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Income Indicator
Our expert and Advisory Board member, Lawrence
Mishel, President of the Economic Policy Institute
(www.epinet.org)
of Washington, DC provides deep analyses of US income and wealth
trends. Our Income Indicator
dissects conventional macro-statistics to reveal important information
concealed by the averages. US incomes at the low end have been essentially
flat for over a decade and the 2001 recession and higher unemployment
rates caused setbacks for many wage earners. The gap between rich
and poor Americans is still historically high, an issue that does
not bode well for any democracy.
As the US economy slowed in mid-2004, higher
unemployment pushed many low-income families back below the poverty
line. Election debates focused on the role of tax cuts and
the extent to which the tax code and public policy favor powerful
interest groups over vulnerable groups and average middle-class
taxpayers. The second term of the Bush administration will target
more tax cuts -- while several states, including Florida, passed constitutional
amendments raising the minimum wage. Even Business Week (May 31, 2004) ran its cover story
on these issues -- calling for urgent policy changes, including
raising the US minimum wage to $7 per hour. Other issues include
the extent to which technology and globalization are squeezing the
incomes of less skilled Americans. The London-based Economist (Aug 30,2004)
noted that the number of Americans in poverty is rising -- 35.9 million
or 12.5% of the population fell below the poverty line in 2003, 1.3 million
more than the year before.
The US economy produced 157,000 new jobs in December. The offical unemployment rate
for 2004 was 5.5%. However, this figure is the result of 152,000 leaving
the labor force and omits millions of other
discouraged workers no longer counted among those seeking work.
Growing awareness of the need to "unpack" such macro-economic
indicators led to many media stories on the "hidden unemployment"
of those discouraged job seekers, under-employed part-timers, structurally-unemployed
youth and minorities (click on the Employment Indicator). The spurt
in hourly productivity (up about 4% over last year) translates into
fewer jobs as companies strive for efficiency and profits by downsizing
their workforces. The 10-year study by The Russell Sage and Rockefeller
Foundations of the changing structure of US employment and declining
average wages pointed to some startling conclusions. Almost one
American worker in five reported having been paid less than $8 per
hour in 2001. Furthermore, the median American worker's real
hourly wages rose only 7% between 1973 and 2001 (click on the Income
Indicator) according to The State of Working America, published
by the Economic Policy Institute.
Clearly the stimulus of tax cuts and rock-bottom interest rates has flowed
largely to company profits, while wage increases have lagged behind.
Why do ordinary American workers get to keep less of what they
produce than ordinary workers in other rich countries? The Russell
Sage-Rockefeller Foundations'; reports on why the gap
between rich and poor is wider than in most other rich democracies:
"its politics, stupid"! These differences in income distribution
seem to be traceable to differences in constitutional arrangements,
electoral systems and economic institutions. These differences,
in turn, affect the political balance, the level of spending on
the welfare state and a wide range of other economic policies. Economic
inequality is less pronounced in countries that favor multi-party
systems and proportional representation (rather than a two-party
system) and produce more equal economic outcomes. A summary of this
ground-breaking research is published in The American Prospective,
January 2004 (www.prospect.org).
These issues also relate to our Employment, Education
and Shelter Indicators. And what are we to make of the 1995 national
survey by the Merck Foundation and the Harwood Group that found
28% of Americans had opted for lower incomes and moved to rural
communities in order to improve their quality of life? Clearly,
values are changing and new trade-offs are being made between more
money and more time, tranquil and less-polluted environments, as
the PBS television special Affluenza describes. The
debate extends to the issue of choosing shorter workweeks while
sharing the loss in productivity with employers. This is how the
Kellogg Company of Michigan reduced its workweek to 35 hours, a
move followed in France in the late 1990s as a measure to reduce
unemployment. Historically, workweeks in most industrial societies
have steadily dropped and preferences for more free time have become
"quality of life" issues. Lagging returns to employees
versus top managers and investors have become an issue in the 2004
presidential election - and have revived the debates of the 1960s
and 1970s about automation, jobless economic growth and the need
for guaranteeing incomes so that sufficient purchasing power among
the poor and middle-class can keep US industries humming.
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