's are piling up unsold on lots across the United States. GM workers are losing jobs and benefits. Rumors about a GM bankruptcy have even started circulating.
The conventional wisdom from conservative circles blames GM’s current woes on high wages and pensions for workers. More perceptive critics, Jacoby notes, blame GM’s "overreliance on gas-guzzlers, mediocre product quality, and unimpressive design."
But that overreliance didn’t have to be. In the 1990s, GM was swimming in cash, more than enough to match Toyota, or any other competitor, in innovative breakthroughs.
"So what in the world," asks Jacoby, "did the company do with all its money?"
That money, simply put, went to making the rich richer, through maneuvers designed to reward both shareholders and company executives flush with stock options. From 1996 to 2000, GM spent $13 billion buying back its shares of stock on the open market, a move that increases "demand" for a company’s shares and jacks up the share price. GM spent $7 billion more on dividends to shareholders.
In those same years, Jacoby points out, Toyota "successfully resisted demands -- chiefly from American investors -- to raise its payout ratio" to shareholders. Toyota’s top executive in the late 1990s, the UCLA economist adds, believed that shareholder interests "would best be served if Toyota plowed its cash into research and development for hybrids and other long-term improvements."
Toyota made investments in the future. GM put smiles on rich people’s faces.
The next occupant of the White House, to have any hope of restoring American prosperity, is going to have to stop the grinning.
See more stories tagged with: economic inequality, democratic party platform, wealth in america
Sam Pizzigati is the editor of the online weekly Too Much, and an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.
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