After Six Years of Growth, Wages Are Still Stagnant
Also in Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace
How One Journalist Learned About Modern Union-Busting the Hard Way
Seth Sandronsky
Don't Fear the Deficit Bogeyman
John Miller
4 Myths About Taxes, Debunked
Paul Buchheit
The Vampire Banks Are Back: Will There Ever Be Meaningful Financial Reform?
Dean Baker
Is Amazon.com Screwing You Over?
Steve Brown
What Happened to That Prosperity Tax-Cutters Promised Us?
Sam Pizzigati
The Right Wing Noise Machine econ division has continued to tell us that this is the greatest expansion since sliced bread. However, the underlying statistics indicate otherwise. Job growth is still the weakest of the last 60 years. And most importantly, wage growth is still lagging. This is the central reason why the economy continues to poll poorly. How would you feel if you hadn't had a raise in 7 years?
Let's start with information from the Federal Reserve. Their latest report on consumer finances was published in 2005, titled the Survey of Consumer finances. It stated:
The survey shows that, over the 2001-04 period, the median value of real (inflation-adjusted) family income before taxes continued to trend up, rising 1.6%, whereas the mean value fell 2.3 percent….These results stand in contract ot the strong and broad gains seen for the period 1998 and 2001 surveys and to the smaller but similarly broad gains between the 1995 and 1998 surveys.
This same observation was made in the latest Foreign Affairs article titled A New Deal For Globalization:
Those earlier barons disappeared by the 1920s and, constrained by the Depression and by the greater government oversight and high income tax rates that followed, no one really took their place. Then, starting in the late 1970s, as the constraints receded, new tycoons gradually emerged, and now their concentrated wealth has made the early years of the 21st century truly another Gilded Age.
Only twice before over the last century has 5 percent of the national income gone to families in the upper one-one-hundredth of a percent of the income distribution — currently, the almost 15,000 families with incomes of $9.5 million or more a year, according to an analysis of tax returns by the economists Emmanuel Saez at the University of California, Berkeley and Thomas Piketty at the Paris School of Economics.
Such concentration at the very top occurred in 1915 and 1916, as the Gilded Age was ending, and again briefly in the late 1920s, before the stock market crash. Now it is back, and Mr. Weill is prominent among the new titans. His net worth exceeds $1 billion, not counting the $500 million he says he has already given away, in the open-handed style of Andrew Carnegie and the other great philanthropists of the earlier age.
If Bill Gates enters a room with 100 people who all make minimum wage, then the average and median income of the room is still impressive.
The astonishing skewness of U.S. income growth is evident in the analysis of other measures as well. The growth in total income reported on tax returns has been extremely concentrated in recent years: the share of national income accounted for by the top one percent of income earners reached 21.8% in 2005 -- a level not seen since 1928. In addition to high labor earnings, income growth is driven by corporate profits, which are at a nearly 50-year highs as a share of national income and which accrue mainly to those with high labor earnings.
See more stories tagged with: economy, wages
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace! Sign up now »
You've chosen to turn comments off for the entire site. Would you like to turn them back on?
Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.