Three More Reasons for Wealth-Deprived Americans to Take to the Streets
08 April 2018
It's starting to happen, as teachers around the country are fighting back against income and wealth inequality. At least 3 of every 4 Americans have been cheated out of a share of U.S. productivity since the 1980s. The approximately one of four Americans who have prospered, especially those in the top 5%, generally don't seem to care much about inequality, and instead hang onto delusions about their own self-worth and the struggles of people who "don't work hard enough."
From various trusted sources come maddening facts about the relentlessly expanding wealth divide. Inequality is a perversion of human conduct, as most of society's new benefits have derived from automation, and thus from decades of public input, taxpayer funding, and government research. But the beneficiaries are those who are well-connected to the corporate and financial processes exploiting that growth, mainly through stock ownership.
The rest of America has been left behind, but their voices are getting louder.
(1) In Just the Last 3 Years, the Richest 5% Gained an Average of $800,000 While the Poorest 50% LOST Wealth
This information comes from the 2017 Global Wealth Databook, and is summarized here. Incredibly, the richest 5% of Americans increased their average wealth from about $4 million to nearly $5 million since the end of 2014.
Meanwhile, the average household wealth of the poorest 50% actually went DOWN by about $200. The middle class (50-90%) increased their wealth by anywhere from $6,000 to $26,000 during that financially productive time.
(2) The Wealth Owned by 90% of Us in the 1980s Has Been Redistributed to the Richest .1%
The charts below from the World Inequality Lab reveal this terrible truth about the past 35 years:
-----The richest 125,000 households owned 7 percent of the wealth then, 22 percent now
-----The poorest 112,000,000 households owned 37 percent of the wealth then, 23 percent now
So nearly 15 percent of our nation's total household wealth -- $14 trillion! -- has been transfered from middle-class America to people with an average net worth of $75 million.